Lai Zhide
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This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2024) |
Lái Zhīdé (來知德 / 来知德; also Lái Qútáng 來瞿唐 / 来瞿唐, 1525–1604)[1] was a Ming period Neo-Confucian philosopher. He introduced into Chinese philosophy the well-known "Yin and Yang symbol", the taijitu (a "diagram of the great ultimate"). Lai Zhide is the author of an I Ching commentary, the Explanation of the Classic of Change Annotated by Mr Lai (ed. Zheng Can 1988).
See also
- Li Zhi (Ming Dynasty)
- Zhou Dun-yi, an 11th-century Neo-Confucian who had also presented a taijitu
References
Citations
- ^ Shaughnessy 2014, p. xxi.
Bibliography
Shaughnessy, Edward L. (2014). Unearthing the Changes: Recently Discovered Manuscripts of the Yi Jing ( I Ching) and Related Texts. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-16184-8.
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- 1525 births
- 1604 deaths
- Ming dynasty philosophers
- Chinese Confucianists
- Neo-Confucian scholars
- Ming dynasty writers
- Philosophers from Chongqing
- Writers from Chongqing
- 16th-century Chinese philosophers
- Ming dynasty classicists
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