Lee, Chung Soon. Alfred North Whitehead and Yi Yulgok: Toward a Process-Confucian Spirituality in Korea. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 2006.
Abstract
This book explores the
Confucian-Christian dialogue in Korea through a comparative study of
the cosmologies of Alfred North Whitehead (1861-1947), the founder of
process philosophy, and Yi Yulgok (1536-1584), the great scholar of
Korean Neo-Confucianism. Although their philosophical traditions are
different, Yulgok and Whitehead's perspectives on the universe were
very similar. This study argues that Whitehead's theory of eternal
object-actual entity has affinities with Yulgok's theory of
principal-material force. Their two theories, both based on reciprocal
dialectical relationships, view the world as a cosmos characterized by
the process of becoming. Accordingly, Whitehead's panentheistic
interpretation of the God-world relationship correlates with Yulgok's
Neo-Confucian notion of how the Great Ultimate relates to material
force. These two concepts suggest a balanced structure of God and the
world and offer insights into encouraging interreligious spirituality
in Korea.