Confucian Orthodoxy, “Daotong” (K. Tot’ong 道統), which establishes Confucianism and Neo-Confucianism as Right Learning (正學), is an idea transcending history in the sense that it is unaffected by the passage of time or contingent factors, whereas “Daotong discourse” (道統論), which distinguishes heterodoxy from the viewpoint of Daotong, is always a historical praxis and a logic operated by a specific historical momentum. Daotong discourse had not been a topical issue in Chosŏn since the time it had accepted Zhu Xi (朱熹) and his interpretation of Confucianism as orthodoxy. Only after the Jesuits entered China in the sixteenth century to introduce their theocentric worldview and academic system that supported it did the need to update a list of heterodoxies and to re-operate Daotong discourse emerge. The Jesuits’ introduction of Western Learning (西學) did not provoke an immediate backlash from scholars in Chosŏn. Research on Western Learning by Sŏngho Yi Ik (星湖 李瀷, 1681–1763) with his open and practical attitude was a good example. However, the vigorous research on Western Learning eventually came to divide the Sŏngho School into two groups “the pro-Western Learning line” (親西派) and “the anti-Western Learning line” (攻西派), schools of thought that came into conflict. This article examines the attitudes of Sŏngho and his School members towards Western Learning, not by focusing on the dichotomy between pro- and anti-Western Learning, but by focusing on “civilization” and the “expansion of Confucianism,” because, as far as Daotong is a universal idea guaranteeing social order and the moral cultivation of individuals, it is also an idea of civilization. If viewed from the perspective of civilization, Western Learning can be regarded, not as mere heretical discourse, but as a practical and intellectual resource that can encourage moral cultivation, improve public welfare, and develop nations, and acceptance of Western Learning can be viewed as a matter of academic and technological progress rather than merely that of orthodoxy. In this context, the controversy within the Sŏngho School that attempted to include not only philosophical speculations but also practical knowledge into the essential nature of Confucianism may be estimated as being an attempt to expand Confucianism, regardless of any individual member’s stance on the issue.
목차
Abstract I. CIVILIZATION CONSCIOUSNESS AND DAOTONG II. A RENEWED LIST OF HETERODOXY III. CRITIQUING HETERODOXY, REVERTING TO ORTHODOXY IV. WESTERN LEARNING, A RESOURCE OF CIVILIZATION V. EXPANSION OF CONFUCIANISM VI. CONCLUSION REFERENCES
키워드
Confucian OrthodoxyDaotongHeterodoxyMatteo R icciS ŏngho Y i I kSŏngho SchoolWestern Learning
저자
KIM SEONHEE [ A research professor at Ewha Institute for the Humanities (EIH), Ewha Womans University, Korea. ]
한국연구원은 1970년 5월 한국 민속의 각 분야에 걸친 자료의 수집과 학술적 연구를 목적으로 '한국민속연구소'로 출발하였다. 그 후 1973년 5월 연구 분야를 확대하며 민속뿐만 아니라 한국학 전반에 걸친 연구를 위해 '한국학연구소'로 개편하였고, 다시 1989년 3월 한국의 국제적 위상의 부상과 함께 한국학 연구의 중요성이 높아짐에 따라 '한국학연구원'으로 확대, 개편하였다. 한국학연구원은 한국학 전반에 걸친 연구를 통해 지역과 민족문화 발전에 기여하며 한국학의 세계화를 위해서 학술활동을 강화하고 나아가 내·외국인에 대한 한국문화 교육을 담당하고자 한다.