Biography in English

Hsiung Shih-li (1885-), philosopher. As expressed in his most important work, Hsin weishih lun [new doctrine of consciousness only], Hsiung's system combined elements of the I-ching, the Lu-Wang school of Neo-Confucianism, and the wei-shih school of Mahayana Buddhism.

A native of Huangkang, Hupeh, Hsiung Shih-li was the third in a family of six boys. Only he and his eldest brother received any education. Apparently, their mother died when they were small children. Their father, Hsiung Ch'i-hsiang, was a poverty-stricken scholar who adhered to the Ch'eng-Chu school of Xeo-Confucianism. As a boy, Hsiung Shih-li herded cattle for his neighbors. When he was ten, his father, who was ill with a lung ailment, forced himself to take on students so that Hsiung could learn to read and write. Endowed with an unusually good memory, the boy learned to recite the San-tzu-chirig [threecharacter classic] in one day. Later, he studied the Confucian classics under his father's guidance. Hsiung Ch'i-hsiang died about 1896. On his deathbed, he told Hsiung Shih-li that fate had terminated the boy's schooling and that, since the boy was w^eak and sickly, it would be best for him to become a tailor. Hsiung Shih-li swore to his father that he would continue his education despite all obstacles. His brother Hsiung Chung-fu, Who had attended school until he was 15, often brought along books to read While Working in the fields, and Hsiung Shih-li followed his example. Hsiung Shih-li's formal education was limited to a few months of study with a country teacher named Ho. Hsiung read books on science and other modern subjects which he borrowed from a chü-jen scholar in a neighboring district. He also read essays and memorials written by contemporary reformers and the works of Wang"Fu-chih (ECCP, H, 817-19) and Ku Yen-wu (ECCP, I, 421-26), whose patriotic sentiments made their writings popular in the decades immediately preceding the overthrow of the Manchus.

In 1902, when he was 18, Hsiung Shih-li and two other young men from his district in Hupeh, Wang Han and Ho Tzu-hsin, went to Wuchang, the provincial capital, in search of political adventure. Wang and Ho joined an anti- Manchu revolutionary society called the K'ohsueh pu-hsi [science study club], and Hsiung enlisted as a private in the army. In 1904 Wang Han committed suicide in Changte, Honan, after failing in an attempt to assassinate the vice minister of finance, T'ieh-liang (ECCP, II, 952). That year, Hsiung Shih-li and Ho Tzu-hsin joined another revolutionary society. Its members met in the newspaper reading room of the Wuchang Sheng-kung-hui [Episcopal church]. Hsiung was admitted to the Army Special School. In 1906 he helped organize a military study group as a cover for anti-Manchu activities. His revolutionary agitation in the army soon came to the notice of Chang Piao, the commanding general of the garrison force, and he fled Wuchang. On returning to his native village, he found that his brothers were living in dire poverty. When they learned that the Nanchang-Kiukiang railway in Kiangsi was about to be built and that virgin land was available in Tean, a district lying between the two terminal cities, the brothers decided to try their luck as agricultural settlers.

After the 1911 rev^olution broke out, Huangkang was seized by the republican army. Hsiung Shih-li became a staff officer in the local military government. But when Yuan Shih-k'ai became provisional president of the new republic in 1912 and began to persecute Kuomintang members in Hupeh, Hsiung temporarily withdrew from politics. After Yuan's death and during the ensuing struggle for power between the Peking government of Tuan Ch'i-jui (q.v.) and the Canton government of Sun Yat-sen, Hsiung joined the southern forces and participated in the Kwangsi military expedition against Hunan in 1917-18. He then went to live in Canton and resolved to devote himself to an academic life. About this time, his eldest brother and his two youngest brothers died in succession in bleak poverty. Hsiung sought consolation in Buddhism, studying for more than a year under Ou-yang Ching-wu (q.v.), who was the organizer of the China Buddhist Association and the founder of the China Institute of Inner Learning at Nanking. He studied the rationalistic wei-shih, or "consciousness-only," school of Mahayana Buddhism. However, he soon became dissatisfied with Buddhist thought and began to construct his own philosophical system. In 1922 Hsiung Shih-li accepted an offer to teach at National Peking University. He lectured on his philosophy of "new consciousness-only" and became a close friend of Liang Shu-ming (q.v.) and Lin Tsai-p'ing. In the early 1930's Hsiung became ill. He convalesced at Hangchow and returned to Peking University in 1935.

In the spring of 1938, after the outbreak of the Sino-Japanese war, Hsiung made his way to Pishan, Szechwan. In the summer of 1939 he accepted an offer to lecture at the Fu-hsing Academy at Loshan. Some of his manuscripts were destroyed and he was wounded during an air raid there. Hsiung's stay at the academy was cut short by illness, and he returned to Pishan in the autumn of 1939. Shortly thereafter, he moved to Peip'ei, where he lived at the Mien-jen Academy, founded by his friend Liang Shu-ming.

In 1944 Hsiung Shih-li obtained the support of Chü Cheng, T'ao Hsi-sheng (qq.v.), and T'ao Chun in organizing the Research Institute for Chinese Philosophy at Peip'ei, with Chü as chairman of the board of trustees and Hsiung as director. The building was donated by Lu Tzu-ying, the mayor of Peip'ei. The only student was Chü Cheng's son Chü Hao-jan, and Hsiung soon completed his Tu-chitig shih-yao [essence of the classics]. In 1945 he lectured for a brief period at a school maintained by the Yellow Sea Chemical Industry Research Association. He then returned to Hupeh. In 1948 he taught at the National Chekiang University for a semester. He moved to Canton in the spring of 1949, but returned to Hupeh at the end of the year. The Central People's Government apparently reappointed him to Peking University in 1950. In 1956 Hsiung published a two-volume study of Confucianism entitled Yuan-ju [on Confucianism] dealing with the Confucian concepts of "kingliness without and sageness within." Hsiung's major work, Hsin wei-shih lun [the new theory of consciousness-only] , was written in classical Chinese in 1923. After many revisions, it was privately published in October 1932. Beginning in the spring of 1938, with the assistance of Ch'ien Hsueh-hsi and Han Yü-wen, Hsiung rewrote it in the vernacular and published it in three volumes (1940, 1941, and 1944). The central thesis of Hsiung's system is the perpetual transformation of reality which he describes as the "closing" and "opening" of the "original substance." In its closing aspect, the original substance tends to integrate, the result of which may temporarily be called mind. This mind itself is one part of the "original mind," which in its various aspects is mind, will, and consciousness. Elements of the I-ching, the Lu-Wang school of Neo-Confucianism (so named because of the dominant influence of the writings of Lu Hsiang-shan, 1139-1193, and Wang Yangming, 1472-1529), and the "consciousnessonly" school of Mahayana Buddhist thought are synthesized in Hsiung's work.

Extracts from Hsiung Shih-li's letters, lectures, and conversations were collected by students and friends and published in four volumes between 1935 and 1947. Entitled Shih-li yü-yao [the essence of Hsiung Shih-li], the work contains comments by the author on a variety of topics, mostly philosophical but also historical, political, and personal. A supplement was published in 1949. Hsiung's other publications included P'o p^o wei-shih-lun [refutation of consciousness-only], Fo-chia ming hsiang t'ung-shih [comprehensive explication of the Buddhist theory ofphenomena] , and Yin-ming ta-shu shan-ju [notes on higher Buddhist logic]. Hsiung Shih-li's philosophy reflects the influence of two important intellectual trends in modern China prior to 1949: Buddhist idealism and the revival and reinterpretation of Neo- Confucianism. Even under the new Communist orthodoxy, Hsiung refused to alter his philosophy. His important study of Confucianism published in 1956 did not pay even lip service to Marxism-Leninism.

Biography in Chinese

熊十力
熊十力(1885—),哲学家,如他最主要的著作《新唯识论》所表明的那样,熊的体系综合了陆、王理学和大乘佛教唯识派的思想。
熊十力湖北黄冈人,兄弟六人,行三,只有他和他的大哥读过一点书。幼年时,母亲去世,父亲熊启祥是一名笃守程朱理学的穷儒生。熊十力童年时为邻家放牛。他十岁时,患肺病的父亲为生计所迫设馆招收学生,因此熊十力学会了读书写字。他记忆力极强,一天之内就能背诵《三字经》。以后他父亲教他读儒家的经书。约在1896年,他父亲去世。临死前熊父对熊十力说,由于他体弱多病,命里注定不能上学读书,最好还是去学裁缝。熊十力对他父亲发誓一定要排除万难继续读书。他的哥哥熊中孚上学到十五岁,下地干活时常带着书阅读,熊十力就仿效他哥哥的样子。他的正规学习,只是跟塾师吴某读了几个月书。他从邻县的举人那里借了一些有关科学和时务的书来读。他还读了一些当时维新派的文章和条陈以及王夫之、顾炎武的著作,这些人的爱国精神使他们的著作在清朝倒台前一二十年中流传甚广。
1902年,熊十力十八岁时,和其他的同县两个青年——王翰和何祖新——来到武昌,想从政治上找出路。王、何二人加入了“科学补习会”这个革命团体,熊十力则去投军。王翰因行刺度支大臣铁良失败,在河南彰德自杀。当年,熊十力和何祖新又参加了另一个革命团体。这个团体以武昌圣公会阅览室为聚会地点。熊十力进了一个陆军特别学校,1906年他帮助组织十个军事学习小组,掩护其反清活动。熊十力在军队中的煽动活动引起了驻防军统制张彪的注意,乃逃离武昌。他回到家乡,见到他的兄弟辈生活极端贫困。他们听说南浔铁路将即开工,此路的中段德安县有荒地可以申请,弟兄几人决定去垦荒,试试他们的运气。
辛亥革命爆发,黄冈被革命军占领,熊十力在当地军政府中任参谋。袁世凯于1912年任临时大总统,开始对湖北国民党员进行迫害,熊十力暂时退出政界。袁世凯死后,熊十力在随后的段祺瑞的北京政府和孙逸仙的广州政府的斗争中加入南军,并参加了1917—1918年广西军队向湖南进军。此后他住在广州,决心从事学术研究。那时,他的长兄和两个幼弟都相继贫病而死。他想从佛教里找寻安慰,随欧阳竟无学佛一年多,欧阳是中国佛教协会和南京内典学院的创始人。他研究大乘佛教的唯识论。但他不久就对佛家思想感到不满,开始想要建立自己的哲学体系。
1922年,熊十力受聘去北京大学教书,讲授他的“新唯识论”,成为梁漱溟、林载平的好友。三十年代初,熊十力患病去杭州养病,1935年病愈回北京大学。
1938年春,中日战争爆发,熊十力去四川壁山。1939年夏,他受聘到乐山复兴书院讲学。在一次空袭中,他的文稿被毁,本人受伤。他因病缩短了聘期,1939年秋回壁山。不久,去北碚住在他朋友梁漱溟所办的勉仁书院。
1944年,他得到居正、陶希圣、陶钧之助,在北碚办了一个中国哲学研究所,居正任董事长,熊十力任所长。该所所址是北碚区长所捐赠。居正的儿子居浩然是该所唯一的学生。熊十力写成了《读经释要》。1945年,他在黄海化工研究协会短期讲学,以后回到湖北。1948年,他在浙江大学任教一学期。他在1949年春去广州,年底又回湖北。1950年,中央人民政府任命他在北京大学教书。1956年,熊十力出版《原儒》两卷,论述儒家“内圣外王”的思想。
熊十力的主要著作《新唯识论》是1923年用文言文写的。经过多次修订,在1932年由个人出版。1938年春初,经钱学熙、韩郁文协助,改写成白话文,分三卷在1940、1941、1944年出版。熊十力的论点,认为实在的不断变化是由于“原物”的“开”与“合”。当其“合”,则显出了原物的本象,可以暂称之为心;所谓心,是“原有心”的一部分,其各种现象即是心、意、识等。熊十力的著作综合了易经、陆、王理学和大乘唯识论的成分。
熊十力的书信、讲稿、言论由他的朋友和学生选编为四卷,在1935年和1947年出版。《十力语要》包括了熊十力关于历史、政治、人物等各方面的论述,续编在1949年出版。熊十力的其它作品还有《佛家名相通释》等著作。
熊十力的哲学思想,反映了1949年以前近代中国的两种重要思想趋向:佛家唯心论学说和理学的恢复及新释。即使在新的共产主义正统思想下,熊十力也不肯改变他的哲学思想。他有关儒家的重要著作于1956年出版,其中甚至连一句赞扬马列主义的话也没有提到。

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