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Mohism was an influential philosophical, social, and religious movement that flourished during the Warring States era (479-221 B.C.) in ancient China. Mohism originates in the teachings of Mo Di, or "Mozi" ("Master Mo," fl. ca. 430 B.C.), from whom it takes its name.
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Mohism or Moism (Chinese: 墨家; pinyin: Mòjiā; literally "School of Mo") was a Chinese philosophy developed by the followers of Mozi (also referred to as Mo Tzu, latinized as Micius), 470 BCE–c.391 BC. During that time, Mohism was seen as a major rival to Confucianism. The Qin dynasty, which united China in 221 BCE,
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The doctrines of Mohism are to be found in the work Mo-tzu, named after the founder of the Moist tradition Mo Ti (c. 470-390 BCE).
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Mohism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mohism or Moism (Chinese: 墨家; pinyin: Mòjiā; literally "School of Mo") was a Chinese philosophy developed by the followers of Mozi (also referred to as Mo Di; 470–c.391 BC). It evolved at about the sa...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohism |
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Several articles on various aspects of this philosophical tradition, from a Daoist perspective.
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Supplement to Mohism As Graham (1989) points out, however, despite the likely influence of the Mohists’ social background on their thought, there is no evidence that Mohism represents the ideology of a self-conscious craft or artisan class that sought to reform the established political order.
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Chinese philosopher whose fundamental doctrine of universal love challenged Confucianism for several centuries and became the basis of a religious movement known as Mohism. Mohism. (2008). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved May 03, 2008, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www...
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Mo Di (480-390) becomes Master Mo—Mozi or Zimozi—Master Teacher Mo. • May have been a disciple of Confucius. If so, he soon became an opponent.
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A web-based e-text system which presents the full text of Mozi in a structured, cross-referenced, and searchable form. Welcome to the Chinese Text Project homepage. The Chinese Text Project is a web-based e-text system designed to present ancient Chinese texts, particularly those relating to Chinese philosophy,
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Text, draft translation and extensive commentary on this passage from the key work of Mohism, which is attributed to the dialecticians of the Later Mohist school. By Patrick Edwin Moran.
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