Yuan, Jinmei. "The Role of Time in the Structure of Chinese Logic." Philosophy East & West 56, no. 1 (January 2006): 136-152.
Abstract
Things
are changing all
the time. Time, then, plays a crucial role in the structure of Chinese
logic. This article uses the concept of "subjective time" and the
Leibnizian concept of "possible worlds" to analyze the structure of
logic in the Later Mohist Canon and in the logical reasoning of other
early Chinese philosophers. The author argues that Chinese logic is
structured in the time of the now. This time is subjective and "spreads
out" to more than one possible world. Chinese logicians had to deal
with relationships in not only a single world but also more than one
"possible world." The aim of Chinese logical reasoning is not to
represent any universal truth but to point out (zhi ) a
particular-world-related truth, or, in other words, the harmony of
relations among particulars in a particular field at a single moment.
Therefore, a valid Chinese logical argument represents only the beauty
of harmony among possible worlds at a given moment. The harmony
represented by Chinese logic brings to light a high level of aesthetic
order in a world that is always changing.