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This is a Korean name; the family name is Jeong.
First Prime Minister in Joseon Dynasty
Hangul 정도전
Hanja 鄭道傳
Revised Romanization Jeong Dojeon
McCune–Reischauer Chŏng Tojŏn
Pen name
Hangul 삼봉
Hanja 三峰
Revised Romanization Sambong
McCune–Reischauer Sambong
Courtesy name
Hangul 종지
Hanja 宗之
Revised Romanization Jongji
McCune–Reischauer Jongji

Jeong Dojeon (1342-1398), also known by the pen name Sambong, was the most powerful medieval Korean aristocrat and politician in the early Joseon dynasty. He was also an influential Neo-Confucian ideologue and was the number one supporter and a close advisor to King Taejo, who founded the Joseon dynasty.

Contents

[edit] Background and early career

Jeong Dojeon was born from a noble family in Chungcheongbuk-do Danyanggun, Sambong, in the present-day of South Korea. His family had emerged from commoner status some four generations before, and slowly climbed up the ladder of government service. His father was the first in the family to obtain a high post. Unfortunately Jeong's mother was his concubine, which made it very difficult for him to gain power in his early days. Despite all his difficulties, he became a student of Yi Saek and with other leading thinkers of the time such as Jeong Mong-ju, his penetrating intelligents started to effect on Korean politics.

[edit] Relationship with Yi Seonggye

Jeong's ties with Yi Seonggye and the foundation of Joseon, were extremely close. He is said to have compared his relationship to Yi to that between Zhang Liang and Gaozu of Han. Jeong's political ideas had a lasting impact on Joseon Dynasty politics and laws.

The two first became acquainted in 1383, when Jeong visited Yi at his quarters in Hamgyong province.

[edit] Intellectual activity

Jeong Dojeon was a major opponent of Buddhism at the end of the Goryeo period. He was a student of Zhuxi's thought. Using Cheng-Zhu Neo-Confucian philosophy as the basis of his anti-Buddhist polemic, he criticized Buddhism in a number of treatises as being corrupt in its practices, and nihilistic and antinomian in its doctrines. The most famous of these treatises was the Bulssi japbyeon ("Array of Critiques Against Buddhism" ). He was a founding member of the Seonggyungwan, the royal Confucian academy, and one of its early faculty members.

Jeong was among the first Korean scholars to refer to his thought as silhak, or "practical learning." However, he is not usually numbered among the members of the Silhak tradition, which arose much later in the Joseon period.

[edit] Political thought

Jeong argued that the government, including the king himself, exists for the sake of the people. Its legitimacy could only come from benevolent public service. It was largely on this basis that he legitimized the overthrow of the Goryeo dynasty, arguing that the Goryeo rulers had given up their right to rule.

Jeong divided society into three classes: a large lower class of agricultural laborers and craftsmen, a middle class of literati, and a small upper class of bureaucrats. Anyone outside this system, including Buddhist monks, shamans, and entertainers, he considered a "vicious" threat to the social fabric.

[edit] References

  • Han Yeong-u. (1974). Jeong Do-jeon's philosophy of political reform. Korea Journal 14(7-8). Reprinted in Lee et al. (2004), Korean philosophy: Its tradition and modern transformation, pp. 55-74. Seoul: Hollym. ISBN 1-56591-178-4
  • Korean Institute of Philosophical Thought. (1995). 강좌 한국철학 (Gangjwa Hanguk Cheolhak, Guide to Korean philosophy), pp. 333-345. Seoul: Yemoon Seowon. ISBN 89-7646-032-4.

[edit] See also




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