Forum focuses on civilizational exchange & modernization dev’t

BEIJING: More than 100 scholars from home and abroad engaged in dialogue at the Wuyi Forum to activate traditional Chinese wisdom in response to contemporary challenges.
The forum was hosted by Renmin University of China and the Nanping government in Wuyishan, Nanping city, Fujian province on March 22. “The development of socialism with Chinese characteristics provides momentum, not resistance to the world and human progress. It brings blessings, not threats,” emphasizes Qin Xuan, a professor at Renmin University of China.
He stresses that socialism with Chinese characteristics has demonstrated the vitality of socialism to the world and expanded the pathways for developing countries to achieve modernization. This is a path that centers on the people and prioritizes their interests. Only by adhering to a people-centered approach and fully leveraging the creative spirit of the public can modernization gain inexhaustible momentum, Qin says.
Young-Seo Baik, emeritus professor at Yonsei University, South Korea and an expert in East Asia and China’s modern and contemporary history, suggests that the world should seek new paths for modern civilizational transformation from classical Chinese thought.
“To achieve the coexistence of tradition and modernity, we need to introduce the perspective of civilizational exchange,” he says.
He proposes the integration of Chinese philosophy into daily life to break rigid self-perceptions and reshape interactions between individuals and the world, and combine Neo-Confucianism with institutional innovation to explore how traditional culture can better drive reform and development.
Robert Chard, emeritus professor at St Anne’s College, University of Oxford and a visiting professor at the Peking University’s Department of History, shares his observations from decades of teaching Chinese students.
He notes that many Chinese students possess a far deeper understanding of Western civilization than Western students do of Chinese civilization — and sometimes even more than Western students know about their own culture. –The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item