TY - JOUR
T1 - Disaster, Heaven, and Political Responsibility
T2 - Mencius and Dong Zhongshu on Humane Government
AU - Kim, Sungmoon
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - This paper investigates the Confucian conception of political responsibility as a political virtue essential for an ordinary non-Confucian ruler's actualization of humane government by paying close attention to the early Confucian discourses of Heaven and disaster. After briefly discussing Confucius's seminal idea of responsibility, this paper shows how Mencius developed the political conception of responsibility, as a noncausal responsibility shared by the ruler and the virtuous ministers for a humane government, especially under the condition of natural disasters. It then discusses how the Han Confucian philosopher Dong Zhongshu reformulated the Mencian theory of responsibility and humane government under radically altered political circumstances by advancing a new version of Confucianism, central to which is the causal conception of political responsibility. This paper concludes by discussing how the evolution of Confucian political theory from Mencius to Dong Zhongshu should be understood with a view to the question of political legitimacy. © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of University of Notre Dame.
AB - This paper investigates the Confucian conception of political responsibility as a political virtue essential for an ordinary non-Confucian ruler's actualization of humane government by paying close attention to the early Confucian discourses of Heaven and disaster. After briefly discussing Confucius's seminal idea of responsibility, this paper shows how Mencius developed the political conception of responsibility, as a noncausal responsibility shared by the ruler and the virtuous ministers for a humane government, especially under the condition of natural disasters. It then discusses how the Han Confucian philosopher Dong Zhongshu reformulated the Mencian theory of responsibility and humane government under radically altered political circumstances by advancing a new version of Confucianism, central to which is the causal conception of political responsibility. This paper concludes by discussing how the evolution of Confucian political theory from Mencius to Dong Zhongshu should be understood with a view to the question of political legitimacy. © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of University of Notre Dame.
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U2 - 10.1017/S0034670523000542
DO - 10.1017/S0034670523000542
M3 - RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal
SN - 0034-6705
VL - 86
SP - 1
EP - 23
JO - Review of Politics
JF - Review of Politics
IS - 1
ER -