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Robert Allinson

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Robert Elliott Allinson is an international philosopher of American origin. He is Professor of Philosophy at Soka University of America and was formerly Full Professor of Philosophy at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He is the author/editor of nine books and over two hundred academic papers.[1] His works primarily focus on four areas of philosophy: Original Theoretical Philosophy; Comparative Philosophy, Eastern and Western; Management Ethics, Environmental Ethics and Public Health Ethics; Holocaust and Sino-Judaic Comparative Philosophy.

Theoretical philosophy

Robert Allinson is an original philosopher of theoretical philosophy. He has synthesized traditional, Western metaphysics, Platonic dialectic, Kantian epistemology, and Husserlian phenomenology and published the book A Metaphysics for the Future.[2][3] His systematic philosophy takes advantage of both Critical philosophy and phenomenological introspection and proposes an epistemological/metaphysical mix as the foundation for philosophy. Lewis Hahn, Editor of Library of Living Philosophers, has commented, “With a new phenomenology, a distinctive method and unique modes of validation for philosophy, and an extraordinary command of both Eastern and Western philosophy, Professor Allinson develops his own bold, imaginative, and challenging system of philosophy.”[2]

Robert Neville, Professor of Philosophy at Boston University, also writes in a review in Iyyun: Jerusalem Philosophical Quarterly, of A Metaphysics of the Future, “Running contrary to nearly all contemporary Western philosophical currents, Robert Allinson … has written a brilliant defence of a rigorous phenomenological approach to metaphysics … The reference circle for Allinson’s argument is classical Western philosophy of the ancient and modern periods. The footnotes are a wonderful source of continuing commentary on contemporary problems of reading the history of Western philosophy, as well as ongoing debates with our contemporaries … No one has made this case for phenomenological certainty in metaphysics as well as Allinson.”[4]

Robert Allinson introduces a definition of space-time that provides a philosophical and conceptual explanation of the nature of space and time that is independent of and supportive of the Einsteinian discoveries in physics in his monograph Space, Time and the Ethical Foundations.[5][6] His 2022 publication Awakening Philosophy: The Loss of Truth with Palgrave Macmillan has been commented upon by Slavoj Zîzêk: “Allinson does something that we all secretly knew it has to be done, but nobody dared to actually do it so directly: he convincingly argues for the return to a philosophy that shamelessly addresses big questions. A great sigh of relief will be felt by the readers of Awakening Philosophy: The Loss of Truth: we are back home. If there is justice in our intellectual life, the book will become daily bread for thinking beings.”[7] The book has also received comments from Brian Klug of the University of Oxford and Michael Slote of the Royal Irish Academy.[7]

Eastern and Western philosophy

Robert Allinson has specialized in Comparative Philosophy, East, West, and South. His book Understanding the Chinese Mind: The Philosophical Roots examined Chinese Philosophy through the categories of Western philosophy and introduced the idea that Western and Chinese philosophies form a complementary whole rather than being two competing outlooks.[8] It is now in its 11th impression with Oxford University Press.

His publication Chuang-Tzu for Spiritual Transformation: An Analysis of the Inner Chapters was a systematic exploration of the Zhuangzi as a linguistic and philosophical method to achieve a neural transformation and provided historical and logical explanations for the paradoxes presented by the Zhuangzi.[9] It has been translated into Chinese and Korean and received a review from the translator Burton Watson.[10][11][12] It is in its 8th impression with the State University of New York press.

Robert Allinson has published Harmony and Strife: Contemporary Perspectives, East and West with Shu-hsien Liu in 1989 through Chinese University Press and Columbia University Press.[13] His monograph published in 2020 with Bloomsbury Publishing,The Philosophical Influences of Mao Zedong: Notations, Reflections and Insights, has elicited comments from Slavoj Zîzêk, Anne Cheng of the Collège de France, and Michael Puett of Harvard, as well as reviews from Chinese scholars such as Keqian Xu and Qiong Wang.[14][15][16][17][18][19]

Slavoj Žižek has commented: “Mao Ze Dong is celebrated (or cursed) as a revolutionary leader, but the philosophical foundation of his activity is largely ignored. In his superb study, Allinson fills in this lack. Mao’s thought is not just located in its historical context; its complex references to the Chinese traditional thought, to Marx and Western philosophy, but also to modern sciences (quantum physics), are explored and documented. A new Mao thus emerges, a Mao whose radical acts are grounded in a thick texture of philosophical reflections. Allinson’s Mao is indispensable for everybody who wants to understand not just Mao but the concatenation of philosophy and politics that characterized the twentieth century.”[14]

Robert Allinson has been invited by the Chinese philosopher Tang Yijie to be Visiting Professor to Peking University and to the International Academy of Chinese Culture. He has been Visiting Professor or Scholar to Fudan University, Ōtani University, the East-West Center in Hawaii. He was invited by Sir Joseph Needham to be a Visiting Fellow at the University of Cambridge. He has been invited to edit the section on Logic of Volume VII of Science and Civilization in China. He has been invited to give lectures at the Department of Philosophy of the University of Hong Kong, Nanjing University, Gweilin Normal University, a Visiting Lecture at the Edgar Snow House at Peking University, and to direct a two-week seminar on Zhuangzi and the Sixth Patriarch for The Summer Seminar for Zen Studies at the Bodhi Mandala Zen Center in New Mexico.[20]

He has contributed to or been listed in the Encyclopaedia Britannica (print edition), Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (most recent citation Feb 23, 2021 in section, Epistemology in Chinese Philosophy),[21] Encyclopedia of Ethics, Encyclopedia of Crime and Punishment, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Encyclopedia of Chinese Philosophy, Encyclopedia of Literary Translation into English, Encyclopedia of Asian and Comparative Philosophy, Encyclopedia of Asian Philosophy, Encyclopedia of Eastern Philosophy and Religion, and the Kodansha Encyclopedia of Japan.[20]

Management and environmental ethics

Robert Allinson has published two books related to Management Ethics and Corporate Ethics, including Global Disasters: Inquiries into Management Ethics [1][4] with Prentice-Hall and Saving Human Lives: Lessons in Management Ethics with Springer.[22]

The book Saving Human Lives demonstrated that the foundations for sound management and ethical relations were woven out of the same cloth and that risk management is subsidiary to the more fundamental concept of risk assessment. He proposed that corporate disasters are the function and result of unethical management.[23] He also conducted extensive research on the Space Shuttle Challenger Disaster and has given seminars on the Challenger Disaster for the MBA Program at the Darden School of Business at the University of Virginia and for the Department of Management at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.[24][25][26][27]

His books have drawn plaudits from Paul Vatter of Harvard University, S. Prakash Sethi, and Patricia Werhane. Patricia Werhane has commented, “His wide-ranging investigation of court cases and government documents from the seventeenth through the twentieth centuries, and from places as diverse as the USA, UK and New Zealand provide ample supporting evidence for the universality and the power of explanation of his thesis. Saving Human Lives will have an impact beyond measurement on the field of management ethics.”[28]

He has been invited to deliver Distinguished Lectures and Annual Lectures for MBA programs at Copenhagen Business School, the Helsinki School of Economics and Business Administration, I.E.S.E. of the University of Navarra, the Shidler School of Business at the University of Hawaii, the Science Prestige Lecture at the University of Canterbury where he was Erskine Fellow to the MBA Program of the Department of Management,  the Institute for Advanced Studies at the United Nations University, and the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences.

He has offered seminars for the MBA program at the Darden School of Business Administration at the University of Virginia, and the Department of Management at the Hong Kong University for Science and Technology. He was chosen to represent Asia at the seven continent Symposium for Responsibility for World Business sponsored by the United Nations and the Oslo Peace Institute held in Sao Paulo, Brazil. His contribution was later published in the volume, Responsibility for World Business published by the United Nations University. He took part in the 15th European Business Ethics Network Conference and European Ethics Summit and delivered his paper at the European Parliament Building in Brussels. He is a Founding Member of the Asian Academy of Management. He has served on the Editorial Board of Business Ethics Quarterly, The International Journal of Management and Decision Making, The International Journal of Technology Management and has served as referee for the Journal of Business Ethics.[20]

In the area of Applied Ethics and Bioethics, he focuses on the philosophical, economic, cultural, political, and psychological roots of both different national practices in public health ethics and color racism.[29][30] He has been a supporter of African philosophy.[31]

Jewish-Chinese comparative philosophy

Robert Allinson is known for his comparison of the proscriptive sentential formulation of the Golden Rule in both Jewish and Chinese Confucian writings.[32][33][34] He initated his career in Holocaust studies in Asia, in Hong Kong and China in the early 1980s. In his work on the Holocaust, he develops the idea that anti-Judaism and acts of hatred are based on jealousy which is derivative from fear. He also critiques the Arendtian portrait of Adolf Eichmann as banal.[35]

He has been Senior Lady Davis Fellow to The Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Research Fellow to the International Institute for Holocaust Research at Yad Vashem, Jerusalem. He has been invited to deliver a paper at the Cambridge Conference on Antisemitism held at the University of Cambridge in 2022.

Varia

Robert Allinson also possesses an interest in classical Greek philosophy. He was invited to offer a keynote lecture on a synthesis of Plato and Aristotle for the 27th Conference of the International Association of Greek Philosophy in Athens in 2015 and has published on this same subject.[36][37] In addition, Professor Allinson is keen on finding philosophy in popular literature, particularly detective fiction.[38]

Intellectual biography

Robert Allinson studied with Charles Hartshorne, heralded by the Encyclopedia Britannica as the leading metaphysician of the twentieth century, who became the co-Director of his doctoral dissertation together with the distinguished Indian novelist, Raja Rao, winner of the Sahitya Akademi Award, India’s highest literary award, and the Neustadt International Prize for Literature. His Doctoral dissertation at the University of Texas at Austin was a set of original dialogues between East and West. He earned the Highest Distinction in Metaphysics and Epistemology, graded by John Findlay and Charles Hartshorne. He was awarded an Oldright Fellowship, one of only two granted. He studied with the Kant scholar, John Silber, the Plato scholar, Alexander Mourelatos, the Hegelian scholars, John Findlay and Errol Harris, and the English translator of Heidegger’s Being and Time, Edward Robinson. He was Teaching Assistant to Marjorie Grene, who studied with Heidegger and Karl Jaspers. Since Charles Hartshorne had been a student of Lord Alfred North Whitehead and Edmund Husserl, Professor Allinson’s educational heritage can be traced back to Husserl, a philosopher whose writings came to influence Professor Allinson’s thinking about Metaphysics. He studied Spinoza, Leibniz, Whitehead and Methods in Metaphysics with Hartshorne. In addition, he studied with Mihoko Nakamura, the private secretary of Daisetz Suzuki in Japan, Reverend Yen Why, the student of the last surviving Ch’ an Buddhist Master from China, Empty Clouds in Hong Kong and Sri Padmanabha Menon, son of Krishna Menon, in Anandavadi, India. He was invited to participate in the Zen Symposium in Kyoto with Nishitani Keiji. He has published on Zen Buddhism in The Eastern Buddhist founded by D. T. Suzuki and on Buddhist economics.[39][40]

Robert Allinson’s academic career has included being the Chairman of the Department of Philosophy and offered a Full Professorship at West Virginia State University, one of the top five of HBUC, integrated in reverse. He served for twenty-seven years on the Graduate Panel of the Department of Philosophy at The Chinese University of Hong Kong, achieving the rank of Full Professor. He has been a member of the Board of Trustees of Shaw College of The Chinese University of Hong Kong and a Fellow to Shaw College. He has served as External Examiner both to major Research Universities and for promotions from Full Professor to Distinguished Professor at major Research Universities. He is now Professor of Philosophy at Soka University of America and Affiliate Faculty to the University of Haifa. He regularly offers seminars on Metaphysics, the Holocaust, courses in East-West philosophy, and courses in Corporate Social Responsibility and Good Governance and Environmental and Bio-Ethics. He presented a paper on Medical Ethics for the Stanford University Medical School in 2022.[20]

Robert Allinson has long been a supporter of the idea that Philosophy is universal. He has recently served as the Guest Editor for a trilogy of issues of nearly 900 pages on whether we need a new Enlightenment for the 21st century.[41][42][43] He referees regularly for Diametros, Philosophy East and West, Asian Philosophy, Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy, the Journal of Chinese Philosophy, as well as a select number of international journals.

He is also a published poet and has published his poetry in poetry magazines on adjoining pages with Boris Pasternak (Nobel laureate for literature) and Odysseus Elytis (Nobel laureate for literature). He is a winner of an Academy of American Poets Award judged by Octavio Paz (Nobel laureate for literature).[20]

Fellowships and honors

Robert Allinson has been invited as:

He currently serves on/as:

  • President, The International Society for Universal Dialogue[44]
  • Executive Editorial Board, Dialogue and Universalism, Polish Academy of Sciences[45]
  • Advisory Board, Journal of Chinese Philosophy[46]
  • Editorial Board, Philosophical Inquiry[47]
  • Editorial Board, Asian Philosophy[48]
  • Editorial Board, Journal of Daoist Studies[49]
  • Editorial Advisory Board, Series on Daoism edited by David Chai for Bloomsbury Academic Books[50]
  • Distinguished Advisory Board, The International Society for Comparative Studies of Chinese and Western Philosophy (ISCWP)[51]
  • Referee, Philosophy East and West[52]
  • Referee, Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy[53]

References

  1. ^ "Robert Allinson". www.soka.edu. Retrieved 2022-01-21.
  2. ^ a b Allinson, Robert (November 1, 2019). A Metaphysics for the Future (1st ed.). London: Routledge. ISBN 9781138732766.
  3. ^ 爱莲心 (2012). Wei lai de xing er shang xue. Ai lian xin, Yu ri chang, 爱莲心., 余日昌. Nan jing: Jiang su ren min chu ban she. ISBN 978-7-214-08419-4. OCLC 910136098.
  4. ^ a b Neville, Robert Cummings (2005). "Review of A Metaphysics for the Future". Iyyun: The Jerusalem Philosophical Quarterly / עיון: רבעון פילוסופי. 54: 349–353. ISSN 0021-3306. JSTOR 23354481.
  5. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (November 28, 2019). Space, Time and the Ethical Foundations (1st ed.). London: Routledge. ISBN 9781138740730.
  6. ^ Shi jian, kong jian yu lun li xue ji chu. Lianxin Ai, Yongwang Gao, Mengguo Li, 爱莲心., 高永旺., 李孟国. (Di 1 ban ed.). Nanjing: Jiang su ren min chu ban she. 2015. ISBN 978-7-214-16606-7. OCLC 1029218742.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  7. ^ a b Allinson, Robert Elliott (2022). Awakening Philosophy: The Loss of Truth (1st ed.). Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. doi:10.1007/978-3-031-08300-6. ISBN 978-3-031-08299-3. S2CID 251965696.
  8. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (1989). Understanding the Chinese Mind: The Philosophical Roots (6th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195827064. OCLC 489717389.
  9. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (July 1989). Chuang-Tzu for Spiritual Transformation: An Analysis of the Inner Chapters. New York: State University of New York Press. ISBN 9780887069697.
  10. ^ 爱莲心 Robert Elliott Allinson (2004). 向往心灵转化的庄子: 内篇分析. 海外中国研究丛书 (in Chinese). Translated by 周炽成 Zhou Chicheng. 南京: 江苏人民出版社. ISBN 9787214036735.
  11. ^ 로버트 엘린슨 지음 Robert Elliott Allinson (2004). 장자, 영혼의 변화를 위한 철학 : 『장자』'내편' 분석 (in Korean). Translated by 김경희 옮김 Kyunghee Kim. Seoul: Greenbee Publishing. ISBN 9788976829412.
  12. ^ Burton, Watson (October 1992). "Robert E. Allinson, Chuang-Tzu for Spiritual Transformation: An Analysis of the Inner Chapters (review)". Philosophy and Literature. 16 (2): 423–424. doi:10.1353/phl.1992.0079. S2CID 145018495 – via Project MUSE.
  13. ^ Liu, Shu-hsien; Allinson, Robert E. (January 1989). Harmony and Strife: Contemporary Perspectives, East & West. Hongkong: The Chinese University of Hong Kong Press & Columbia University Press. ISBN 9789622014121.
  14. ^ a b Allinson, Robert E. (September 19, 2019). The Philosophical Influences of Mao Zedong: Notations, Reflections and Insights (1st ed.). New York: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781350059863.
  15. ^ Xu, Keqian (2021-09-01). "Allinson, Robert Elliott, The Philosophical Influences of Mao Zedong: Notations, Reflections and Insights". Dao. 20 (3): 499–503. doi:10.1007/s11712-021-09791-y. ISSN 1569-7274. S2CID 237884699.
  16. ^ Xu, Keqian (2022-11-25). "A Review on Robert E. Allinson's New Book The Philosophical Influences of Mao Zedong: Notions, Reflections and Insights—A New Exploration of Young Mao Zedong's Philosophical Thought". Mao Zedong Thought Study. 39 (6): 94–102 – via CNKI.
  17. ^ Wang, Qiong (2022). "The Philosophical Influences of Mao Zedong: Notations, Reflections and Insights Robert Elliott Allinson London: Bloomsbury Academic Books, 2020 xxiv + 231 pp. $30.95 ISBN 978-1-3500-5985-6". The China Quarterly. 250: 604–606. doi:10.1017/S0305741022000728. ISSN 0305-7410. S2CID 249352663.
  18. ^ Ambrogio, Selusi (2022-05-09). "Robert E. Allinson: The Philosophical Influences of Mao Zedong. Notations, Reflections and Insights". Asian Studies. 10 (2): 399–403. doi:10.4312/as.2022.10.2.399-403. ISSN 2350-4226. S2CID 248684871.
  19. ^ Rošker, Jana S. (2020). "Robert Elliott Allinson: Influences of Mao Zedong—notations, reflections and insights: New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2020; 232 pages". International Communication of Chinese Culture. 7 (1): 53–56. doi:10.1007/s40636-020-00174-1. ISSN 2197-4233. S2CID 213409141.
  20. ^ a b c d e f "Robert Allinson | Soka University of America". www.soka.edu. Retrieved 2022-12-24.
  21. ^ Rošker, Jana (2021), "Epistemology in Chinese Philosophy", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2021 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 2022-12-26
  22. ^ Allinson, Robert E. (1993). Global Disasters: Inquiries into Management Ethics. New York: Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0131459472. OCLC 29182346.
  23. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (2005). Saving Human Lives: Lessons in Management Ethics. Issues in Business Ethics. Vol. 21 (1st ed.). Springer. doi:10.1007/1-4020-2980-2. ISBN 978-1-4020-2905-9.
  24. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliot (1995). "A Call for Ethically-Centered Management". Academy of Management Perspectives. 9 (1): 73–76. doi:10.5465/ame.1995.9503133499. ISSN 1558-9080.
  25. ^ Allinson, Robert E. (1998). "The "Cog in the Machine" Manifesto: The Banality and the Inevitability of Evil". Business Ethics Quarterly. 8 (4): 743–756. doi:10.2307/3857551. ISSN 1052-150X. JSTOR 3857551.
  26. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (2012-09-12), "On the Very Idea of Risk Management: Lessons from the Space Shuttle Challenger", Risk Management, InTech, doi:10.5772/51666, ISBN 978-953-51-0747-7, S2CID 106516930
  27. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (2016). "The Ethical Relevance of Risk Assessment and Risk Heeding: The Space Shuttle Challenger Launch Decision as an Object Lesson". Ramon Llull Journal of Applied Ethics. 7 (7): 93–120.
  28. ^ Allinson, Robert E. (2005). "Saving Human Lives: Lessons in Management Ethics". Springer Nature EBook. Issues in Business Ethics. 21. SpringerLink (Online service). doi:10.1007/1-4020-2980-2. ISBN 978-1-4020-2905-9.
  29. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (2020-07-01). "The Primacy of Duty and Its Efficacy in Combating COVID-19". Public Health Ethics. 13 (2): 179–189. doi:10.1093/phe/phaa029. ISSN 1754-9973.
  30. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (2021). "Unmasking Color Racism". Dialogue and Universalism. 31 (1): 41–67. doi:10.5840/du20213114. S2CID 234935753.
  31. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (2021), Elechi, Maraizu; Idika, Christiana C.M.N. (eds.), "Marie Pauline Eboh's Dedication to Humanity and Philosophy: Gynism, Hegel's Master Slave Dialectic, Marxism and the Influence of Simone de Beauvoir", Philosophy, Universal Dialogue and Intersectionality: Philosophical Essays in Honour of Professor Marie Pauline Eboh, Enugu, Nigeria: Rhyce Kerex Publishers, pp. 121–36, doi:10.7312/baue11664-004
  32. ^ Allinson, Robert E. (1985-01-19). "The Confucian Golden Rule: A Negative Formualtion". Journal of Chinese Philosophy. 12 (3): 305–315. doi:10.1163/15406253-01203005. ISSN 0301-8121.
  33. ^ Allinson, Robert E. (1992). "The golden rule as the core value in Confucianism & Christianity: Ethical similarities and differences". Asian Philosophy. 2 (2): 173–185. doi:10.1080/09552369208575363. ISSN 0955-2367.
  34. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (2003). "Hillel and Confucius: The prescriptive formulation of the golden rule in the Jewish and Chinese Confucian ethical traditions". Dao. 3 (1): 29–41. doi:10.1007/bf02910339. ISSN 1540-3009. S2CID 145582972.
  35. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (2011). "Evil Banalized: Eichmann's Master Performance in Jerusalem". Iyyun. 60: 275–300. JSTOR 23354121 – via JSTOR.
  36. ^ "International Association for Greek Philosophy". www.hri.org. Retrieved 2022-12-24.
  37. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (2015). "An Aristotelian Renaissance: Aristotelian Ethics for Today". In Adam, Maria; Veneti, Maria (eds.). Greek Philosophy and Moral and Political Issues. Athens: Ionia Publications. p. 336.
  38. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (2020). "A Paragon of Righteous Virtue". In Rivera, Heather L.; Arp, Robert (eds.). Perry Mason and Philosophy: The Case of the Awesome Attorney. Popular Culture and Philosophy Series. Chicago, Illinois: Open Court Publishing. pp. 133:11–27. ISBN 978-0812699074. OCLC 1139151024.
  39. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (May 1975). "The Buddhist Theory of Instantaneous Being: The Ur-Concept of Buddhism". The Eastern Buddhist. VIII (l).
  40. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (2022), Buddhist Economics: The Global View, Ethical Economy, vol. 63, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 339–360, doi:10.1007/978-3-031-10204-2_18, ISBN 978-3-031-10203-5, retrieved 2022-12-24
  41. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott; Polish Academy of Sciences (2021). "Editorial". Dialogue and Universalism. 31 (3): 5–17. doi:10.5840/du202131342. ISSN 1234-5792.
  42. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott; Polish Academy of Sciences (2022). "Editorial". Dialogue and Universalism. 32 (1): 5–18. doi:10.5840/du20223211. ISSN 1234-5792. S2CID 249080280.
  43. ^ Allinson, Robert Elliott (2022). "EDITORIAL: Do We Need a New Enlightenment for the Twenty-First Century? Part III". Dialogue and Universalism (1): 5–18. doi:10.5840/du20223211. ISSN 1234-5792. S2CID 249080280.
  44. ^ "Home". isud. Retrieved 2022-12-24.
  45. ^ "Dialogue and Universalism" (in Polish). Retrieved 2022-12-24.
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  47. ^ "Editorial Team - Philosophical Inquiry - An International Quarterly". www.pdcnet.org. Retrieved 2022-12-30.
  48. ^ "Asian Philosophy". Taylor & Francis. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  49. ^ "Journal of Daoist Studies". UH Press. 2017-03-30. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  50. ^ Bloomsbury.Domain.Store.Site. "Daoism and the Human Experience: Bloomsbury Publishing (US)". www.bloomsbury.com. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  51. ^ "ISCWP's Advisory Board". The International Society for Comparative Studies of Chinese and Western Philosophy (ISCWP). Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  52. ^ "Philosophy East and West: A Quarterly of Comparative Philosophy". UH Press. 2017-03-30. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  53. ^ "DAO". phil.arts.cuhk.edu.hk. Retrieved 2022-12-30.