by Agnes Kwok Wai-fong.Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1992.Includes bibliographical references (leaves [109]-[115]).Acknowledgement --- p.1-2Abstract --- p.3Preface --- p.4-7Chapter Chapter 1 --- The Development of Imagination from the Medievals to The Romantics --- p.8-32Chapter Chapter 2: --- The Chinese Concept of Shen and Liu Xie's Shen-si --- p.33-58Chapter Chapter 3: --- Image-forming and Imagination in Sino-Western Perspectives --- p.59-87Chapter Chapter 4: --- Different Functions of Imagination in Comprehending Nature China and the West --- p.88-108Works Cite
The understanding of another culture leads to both respect for that culture, and a new understanding...
by Ling Tun Ngai.Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1990.Bibliography: leaves [129]-...
Through a variety of sources from various chinese intellectual traditions, this paper attempts to pr...
Fiction has emerged as a major medium for modern Chinese to express their imagination and 'narrate' ...
by Wan-kan Chin.Includes passages in Chinese.Thesis (M.Ph.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1988.B...
Philosophers in the Western tradition have both theorized about imagination and used imagination in ...
The study presents various factors which obstacles adequate description and analysis of Chinese real...
International audienceFor several centuries now European and American sinologists and novelists have...
In discussions in comparative philosophy, it is often assumed that Chinese and Western traditions ar...
In discussions in comparative philosophy, it is often assumed that Chinese and Western traditions ar...
by Cindy, Ah Shan Kuan.Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1999.Includes bibliographi...
This comprehensive comparative study of Western and Chinese poetics begins with broad examinations o...
by Pauline Po Chun Tam.Text in Chinese and EnglishBibliography: leaves 93-101Thesis (M.Ph.)--Chinese...
F. Mote’s thesis that Chinese civilisation differs in the most fundamental aspects from Western civi...
[EN] Traditional Chinese philosophy differs from Western thought in its essentially holistic concept...
The understanding of another culture leads to both respect for that culture, and a new understanding...
by Ling Tun Ngai.Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1990.Bibliography: leaves [129]-...
Through a variety of sources from various chinese intellectual traditions, this paper attempts to pr...
Fiction has emerged as a major medium for modern Chinese to express their imagination and 'narrate' ...
by Wan-kan Chin.Includes passages in Chinese.Thesis (M.Ph.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1988.B...
Philosophers in the Western tradition have both theorized about imagination and used imagination in ...
The study presents various factors which obstacles adequate description and analysis of Chinese real...
International audienceFor several centuries now European and American sinologists and novelists have...
In discussions in comparative philosophy, it is often assumed that Chinese and Western traditions ar...
In discussions in comparative philosophy, it is often assumed that Chinese and Western traditions ar...
by Cindy, Ah Shan Kuan.Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1999.Includes bibliographi...
This comprehensive comparative study of Western and Chinese poetics begins with broad examinations o...
by Pauline Po Chun Tam.Text in Chinese and EnglishBibliography: leaves 93-101Thesis (M.Ph.)--Chinese...
F. Mote’s thesis that Chinese civilisation differs in the most fundamental aspects from Western civi...
[EN] Traditional Chinese philosophy differs from Western thought in its essentially holistic concept...
The understanding of another culture leads to both respect for that culture, and a new understanding...
by Ling Tun Ngai.Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1990.Bibliography: leaves [129]-...
Through a variety of sources from various chinese intellectual traditions, this paper attempts to pr...