Yakjungpyeon ??? [Discourse on Moderation]
YI, Sang-j?ng ???
Sold by Jonathan A. Hill, Bookseller Inc., New York, NY, U.S.A.
Association Member:
AbeBooks Seller since March 15, 1999
Used - Soft cover
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basket
Sold by Jonathan A. Hill, Bookseller Inc., New York, NY, U.S.A.
Association Member:
AbeBooks Seller since March 15, 1999
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basket46 folding leaves. Small folio (316 x 213 mm.), orig. yellow-brown semi-stiff wrappers, new stitching. Ch ?ngsong ??: Pugang S?dang ????, 1849. First edition of a fascinating late-Chos?n treatise by Yi Sang-j?ng (1711-81), elaborating on how to control one s emotions. Yi was a prominent scholar who followed the legacy of Toegye Yi Hwang ?? (1502-70), the most important Neo-Confucian scholar in Korea. A scholar and government official, Yi was known for his moral integrity, learning, and devotion to Confucian principles in state administration. He held a number of important posts including Chief Censor, Minister of Rites, and Senior Advisor to the king. Yakjungpyeon is organized into 66 discrete entries. It investigates how human emotions (the "Seven Fundamental Feelings" joy, anger, sorrow, fear, love, hate, and desire) should be managed in daily life. Beginning with the theme of "the mind before emotions arise" ???????? a concept central to the reading of Neo-Confucian mind theory by the Chinese philosopher Zhu Xi (1130-1200) the text guides readers through moral and psychological challenges. Yi gathers classical sources to argue that emotions are natural and inevitable for human beings and should not be criticized or repressed. However, he warns that these emotions unchecked influences can disrupt rational judgment and moral pursuits, and stresses the necessity of cultivating the ability to regulate them. Throughout sections devoted to each emotion, Yi provides examples and explorations of matters such as the importance of not holding onto anger after it arises, the need to reduce selfish desires (and how to tell if a desire is selfish), the pitfalls of inattention, and the roots of fear. While maintaining the Confucian emphasis on propriety, rather than prescribing a single standard for the proper state of emotion, Yi insists that the "middle way" ?? is the goal of self-cultivation. The colophon, written by Yi s grandson Ryu Chi-myung ??? (1777-1861), dated 1849, notes that Yi Sang-j?ng originally wrote the work in 1749. Very good copy. Marginal dampstaining throughout. We find no copy outside of Korea.
Seller Inventory # 11156
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