Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Huang-Lao> ?p ?o }
- Huang-Lao abstract "Huang-Lao or Huanglao (simplified Chinese: 黄老; traditional Chinese: 黃老; pinyin: Huáng-Lǎo; Wade–Giles: Huang-Lao; literally: "Yellow [Emperor] Old [Master]") was the most influential Chinese school of thought in the early 2nd-century BCE Han dynasty, and is generally interpreted as a school of syncretism. Like the more purely administrative Shen Buhai which became associated with "Legalism", they mostly come out of the the Jixia Academy and are usually associated with a Realpolitikal Taoism, but also sometimes Realist Confucianism. Excepting the Huangdi Neijing, most Huang-Lao texts have vanished, and traditional scholarship associates this philosophical school with syncretist Chinese classics, namely the Legalist-Taoistic Hanfeizi and Realpolitikal Taoist Huainanzi, and the more Confucian Realist Xunzi and Guanzi. Modern scholars are reinterpreting Huang-Lao following the 1973 discovery of the Legalistic Mawangdui Silk Texts, which included four manuscripts, called the Huang-Lao boshu (黄老帛书 "Huang-Lao Silk Texts"), that are controversially identified as the long-lost Huangdi Sijing ("Yellow Emperor's Four Classics").Though the primary qualifaction of the the trend is syncretism, it is suggested that, aside from the more obvious feudalism of any Confucianistic texts coming out of the Jixia Academy, the Taoistic Realpolitkal texts too were part of a broader political-philosophical drive looking for solutions to strengthen the feudal order as depicted in Zhou propoganda, opposing more absolutist-based politic like that of Qin "Legalism". For instance, the Taoistic Huainanzi includes a naturalist argument against Legalism in favour of rule by worthies on the basis that one needs their competence for such things for diplomacy. Of course, on the basis of syncretism, "Legalist" texts like the Han Feizi are still sometimes included under the heading.Huang-Lao Daoist philosophy was favoured at the Western Han courts of Emperor Wen (r. 180 – 157 BCE) and Emperor Jing (r. 157 – 141 BCE), before Emperor Wu (r. 141– 87 BCE) established Confucianism as the state philosophy. Hans van Ess (1993:173) analyzed the Shiji and Hanshu biographies of 2nd-century BCE individuals described as "Huang-Lao" followers, and found they were either members of a Huang-Lao faction or a Ru "Confucian" and Fa "Legalist" faction. The historian Sima Qian used the term Huang-Lao "as a characterization of persons belonging to a political group which was the faction he belonged to as well." These historical members of the Huang-Lao faction had three political policies in common: "opposing the campaigns in the north" against the Xiongnu, "affiliation to rich and independent families with a power-base far from the capital" at Chang'an, and "opposing the measures to deprive the feudal kings of their power."".
- Huang-Lao thumbnail LaoGod.jpg?width=300.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageExternalLink 012.HuangLao.html.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageExternalLink ?id=qxgLcrLL-IIC.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageExternalLink books?id=IPl65YAQxI8C.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageExternalLink books?id=lhAhAAAAMAAJ&dq=huang-lao+buddhism&source=gbs_navlinks_s.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageExternalLink books?id=uGZIziWmlmsC.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageExternalLink huangdisijing.html.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageExternalLink The_Huang-Lao_Tradition.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageExternalLink 12-2VanHess.pdf.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageExternalLink p-12991319.html.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageExternalLink Status_LZ.htm.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageExternalLink 4.8-Huang-Lao-2010.pdf.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageExternalLink 25182941.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageID "32145192".
- Huang-Lao wikiPageLength "18685".
- Huang-Lao wikiPageOutDegree "101".
- Huang-Lao wikiPageRevisionID "682414610".
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Book_of_Han.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Cao_Shen.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chinese_philosophy.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Category:Han_dynasty.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Category:Legalism_(Chinese_philosophy).
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Category:Taoism.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Chancellor_(China).
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Changan.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Changsha.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Chao_Cuo.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Chen_Ping_(Han_dynasty).
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_classics.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_folk_religion.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Chunqiu_Fanlu.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Confucian_Realist.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Confucianism.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Daodejing.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_Han.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_Gaozu_of_Han.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_Jing_of_Han.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_Wen_of_Han.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_Wu_of_Han.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Guanzi_(text).
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Guoyu_(book).
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Han_Fei.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Han_Feizi.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Han_dynasty.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Hanfeizi.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Hanshu.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Huainanzi.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Huangdi.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Huangdi_Neijing.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Huangdi_Sijing.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Hundred_Schools_of_Thought.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Jixia_Academy.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Laozi.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Legalism_(Chinese_philosophy).
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Li_(Neo-Confucianism).
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Liu_Ying_(prince).
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Luxuriant_Dew_of_the_Spring_and_Autumn_Annals.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Lüshi_Chunqiu.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Mawangdui_Silk_Texts.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Mohism.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Mohist.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Mozi.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Portmanteau.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Qi_(Shandong).
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Qi_(state).
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Realist_Confucian.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Records_of_the_Grand_Historian.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink School_of_Names.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink School_of_Naturalists.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Shandong.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Shen_Buhai.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Shen_Dao.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Sima_Qian.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Sima_Tan.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Sociological_naturalism.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Song_Xian.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Tao.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Tao_Te_Ching.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Taoism.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Three_Strategies_of_Huang_Shigong.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Tian.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Warring_States_period.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Way_of_the_Celestial_Masters.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Way_of_the_Five_Pecks_of_Rice.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Western_Han.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:法.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:理.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:稱.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:老子.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:觀.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:道.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:黃帝.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Wu_wei.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Xian_(Taoism).
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Xiongnu.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Xun_Kuang.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Xunzi_(book).
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Yellow_Emperor.
- Huang-Lao wikiPageWikiLink Yellow_Turban_Rebellion.