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What follows here are excerpts from the Introduction to the Mencius in the translation by D.C.. Lau as well as a few selections from Lau's translation. Only two Chinese philosophers have the distinction of being known consistently to the West by a latinized name. The first is Confucius. The second is Mencius, whose name is
D.C. Lau's Mencius (New York: Penguin Books, 1970) was a major achievement by a brilliant translator and comparative philosopher. Nonetheless, scholarship has advanced considerably since Lau's translation. "Comments and Corrections," which grows out of thousands of hours teaching Mencius at Stanford and other
www.indiana.edu/~p374/Mencius (Eno-2016).pdf. The Great Learning and The Doctrine of D.C. Lau's 1970 translation, available from Penguin Books, is superb, and I admire my late friend The Mencius (in Chinese, Mengzi ??, the book of Master Meng) may be the Classical Chinese philosophical text that most
In his commentary on this verse, Zhu Xi glosses ? as ?, but D. C. Lau follows an interpretation suggested by the well-attested meaning of the ? as “close to," and reads it as. “about to," as in “As someone so old that he is about to die. . . ." This is an intriguing possibility. See Lau,. “Some Notes on the Mencius," in Mencius,
Mencius*. Book I Part A. 1. Mencius went to see King Hui of Liang. “Sir," said the King, “you have come all this distance, thinking nothing of a thousand li [about 250 miles]. You must surely have some .. That is all." * Excerpts taken from Mencius, translated with an introduction by D. C. Lau, New York: Penguin. Books, 1970.
[Matching item] Mencius [electronic resource] / translated with an introduction and notes by D.C. Lau. - Rev. ed. [Matching item] Mengzi = Mencius / Zhong wen yi zhu Cai Xiqin ; Ying wen fan yi He Zuokang.
nourishment of the sprouts of the virtues of the junzi become the focus of Mencius' development of Confucianism. What follows here are excerpts from the Introduction to the Mencius in the translation by D.C.. Lau as well as a few selections from Lau's translation. Only two Chinese philosophers have the distinction of being
of Mencius, there are thirty-three uses of the Book of Odes, twenty-two of which are contexts within which Mencius used classics, and to analyze the implica- Mencius. 1979. Mencius. D.C. Lau (tran.). Hong Kong: The Chinese Univer- sity Press. Nishijima ????. 1973. Reading Mencius ??????. In Nishijima. (ed.)
Mencius*. (371 - 289BCE). (Excerpts on gain). Book I, Part A, 1. Mencius went to see King Hui of Liang. “Sir," said the. King, “you have come all this distance, thinking nothing of a thousand li [about. 250 miles]. You must . *Excerpted from Mencius, translated with an introduction by D.C.Lau, New York: Penguin books, 1970.
Editorial Reviews. Book Description. Mencius, who lived in the 4th century B.C., is second only to Confucius in importance in the Confucian tradition. The Mencius consists of sayings of Mencius and conversations he had with his contemporaries. When read side by side with the Analects, the Mencius throws a great deal of
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