Secular ethics, east and west

Publication Type

Book Chapter

Publication Date

2-2017

Abstract

One can find secular ethics in Aristotle’s philosophy; one can also find secular ethics in Confucianism. Debates about the religious status of Confucianism date back several centuries and continue today. Ethical concepts in the Classical Confucian texts and the ethical life they advocate can be accepted on their own, independent of any otherworldly religious beliefs. This chapter reconstructs a Confucian secular ethics from the textual resources of Classical Confucianism—Analects, the Mencius, and the Xunzi. It then considers possibilities for reconciling ethics, science, and religion within secular Confucian perspectives by comparing two modern treatments of Confucian ethics, one inspired by Immanuel Kant and the other by sociobiology and evolutionary psychology. Finally, a third treatment is presented: a pragmatist treatment of Confucian secular ethics based on John Dewey’s reconstruction of the religious.

Discipline

Arts and Humanities

Research Areas

Humanities

Publication

Oxford Handbook of Secularism

Editor

Phil Zuckerman and John R. Shook

ISBN

9780199988457

Identifier

10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199988457.013.41

Publisher

Oxford University Press

City or Country

New York

Additional URL

https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199988457.013.41

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