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Nammyŏng Jo Sik: The Philosophy of Moral Integrity Volume 3 of the Korean Neo-Confucian Masters Series
Nammyŏng Jo Sik (南冥 曺植, 1501-1572): Nammyŏng, though a contemporary of Toegye, pursued a different path. His thought is marked less by systematic metaphysics and more by an unwavering commitment to moral integrity (節義) and principled action. Rejecting the political corruption of his day, he cultivated a rigorous ethic of sincerity and righteousness that later generations of Confucian loyalists found deeply compelling. His legacy is felt most strongly in periods of moral and political upheaval. This volume examines the thought of Nammyŏng Jo Sik, a figure often remembered as a reclusive teacher or uncompromising remonstrant. While such images capture aspects of his life, they do not fully account for the philosophical coherence of his work. His writings articulate a distinctive vision of moral discipline, political judgment, and self-cultivation that shaped the southeastern scholarly tradition of Korean Neo-Confucianism.Nammyŏng left no systematic treatises; his corpus, preserved in the Nammyŏng jip, consists largely of memorials, letters, and pedagogical reflections. For this reason, he is sometimes regarded as a moral activist rather than a philosopher. This study challenges that view. Across diverse genres, his reflections on reverence, righteousness, and mind form an integrated framework in which cosmology, moral psychology, and political order are inseparable. Adopting a text-centered approach, this book traces recurring conceptual patterns within their historical context, with particular attention to the relation between inner discipline and political authority. Nammyŏng's severity emerges not as temperament, but as principle: a conviction that moral vigilance is the ground of legitimate rule. In this light, even his withdrawal from office appears as an effort to preserve moral integrity within public life.The Korean Neo-Confucian Masters Series has emerged from a long-standing sense that the intellectual achievements of Korean Confucianism deserve fuller recognition within global scholarship than they have thus far received. While studies of Song-Ming (宋明) Confucianism in China, and of its diverse reinterpretations in Japan, have accumulated over many decades, the Korean tradition-despite its remarkable subtlety and sustained philosophical creativity-has often remained at the margins of broader academic discussions. The present series aims, in a modest but deliberate way, to redress that imbalance. It introduces seven thinkers whose works not only defined the contours of Joseon intellectual life (朝鮮, 1392-1910) but also contributed to the wider development of East Asian philosophy.Thanks for subscribing!
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