- Gongsun Long
Gongsun Long (zh-tspw|t=公孫龍|s=公孙龙|p=Gōngsūn Lóng|w=Kung-sun Lung, ca. 325–250 BC [Zhou, Yunzhi, [http://www.wordpedia.com/search/Content.asp?ID=56458 "Gongsun Long"] . "
Encyclopedia of China " (Philosophy Edition), 1st ed.] [Liu 2004, p. 336] ) was a member of theLogicians school of ancientChinese philosophy . He also ran a school and enjoyed the support of rulers, and supported peaceful means of resolving disputes in contrast to the wars which were common in the period (the so-calledWarring States Period ). However, little is known about the particulars of his life, and furthermore many of his writings have been lost.McGreal 1995, p. 31] All of his essays, fourteen originally but only six still extant, are included in the book "Gongsun Longzi" (公孫龍子).He is best known for a series of
paradox es in the tradition ofHui Shi , including "White horses are not horses," "When no thing is not the pointed-out, to point out is not to point out," and "There is no 1 in 2."White Horse Dialogue
In the "White Horse Dialogue" (白馬論, "Báimǎ Lùn"), one interlocutor (sometimes called the "sophist") defends the truth of the statement "White horses are not horses," while the other interlocutor (sometimes called the "objector") disputes the truth of this statement. The argument plays upon an ambiguity in Chinese (which happens to also exist in English). The expression "X is not Y" (X非Y) can mean either
# "X is not a member (or subset) of set Y"
# "X is not identical with Y""Whales are not mammals" and "You are not a philosopher" are examples of the former use of "is not." An example of the second use of "is not" is "Jimmy Olsen is not Superman." Normally, in Chinese and English, it is clear from context which sense is intended, so we do not notice the ambiguity. So the sentence "White horses are not horses" would normally be taken to assert the obviously false claim that white horses are not part of the group of horses. However, the "sophist" in the "White Horse Dialogue " defends the statement under the interpretation, "White horses are not identical with horses." The latter statement is actually true, since (as the "sophist" in the dialogue explains) "horses" includes horses that are white, yellow, brown, etc., while "white horses" includes only white horses, and excludes the others.This work has been viewed by some as a serious logical discourse, by others as a facetious work of
sophistry , and finally by some as a combination of the two.cite journal | author=Harbsmeier, Christoph| title=Humor in Ancient Chinese Philosophy| journal=Philosophy East and West| year=1989| volume=39| issue=3| page=289-310| url=http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0031-8221%28198907%2939%3A3%3C289%3AHIACP%3E2.0.CO%3B2-B | pages=289 | doi=10.2307/1399450]Other works
* 指物論 ("Zhǐwù Lùn")
* 通變論 ("Tōngbiàn Lùn")
* 堅白論 ("Jiānbái Lùn")
* 名實論 ("Míngshí Lùn")
* 跡府 ("Jifǔ") "Storehouse of Traces"Notes
References
* Graham, Angus C. (1989). 'The Sharpening of Rational Debate: The Sophists.' Pp. 75-95 in Graham, "Disputers of the Tao." Chicago: Open Court Press.
* Liu, Jianguo (2004). "Distinguishing and Correcting the pre-Qin Forged Classics". Xi'an: Shaanxi People's Press. ISBN 7-224-05725-8.
* Zhou, Yunzhi, [http://www.wordpedia.com/search/Content.asp?ID=56458 "Gongsun Long"] . "Encyclopedia of China " (Philosophy Edition), 1st ed.External links
* (In Chinese)
* [http://chinese.dsturgeon.net/text.pl?node=11553&if=en Full text of Gongsun Longzi]
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/school-names/#6 Section on Gongsun Longzi in article in "Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy" on the "School of Names."]
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