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What should we Learn from China?
Guest lecture by Josef Gregory Mahoney, PhD
Associate Professor of Politics, East China Normal University
Senior Researcher, Central Compilation and Translation Bureau
Research Fellow, Institute for Advanced Studies, Fudan University
Firstly, as a matter of epistemological analysis, we begin by examining
the "China model" and other contemporary Sinocentric or Chinese-inspired
developments as possibly indicating the emergence of a new, alternative
discourse, with implications for theories and practices of political
economy in China and around the world. Although it is still too early to
conclude confidently that a viable, contemporary, future-oriented
"Chinese" alternative has formed, it is clear that both local and global
conditions for such change are ripe, insomuch as international crises
have eroded confidence in and exposed fault lines in Western models,
which again, we assess in epistemological terms. Secondly, we examine in
particular the "rational kernel in the mystical shell," and argue that
an understanding of Chinese Marxist dialectics remains a key to
understanding China politically and ideologically, which we demonstrate
in part through brief analyses of Mao Zedong Thought, Deng Xiaoping
Theory, Jiang Zemin's "Three Represents," Hu Jintao's "Scientific
Development Concept" and "Harmonious Society" campaign and associated
policymaking praxes. Thirdly, returning to our titular concern, we
reflect on the relative absence of dialectics in the Western
epistemological tradition, particularly in the modern period. We suggest
that a century of blending Chinese and Western thinking has given China
an edge-especially over the course of reform and opening up, when these
two epistemological traditions reached a synthesizing highpoint.
Brief Bio
Josef Gregory Mahoney, PhD, Associate Professor of Political Philosophy, Department of Politics, East China Normal University; Senior Researcher, Central Compilation and Translation Bureau under the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China; Research Associate, Contemporary China Research Center under the Institute for Advanced Studies at Fudan University; Assistant Editor of the US-based Journal of Chinese Political Science. Author of numerous papers in Chinese and English, principle areas of research and expertise include modern political thought and ideology in China and comparative Chinese and Western epistemologies.

