ISSN 1575-2275Legal Deposit B.20995-99

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Article

'Orientalism' Dossier

Instrumentalisation of Passions, Social Regulation and Transcendence of Power in the Hanfeizi 韓非子

Albert Galvany (albert.galvany@upf.edu)
Postdoctoral researcher at the École Pratiques des Hautes Études (Religious Studies Department)

Abstract

basic aim of this article is to present, albeit it schematically, some of the fundamental elements upon which the political and philosophical proposal of the Hanfeizi, one of the most important texts of pre-Imperial China, is based. This ancient text is especially evocative for philosophy in that it constitutes a real exception in classical political theory. Whereas the principal socio-political proposals, which were to a greater or lesser extent utopian, put forward by both Western and Chinese philosophers, consider that the greatest obstacle to achieving these projects lies in the passionate nature of humans, the work traditionally attributed to Han Fei defends the idea that an ordered social body is only possible thanks precisely to that passionate side. Using this core argument as a basis, the article will not only try to clarify the specific way in which this unique ideological system is legitimised and organised, but also endeavours to show the common ideological links between the authoritarian conception of the Hanfeizi and some of the more essential aspects of economic liberalism as presented in the work of Adam Smith.

Keywords

Adam Smith, Ancient China, Han Fei, domination, legalism, liberalism

Submission date: November 2007
Accepted in: December 2007
Published in: May 2008

UOC

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