JOURNAL ARTICLES
& Book Chapters
Asterisks indicate refereed publications; sole-authored unless otherwise indicated.
Introduction: Cognitive Science and Chinese Philosophy
“Introduction: Cognitive Science and Chinese Philosophy,” in Huang, Kevin and Edward Slingerland (editors), Guoji Hanxue luncong 國際漢學論叢 Special Issue on Chinese Philosophy and Cognitive Science, Jao Tsung-I Academy of Sinology in Hong Kong, in press.
Response to Jim Behuniak
“Response to Jim Behuniak,” Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 18.3: 485-488 (2019).
Modeling the Contested Relationship between Analects, Mencius, and Xunzi: Preliminary Evidence from a Machine-Learning Approach
Nichols, Ryan, Edward Slingerland, Kristoffer Nielbo, and Uffe Bergeton. “Modeling the Contested Relationship Between Analects, Mencius, and Xunzi: Preliminary Evidence from a Machine- Learning Approach,” (PDF) Journal of Asian Studies 77.1: 19-57 (2018). *
The Distant Reading of Religious Texts: A “Big Data” Approach to Mind-Body Concepts in Early China
Slingerland, Edward, Ryan Nichols, Kristoffer Nielbo and Carson Logan. “The Distant Reading of Religious Texts: A “Big Data” Approach to Mind-Body Concepts in Early China,” (PDF) Journal of the American Academy of Religion 85.4: 985–1016 (2017). *
Crafting Bowls, Cultivating Sprouts: Unavoidable Tensions in Early Chinese Confucianism
“Crafting Bowls, Cultivating Sprouts: Unavoidable Tensions in Early Chinese Confucianism,” (PDF) Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 14.2: 211-218. *
Classical Confucianism (I): Confucius and the Lun-Yü
“Classical Confucianism (I): Confucius and the Lun-Yü,” in Routledge History of Chinese Philosophy, ed. Bo Mou, 107-136. London: Routledge, 2008.
Images of Women in the Analects of Confucius
“Images of Women in the Analects of Confuciusn” in Images of Women in Chinese Thought and Culture, ed. Robin Wang, New York: Hackett Publishing Company, 2003: 62-67.
Annotated translation of and introduction to selections from the Analects
Annotated translation of and introduction to selections from the Analects (with critical bibliography), in Readings in Classical Chinese Philosophy, ed. P.J. Ivanhoe and Bryan Van Norden, Seven Bridges Press (August 2000): 1-53.
The Conception of Ming [“Fate”] in Early Chinese Thought
“The Conception of Ming [“Fate”] in Early Chinese Thought,” Philosophy East and West 46.4 (1996): 567-581. *