Luo Rufang (Ming dynasty)
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Luo Rufang(Chinese: 罗汝芳, 1515–1588), also Weide (courtesy name, zì) or Jinxi (art pseudonym, hào), was a Chinese philosopher of the Ming Dynasty. He was a Neo-Confucian that was considered heir of the Yang Ming school in Taizhou. He was also an official and educator.
Luo was the student of Yan Jun (严钧),who studied from Wang Yangming's first disciple Wang Ji.[1] His student Yang Qiyuan (杨起元) called him "De wu chang shi, shan wu chang zhu".[clarification needed]
Luo created[citation needed] a new style of Xin Xue, which contained three aspects:[2]
- Seeking Humanity
- Nature heart around the main contents of "Recerting Destiny"
- Six sayings by the Emperor
He is often regarded as the forerunner of Huang Zongxi, Gu Yanwu and Wang Fuzhi.[citation needed]
Notes
References
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- Articles containing simplified Chinese-language text
- Wikipedia articles needing clarification from November 2013
- Articles with unsourced statements from November 2013
- 1515 births
- 1588 deaths
- 16th-century philosophers
- Ming dynasty philosophers
- Neo-Confucianism
- Philosophers from Jiangxi
- People from Fuzhou, Jiangxi
- Chinese philosopher stubs