The Sociology of Philosophies

(Wang) #1
Figure 6.5. Neo-Confucian
Orthodoxy and the Idealist
Movement, 1435–1565

1300
373 Liu Chi (astron/astrol, skeptic
anti-superstition) 
374 Hsieh Ying Fang (skeptic) 
374a Cheng Yü (same as 372a) 
1400
375 Ts’ao Tuan (skeptic,
anti-Buddhist) 
376 Yang P’u 
377 Hsieh Hsuan (cm.
Neo-Confucian texts) 
378 Wu Yü-pi
379 Hu Chü-jen (faithful
Neo-Confucian)
1500
380 Lou Liang
381 Chan Jo-shui
382 Hsü Ai
383 Huang Wan
384 Ku Yin-hsing
385 Ch’ien Te-hung (split in Wang
Yang-Ming school)
386 Ch’en Ching-lan (orthodox
Neo-Confucian, crit. Lu
Chiu-yuan and Wang
Yang-Ming as Ch’an
Buddhism) 

Figure 7.1. Network of Japanese
Philosophers, 600–1100: Founding
of Tendai and Shingon
600
1 Kwalluk (Buddhist fr. Korea)

2 Hui-Kuan (Korean,
transmitted Buddhist
Satyasiddhi & Madhyamika
schools) 

635
3 Chisu (Japanese priest,
transmitted Abhidharma)
4 Chitatsu (same)
5 Dosho (Japanese priest,
transmitted Yogacara)
700
6 Gyogi (shamanistic
Buddhist) 
735
7 Kibi-no-Makibi (transmitted
Confucianism fr. China) 
8 Gembo (Japanese priest, st.
China) 
9 Bodhisena (Indian Buddhist
monk) 
10 Tao-hsüan (transmitted
Vinaya) 
11 Shen-huiang (China,
transmitted Kegon
[Hua-yen]) 
12 Chien-chien (Chinese Vinaya
master) 
[13] Amoghavajra (tantrist, from
China; 254 in Fig. 6.2)
765
[14] Hsiu-jan (Zen, China)
[15] Shun-chia (mantra doctrine
[tantrism], China)
[16] Tao-sui (T’ien-t’ai, China; 269
in Fig. 6.2)
[18] Hui-kuo (tantrist, China)
835
19 Ennin (systematized Tendai
[T’ien-t’ai]) 
20 Enchin f. Tendai
esotericism/magic

916 • (^) Appendix 3

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