Formulating a Minimalist Morality for a New Planetary Order: Alternative Cultural Perspectives

Hardback: $75.00
ISBN-13: 9780824898908
Published: February 2025
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420 pages | 1 b&w illustration
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  • About the Book
  • The Westphalian model of international relations has given us a zero-sum game of winners and losers that has proven to be ineffective in addressing the pressing issues of our times. Philosopher Zhao Tingyang has argued that by conceptualizing international relations from the planetary perspective of tianxia, we can develop a sense of “worldness” that at once acknowledges the plurality of moral ideals defining of the world’s cultures and seeks practical ways to formulate a shared morality for the solidarity needed to bring the world’s people together. In this spirit, political theorist Michael Walzer, in his Thick and Thin: Moral Argument at Home and Abroad, wants “to endorse the politics of difference and, at the same time, to describe and defend a certain sort of universalism.” For Walzer “thin” morality does not mean minor or emotionally shallow morality; on the contrary, thin and intensity come together as “morality close to the bone.”

    Turning to alternative philosophies, the contributors to this volume seek to move beyond liberal thinking on a minimalist ethic to include other cultural values—those of the Confucian, Buddhist, Indian, Islamic, Ubuntu, Japanese, European, and Jewish traditions. In order to reconceive of the world as a world, these scholars seek to formulate an answer to the contemporary challenge of a fragmented and failing Westphalian “internationality,” and in so doing, to offer possible conceptions of a shared and practicable morality sorely needed at a planetary scale.

  • About the Author(s)
    • Roger T. Ames, Editor

      Roger T. Ames is Humanities Chair Professor at Peking University, cochair of the Academic Advisory Committee at Peking University Berggruen Research Center, and professor emeritus of philosophy at the University of Hawai‘i.
    • Jin Young Lim, Editor

      Jin Young Lim is a doctoral candidate in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
    • Steven Y. H. Yang, Editor

      Steven Y. H. Yang is Tianxia Project Consultant at the Berggruen China Center.
    • Roger T. Ames, Series Editor

      Roger T. Ames is Humanities Chair Professor at Peking University, cochair of the Academic Advisory Committee at Peking University Berggruen Research Center, and professor emeritus of philosophy at the University of Hawai‘i.

    Contributors

    • Michael Walzer
    • Owen Flanagan
    • Zhang Feng
    • Baogang He
    • Amita Chatterjee
    • May Sim
    • J. Baird Callicott
    • Oliver Leaman
    • Sun Xiangchen
    • Roger T. Ames
    • Xiaoyu Lu
    • Hans-Georg Moeller
    • Brook Ziporyn
    • Jin Y. Park
    • Vrinda Dalmiya
    • Workineh Kelbessa
    • David B. Wong
    • Wang Hui
    • Albert Welter
    • James Hankins