Summary: | 碩士 === 東吳大學 === 中國文學系 === 92 === This thesis consisted of eight chapters is taken the “Wonsan’s Book of Changes” as a theme to explore the conception of the Book of Changes written by Chu Da-Jun, a scholar specialized in the Book of Changes studying at Kwanton in the early of Chin Dynasty. Charter one (Prolegomenon) is to specify the studying motive, purpose, and approach, and to summarize the findings made by the people of the past. The chapter two (the Era’s Context in the end of Ming and the early of Chin Dynasties) is sketching out the times background that the Chu’s lived in, including the political society, academic ideology trend, classical learning, and the development of the Book of Changes, etc. The chapter three (Life and Writings of Chu Da-Jun) is expounding his experience, tutors, and circle of friends in terms of life, and starting with an explanation for the banning situation enforced by the Manchu Court, then, introducing several significant achievements managed by the writings since the Republic of China, and a few of books written by the Chu’s in terms of writings. Chapter four (the Written Process and Textual Criticism of Wonsan’s Book of Changes) is initially explicit the written ground of the book of “Wonsan’s Book of Changes”, the process of woodblock-craving printing, and the circulation; in next, make a more minute introduction to the six volumes collected by the Taiwan National Library, which are rarely mentioned by general scholar, compare those volumes with the 71 popular volumes, and explore the credibility of the textual criticism. Chapter five (Definition Method of the Wonsan’s Book of Changes--Part 1) is describing the definition made by Chu Da-Jun, who quotes the book based on the Book of Songs, and the Book of History and the Book of Etiquette in sequence. Occasionally, he also quotes the other historical and medical books as well as other writings written by the people of the past. Chapter five (Definition Method of the Wonsan’s Book of Changes--Part 2) is to summarize the Chu’s annotation to the Book of Changes from the whole book of the “Wonsan’s Book of Changes”, including six sections as the “Yin-Yan Message”, “Five-Element Counteraction”, “Divinatory Symbol Variation”, “Astrologic Calendar”, “Personnel Justice and Righteousness”, and “Characters Structure”, of which it will be discussed in this chapter one by one. Chapter seven (Chu Da-Jun’s Conceptions of the Book of Changes) is first to specify the basic viewpoint of the Chu’s on the author, structure, and content of the Book of Changes, and secondarily, divide the Chu’s conception to the Book of Changes into two parts as the Eight Diagrams and the Suhng Philosophy for a respective discussion. Chapter eight (Conclusion) is to generalize the whole article to presume that the Wonsan’s Book of Changes has two features and three faults, and finally, conclude the value of this book.
There are two appendixes are attached to the text; appendix 1 (Content of Chu Da-Jun’s Researching Books Since the Reign of ROC) is collected the Chu’s findings from the early of ROC to the year of 2004, to classify, manage, and edit it into a table of content for academic references, and appendix 2 (Reciprocal Compilation of the “Wonsan’s Book of Changes”) is set the preceding 64-volume as a scope to manage with the reciprocal practices, the purport of which is to emphasize the frequency of exercise of the reciprocal approach to the “Wonsan’s Book of Changes”.
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