Biography:Bao Jingyan

From HandWiki
Bào Jìngyán
鮑敬言
NationalityChinese
CitizenshipJin Empire
OccupationPhilosopher
Known forTaoism, proto-anarchism
Notable work
Neither Lord Nor Subject

Bao Jingyan or Pao Ching-yen (Chinese: 鮑敬言) (Pinyin: Bào Jìngyán) was a Chinese, Taoist, libertarian philosopher[1] who lived somewhere between the late 200's AD and before 400 AD.[2][3]

A successor of Laozi and Zhuang Zhou in the politically and socially-oriented strain of libertarian Taoism, Pao Ching-yen was, according to Etienne Balazs, "China ’s first political anarchist." He extended the arguments in the Zhuangzi to deeply critique State authority and power, writing that "the kings, the oppressors, exploiters of all kinds, are as guilty as the criminals who have emerged from the masses..."[4]

Bao Jingyan was the author of the treatise "Neither Lord Nor Subject", preserved in the Waipian (part of the Baopuzi) of the Taoist Ge Hong. The latter has indeed worked to refute Bao's essay. Bao was the first in China to place utopia in the field of politics. Influenced by Zhuangzi's thought, he opposed despotic absolutism.[3] Given the obscurity of Bao Jingyan's person, Jean Levi hypothesized that he could have been the pen name of Ge Hong, who would thus pass subversive theses without taking too many risks, or at the very least that Ge felt a certain sympathy towards these theses.[5] But this claim does not fit well with his Confucian-legalist political philosophy and criticisms of the disorderly political consequences of Lao-Zhuang political discourse. [6]

References

  1. Needham 1956, p. 434.
  2. Graham 2005, p. 1.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Balazs 1968, p. 123-127.
  4. Rapp 2012, p. 38.
  5. Levi 2004, p. 28-29.
  6. Knapp.

Bibliography

External links