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LovinsChristopher

Lovins, Christopher
Korean History and Civilization
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The King’s Reason: Yi Song-gye and the Centralization of Power in early Choson

Author(s)
Lovins, Christopher
Issued Date
2006
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/20710
Fulltext
http://gsis.korea.ac.kr/kris-contents
Citation
KOREA REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES, v.9, no.1, pp.51 - 65
Abstract
This paper examines the founder of Chosŏn, Yi Sŏng-gye. Contrary to the usual depiction of him as a Confucian revolutionary, the author’s research has uncovered a leader that, though deeply committed to Buddhism on a personal level, possessed a realistic outlook that lead to the establishment of Neo-Confucianism as the official ideology of his new dynasty. This paper discusses the political expediency of Neo-Confucianism for centralizing power under Yi Sŏng-gye’s new government. It concludes that the founder’s support of Neo-Confucian stemmed from practical rather than ideological considerations, thus shedding new light on the conventional conception of Yi Sŏng-gye.
Publisher
Global Research Institute, Korea University
ISSN
1226-4741

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