Abstract: This book introduces and promotes Dr Lim Boon Keng's thoughts on Confucianism. Dr Lim is an outstanding thinker and an authority on Confucian history of Singapore. His thoughts on Confucianism represent the fusion of Confucianism and Christianity, which is unique in the history of Confucianism.
Essays Of Lim Boon Keng On Confucianism (With Chinese Translations) - Ebook written by Yan Chunbao. Read this book using Google Play Books app on your PC, android, iOS devices. Download for offline reading, highlight, bookmark or take notes while you read Essays Of Lim Boon Keng On Confucianism (With Chinese Translations).
Author by: ChunBao Yan Languange: en Publisher by: World Scientific Format Available: PDF, ePub, Mobi Total Read: 62 Total Download: 698 File Size: 42,6 Mb Description: This book introduces and promotes Dr Lim Boon Keng's thoughts on Confucianism.Dr Lim is an outstanding thinker and an authority on Confucian history of Singapore.
This made the paper into an official mouthpiece. In 1930, Lim Boon Keng, a journalist from Singapore who had been connected with Sun Yat-sen, started The Chinese Nation. A Weekly Periodical Devoted to Progress in China (Shanghai, 1930-1931).(Fig.26) It provided strong editorial support to the Nanjing government. Its deputy-editor was Edward.
In British Malaya, both Dr Lim Boon Keng and Song Ong Siang must have, on some level, realised the need to break this silence and subsequently dethrone Britain’s monopoly on the written word. In the inaugural issue of the Straits Chinese Magazine, they explain to their readers that the magazine would serve as a bridge between oriental and occidental concerns, thus undoing the stitches that.
In-depth study in one or two of important historical figures, such as Lim Boon Keng, Song Ong Siang, Wu Lien Teh, Tan Kah Kee, Tan Lark Sye and Tan Cheng Lock. Focus is on the historical and social background of the person under study, his cultural and political identity, his personal achievements and contributions, as well as the interaction between the individual actor and the larger.
As both Koh Tai Ann and John Clammer have noted, the fiction itself did not give rise to a tradition. There were desultory, individual efforts: the Straits Chinese Literary Association’s Recorder, for instance, published short and elementary efforts, while Lim Boon Keng went on to produce a novel, Tragedies of Eastern Life, in 1927.
Lim Peng Han, the fifth and youngest son of Dr Lim Boon Keng, was the first local Chinese to race in the British circuits at Donington and Brooklands between 1930 and 1934. Singapore's first local eye surgeon was Dr Tan Soo Hock, who set up Singapore's first and only private hospital for Ophthalmology, and who died in 1986 at age 87.