cai_yuan_pei
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| ===== Biography ===== | ===== Biography ===== | ||
| - | Cai Yuanpei (蔡元培) was one of the most influential educators and thinkers of modern China, widely credited with transforming Chinese higher education during the turbulent transition from the Qing dynasty to the Republic of China. Born in Shaoxing, Zhejiang Province, Cai received a rigorous classical education in the Confucian tradition, passing the imperial examination at a young age and earning the prestigious jinshi degree, after which he briefly served as an official in the Qing court. The defeat of China in the First Sino-Japanese War (1894–1895) shook his faith in the old order and redirected him toward education as the path to national renewal. He resigned his imperial post, founded patriotic schools, and studied abroad in Japan, Germany (notably at Leipzig under [[wilhelm_wundt|Wilhelm Wundt]]), and France, absorbing German philosophy and aesthetics, French republican ideals, and Anglo-American educational thought. In 1912 he served as the first Minister of Education of the Republic of China, and from 1916 to 1927 he was chancellor of Peking University (Beida), which under his leadership became the cultural epicenter of the New Culture and May Fourth movements. Cai also founded and presided over the Academia Sinica in 1928 and remained a lifelong advocate of women' | + | Cai Yuanpei (蔡元培, Thái Nguyên Bồi) was one of the most influential educators and thinkers of modern China, widely credited with transforming Chinese higher education during the turbulent transition from the Qing dynasty to the Republic of China. Born in Shaoxing, Zhejiang Province, Cai received a rigorous classical education in the Confucian tradition, passing the imperial examination at a young age and earning the prestigious jinshi degree, after which he briefly served as an official in the Qing court. The defeat of China in the First Sino-Japanese War (1894–1895) shook his faith in the old order and redirected him toward education as the path to national renewal. He resigned his imperial post, founded patriotic schools, and studied abroad in Japan, Germany (notably at Leipzig under [[wilhelm Wundt|Wilhelm Wundt]]), and France, absorbing German philosophy and aesthetics, French republican ideals, and Anglo-American educational thought. In 1912 he served as the first Minister of Education of the Republic of China, and from 1916 to 1927 he was chancellor of Peking University (Beida), which under his leadership became the cultural epicenter of the New Culture and May Fourth movements. Cai also founded and presided over the Academia Sinica in 1928 and remained a lifelong advocate of women' |
| ===== Key Contributions ===== | ===== Key Contributions ===== | ||
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| When Cai took the chancellorship of Peking University in 1916, the institution still functioned as a training ground for imperial-style officials and its students regarded a degree primarily as a credential for bureaucratic appointment. Cai rebuilt the university around a single criterion — scholarly capacity — and summarized his hiring philosophy in the enduring four-character slogan jianrong bingbao (兼容并包), | When Cai took the chancellorship of Peking University in 1916, the institution still functioned as a training ground for imperial-style officials and its students regarded a degree primarily as a credential for bureaucratic appointment. Cai rebuilt the university around a single criterion — scholarly capacity — and summarized his hiring philosophy in the enduring four-character slogan jianrong bingbao (兼容并包), | ||
| - | * Cai, Y. (2006). Daxue de yiyi [The meaning of the university] (J. Ye, Ed.). Shandong wenyi chubanshe. | ||
| - | * Wu, G. (2012). Cai Yuanpei gaodeng jiaoyu guanli sixiang yanjiu [Research on Cai Yuanpei' | ||
| - | * Wang, Y. (2007). Cai Yuanpei daxue jiaoyu sixiang lungang [An outline of Cai Yuanpei' | ||
| - | * Lin, X. D. (2012). Peking University: Chinese scholarship and intellectuals, | ||
| ==== The Five-Dimensional Educational Philosophy ==== | ==== The Five-Dimensional Educational Philosophy ==== | ||
| Line 29: | Line 25: | ||
| **5. Aesthetic education: | **5. Aesthetic education: | ||
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| - | * Cai, Y. (2011). Cai Yuanpei jiaoyu lunzhu xuan [Selected articles of Cai Yuanpei' | ||
| - | * Tang, G. (2009). Ziyou yu hexie: Cai Yuanpei wuyu bingju guan yanjiu [Freedom and harmony: Research on Cai Yuanpei' | ||
| - | * Li, Q. (2017). Caiyuanpei "yi meiyu dai zongjiao" | ||
| ==== Aesthetic Education and " | ==== Aesthetic Education and " | ||
| Cai is best known philosophically for his proposal that aesthetic education should take the place of religion in modern Chinese life (以美育代宗教). Drawing on the classical Six Arts, on Aristotle and Kant, and on his deep engagement with German aesthetics, Cai argued that cultivated feeling — the capacity to be moved by music, poetry, ritual, and fine art — could supply the moral and spiritual formation that religion had traditionally provided, while remaining compatible with scientific rationalism. He opened aesthetics courses at Peking University, drafted the textbook himself, and used his ministerial office to embed aesthetic education in national curricula. The thesis provoked some of the most consequential intellectual debates of the Republican era, but it also established aesthetic education as a recognized field in China and made Cai its founding figure. | Cai is best known philosophically for his proposal that aesthetic education should take the place of religion in modern Chinese life (以美育代宗教). Drawing on the classical Six Arts, on Aristotle and Kant, and on his deep engagement with German aesthetics, Cai argued that cultivated feeling — the capacity to be moved by music, poetry, ritual, and fine art — could supply the moral and spiritual formation that religion had traditionally provided, while remaining compatible with scientific rationalism. He opened aesthetics courses at Peking University, drafted the textbook himself, and used his ministerial office to embed aesthetic education in national curricula. The thesis provoked some of the most consequential intellectual debates of the Republican era, but it also established aesthetic education as a recognized field in China and made Cai its founding figure. | ||
| - | |||
| - | * Nie, Z. (2012). Cai Yuanpei meixue sixiang yanjiu [Research on Cai Yuanpei' | ||
| - | * Nie, Z. (1984). Cai Yuanpei jiqi meixue sixiang [Cai Yuanpei and his thoughts on aesthetics]. Tianjin renmin chubanshe. | ||
| - | * Zhang, X. (2010). Cai Yuanpei ping zhuan [Commentary on Cai Yuanpei' | ||
| ==== Common Education and National Literacy ==== | ==== Common Education and National Literacy ==== | ||
| Parallel to his work in higher education, Cai developed an influential conception of " | Parallel to his work in higher education, Cai developed an influential conception of " | ||
| - | |||
| - | * Wang, Y. (2009). Cai Yuanpei putong jiaoyu sixiang lungang [An outline of Cai Yuanpei' | ||
| - | * Cai, Y. (1997). Cai Yuanpei yu jindai Zhongguo [Cai Yuanpei and modern China]. Shanghai shehui kexueyuan chubanshe. | ||
| - | * Gao, P. (1980). Cai Yuanpei nianpu [A chronicle of Cai Yuanpei]. Zhonghua shuju. | ||
| ==== Women' | ==== Women' | ||
| Cai was among the earliest and most courageous advocates of women' | Cai was among the earliest and most courageous advocates of women' | ||
| - | |||
| - | * Cai, Y. (1997). Cai Yuanpei yu jindai Zhongguo [Cai Yuanpei and modern China]. Shanghai shehui kexueyuan chubanshe. | ||
| - | * Cheng, X. (2011). Wannian Cai Yuanpei [Cai Yuanpei in his late years]. Shanghai wenhua chubanshe. | ||
| - | * Liang, Z., & Wang, S. (Eds.). (1995). Cai Yuanpei yu Beijing Daxue [Cai Yuanpei and Peking University]. Shanxi jiaoyu chubanshe. | ||
| ==== Cai Yuanpei' | ==== Cai Yuanpei' | ||
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| * Cai, Y., & Gao, P. (1987). Cai Yuanpei jiaoyu lun ji [A collection of Cai Yuanpei' | * Cai, Y., & Gao, P. (1987). Cai Yuanpei jiaoyu lun ji [A collection of Cai Yuanpei' | ||
| * Cai, Y., Gao, P., & Wang, S. (2000). Cai Yuanpei shuxin ji [The collection of Cai Yuanpei' | * Cai, Y., Gao, P., & Wang, S. (2000). Cai Yuanpei shuxin ji [The collection of Cai Yuanpei' | ||
| - | * Gao, P. (1980). Cai Yuanpei nianpu [A chronicle of Cai Yuanpei]. Zhonghua shuju. | + | |
| - | * Liang, Z., & Wang, S. (Eds.). (1995). Cai Yuanpei yu Beijing Daxue [Cai Yuanpei and Peking University]. Shanxi jiaoyu chubanshe. | + | |
| - | * Li, Q. (2017). Caiyuanpei "yi meiyu dai zongjiao" | + | |
| - | * Nie, Z. (2012). Cai Yuanpei meixue sixiang yanjiu [Research on Cai Yuanpei' | + | |
| - | * Tang, G. (2009). Ziyou yu hexie: Cai Yuanpei wuyu bingju guan yanjiu [Freedom and harmony: Research on Cai Yuanpei' | + | |
| - | * Wang, Y. (2009). Cai Yuanpei putong jiaoyu sixiang lungang [An outline of Cai Yuanpei' | + | |
| - | * Lin, X. D. (2012). Peking University: Chinese scholarship and intellectuals, | + | |
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