Neville, Robert. Boston Confucianism: Portable Tradition in the Late-Modern World. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2000.
Abstract
Is it possible to be a Confucian without being
East Asian, as so many philosophers have been Platonists without being
Greek? Strangely enough, many scholars would answer in the negative,
citing the inextricable connection between Confucianism and East Asian
culture. Boston Confucianism
argues to the contrary, maintaining that Confucianism can be important
to the contemporary global conversation of philosophy and should not be
confined to an East Asian context. It promotes a multicultural
philosophy of culture and makes a contribution to Confucian-Christian
dialogue, showing that the relations among the world's great
civilizations today is not a "clash," as Samuel Huntington has argued,
but an entanglement whose roots are worth sorting and whose
contemporary mutual developments are worth promoting.