英文摘要 |
Dong-Po's Commentary of The Classic of Changes, Song dynasty literary giant Su Shi's treatise on The Classic of Changes, is written on the basis of Wang Bi's Changes of Zhou with Annotations and Brief Examples of The Changes of Zhou as well as Kong Ying-Da's Changes of Zhou with Annotations. It demonstrates the spirit of the meaning sect of The Classic of Changes studies in the Song dynasty. It takes Confucianism as its central idea and at the same time blends learnings of various schools into it. It regards The Classic of Changes as the device that saints uses to illustrate the way and argues about all the things related to human affairs and human relationships. In this book, Su Shi criticizes the policies of “emphasizing similarities” and “unifying morals.” I deem that these arguments discriminating and authenticating “similarities” and “differences” are worth investigating because they contain rich reasoning thoughts and the author's view of life. Also, arguments of this kind offer a glimpse on Su's thought. In this article, I take Dong-Po's Commentary of The Classic of Changes as the main text of study and discuss the differentiation of “similarities” and “differences” in it. The discussion process is as follows. First of all, I introduce the background and discourses of opposing “emphasizing similarities” in Dong-Po's Commentary of The Classic of Changes. Secondly, I explain the annotations of the hexagram lines and the methods of interpreting The Classic of Changes in this book. Then I illustrate the embodiment of its claims “being similar but different” and “being harmonious but not ganging up” in the real world, governing philosophies, and literary and artistic creations. |