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Aristotle in China
Language, Categories and Translation

Part of Needham Research Institute Studies

  • Date Published: November 2006
  • availability: Available
  • format: Paperback
  • isbn: 9780521028479

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About the Authors
  • In this book, Robert Wardy, a philosopher and classicist, turns his attention to the relation between language and thought. He explores this huge topic in an analysis of linguistic relativism, with specific reference to a reading of the ming li t'an ('The Investigation of the Theory of Names'), a seventeenth-century Chinese translation of Aristotle's Categories. Throughout his investigation, Wardy addresses important questions. Do the basis structures of language shape the major thought-patterns of its native speakers? Could philosophy be guided and constrained by the language in which it is done? What factors, from grammar and logic to cultural and religious expectations, influence translation? And does Aristotle survive rendition into Chinese intact? His answers will fascinate philosphers, Sinologists, classicists, linguists and anthropologists, and will make a major contribution to the existing literature.

    • Author offers an interpretation of the relation between language and thought from the vantage point of a philosopher and classicist
    • The work will therefore be of interest to a range of scholars from a range of disciplines
    • Well written and reader friendly
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    Reviews & endorsements

    '… we in Chinese studies clearly owe a considerable debt to Robert Wardy, and hope that he will find other examples of cultural intercommunication between the classical tradition of Western philosophy and China with which to beguile our increasingly rare moments of reflection.' Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society

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    Product details

    • Date Published: November 2006
    • format: Paperback
    • isbn: 9780521028479
    • length: 184 pages
    • dimensions: 244 x 190 x 11 mm
    • weight: 0.337kg
    • contains: 2 b/w illus.
    • availability: Available
  • Table of Contents

    Preface
    Part I. The China Syndrome: Language, Logical Form, Translation:
    1. Introduction
    2. Guidance and constraint
    3. On the very idea of translation
    4. Case-study 1: conditionals
    5. Case-study 2: Chinese is a list
    6. Logical form
    7. Case-study 3: being
    8. Case-study 4: truth
    9. Case-study 5: nouns and ontology
    10. Conclusion
    Part II. Aristotelian whispers:
    11. Introduction
    12. What's in a name?
    13. Disputation, discrimination, inference
    14. The need for logic
    15. Finite and infinite
    16. The simple and the complex
    17. All the things there are
    18. How many questions? 19. Relatively speaking
    20. Particular and general
    21. Translating the untranslatable
    Epilogue
    Glossary
    References
    Index.

  • Author

    Robert Wardy, University of Cambridge

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