Pan Pingge (; 1610âÂÂ1677), was a notable Chinese philosopher during the late-Ming and early-Qing period.
Pan was born in Cixi City, Ningbo, Zhejiang Province in late Ming dynasty in 1610. His courtesy name was Yongwei (ç¨微).
During the Shunzhi Era, Pan lived in Shanying (Traditional/Simplified Chinese: å±±é°/å±±é´; current Shaoxing), Zhejiang Province for ten years. Later Pan became a lecturer in Kunshan (æÂÂå±±; current Suzhou), Jiangsu Province.
Pan chronologically studied and inspected the philosophies of Cheng-Zhu, Lu-Wang, and Buddhist philosophy (especially the Zen buddhism). Pan discovered some subtle conflicts between these philosophical schools, and thought the Neo-confucianism developed in Song, Yuan and Ming dynasties were quite derivatives from the original thoughts or principles of Confucius and Mencius.
Pan criticized that Neo-confucianism mixed too much Zen buddhism, thus called those confucian scholars the "Monks of the Confucian Temple".
Pan considered that Cheng-Zhu School philosophically debated with Lu-Wang School is a kind of using Taoism to attack Buddhism (以èÂÂæÂ»ä½Â), and vice versa (以ä½ÂæÂȏÂÂ).
Pan's philosophy was searching for the humanity (æ±Âä»Â), and he emphasized to search truth or true knowledge from daily living and practice. Pan proposed the theories of one integrated mass (渾ç¶ä¸Âé«Â/æµÂç¶ä¸Âä½Â) and the sight from the true mind (è¦Âå¨çÂÂå¿Â/è§Âå¨çÂÂå¿Â).
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