What Is It Like to Be a Butterfly? - A - Philosophical Interpretation of Zhuangzi's Butterfly Dream
| Title | What Is It Like to Be a Butterfly? - A - Philosophical Interpretation of Zhuangzi's Butterfly Dream |
| Publication Type | Journal Article |
| Year of Publication | 2007 |
| Authors | Lee, Jung H. |
| Journal | Asian Philosophy |
| Volume | 17 |
| Pagination | 185 |
| Date Published | 2007 |
| ISBN Number | 0955-2367 |
| Keywords | Allinson, Robert, Dream, Ethics, Roth, Harold, Taoism, Zhuangzi |
| Abstract | This paper attempts to recast Zhuangzi's butterfly dream within the larger normative context of the 0RW1S34RfeSDcfkexd09rT2Inner Chapters1RW1S34RfeSDcfkexd09rT20RW1S34RfeSDcfkexd09rT2 - and early Daoism in terms of its moral significance, particularly in the way that it prescribes how a Daoist should live through the 'significant symbol' of the butterfly. This normative reading of the passage will be contrasted with two recent interpretations of the passage -- one by Robert Allinson and the other by Harold Roth -- that tend to focus more on the epistemological and mystical concerns of the text. As will be argued, the undue emphasis on the epistemological and mystical significance of the passage not only comes to grief when considered in light of philosophical and textual concerns but also obscures the moral dimensions of the passage that are more congruent with the 1RW1S34RfeSDcfkexd09rT20RW1S34RfeSDcfkexd09rT2Inner Chapters1RW1S34RfeSDcfkexd09rT20RW1S34RfeSDcfkexd09rT2 - as a whole.1RW1S34RfeSDcfkexd09rT2 |
