Thomé H. Fang


Thomé H. Fang was a Chinese philosopher. He was described by Charles A. Moore as the "greatest philosopher of China" and by Vincent Shen as "one of the most creative contemporary Chinese philosophers."

Biography

Thomé H. Fang was born on 9 February 1899 of a family in Tongcheng, Anhui, China, that was known for producing prominent scholars, thinkers, and men of letters in Chinese classics, including several Royal Tutors at the Imperial Palace during the Ming and Qing Dynasties. Thomé H. Fang was the 16th generation descendant of Fang Bao, a Qing dynasty scholar and one of the founders of the Tongcheng School, and a relative of his contemporary Fang Chih, a Chinese diplomat. He was taught the Chinese classics while he was young, and later studied at Jinlin University in Nanjing, where he took courses from John Dewey on ancient Western philosophy. He attended the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and completed an MA in philosophy and pursued a doctorate comparing British and American realism.
From 1925 to 1948, Thomé H. Fang taught at several universities in China, mostly at the National Central University, in Nanjing and Chongqing. Then he taught at National Taiwan University.

Works

Chinese Philosophy: Its Spirit and Its Development, Linking Publishing Co., Ltd, Taipei, 1981, 1986The Chinese View of Life: The Philosophy of Comprehensive Harmony, Linking Publishing Co., Ltd., Taipei, 1980, 1981, 1986Creativity in Man and Nature: A Collection of Philosophical Essays, Linking Publishing Co., Ltd., Taipei, 1980, 1983Chinese Philosophy: Its Spirit and Its Development, Linking Publishing Co., Ltd., Taipei, 1981, 1981, 1986Philosophy of Life, Creativity, and Inclusiveness,Three Types of Philosophical Wisdom, 重慶版時事新報學燈,26 June 1983.Primordial Confucianism and Taoism, Taipei, 1983.Chinese Mahayana Buddhism, Taipei, 1984.Neo-Confucianism in Sung, Ming and Ch'ing Periods ), Taipei, 1983.