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Cambridge References for Afiq Hatta

The document contains a reference list in APA format of various sources on Chinese philosophy and moral philosophy. It includes book chapters from primary Chinese philosophy texts like the Analects, Mencius, Zhuangzi, Mozi, and Xunzi. It also includes translations of chapters from the Dao De Jing and Liezi. Other sources referenced include books on Chinese philosophy and the history of Chinese philosophy, as well as books on moral philosophy and selected articles. Guidelines are provided on properly citing ideas from other sources to avoid plagiarism.

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Ivy Mak
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
144 views2 pages

Cambridge References for Afiq Hatta

The document contains a reference list in APA format of various sources on Chinese philosophy and moral philosophy. It includes book chapters from primary Chinese philosophy texts like the Analects, Mencius, Zhuangzi, Mozi, and Xunzi. It also includes translations of chapters from the Dao De Jing and Liezi. Other sources referenced include books on Chinese philosophy and the history of Chinese philosophy, as well as books on moral philosophy and selected articles. Guidelines are provided on properly citing ideas from other sources to avoid plagiarism.

Uploaded by

Ivy Mak
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Reference List (APA Format is recommended)

Burton Watson, trans., “Chapter 1: Free and Easy Wandering,” in The Complete Works
of Chuang Tzu. New York Columbia University, 1968, pp. 29-35.

Burton Watson, trans., “Chapter 2: Discussion on Making All Things Equal,” in The
Complete Works of Chuang Tzu. New York Columbia University, 1968, pp. 36-
49.

Chan, WT. (1969). A Source Book in Chinese Philosophy. Princeton: Princeton


University Press.

Chapter 6 “Endeavor and Destiny” in the Liezi. Retrieved from [website link].

Chapter 17 “A Discussion of Heaven” in the Xunzi. Retrieved from [website link].

Chapter 13 “Exalting Unity III” in the Mozi. Retrieved from [website link]

Chapter 16 “Universal Love III” in the Mozi. Retrieved from [website link].

Chapter 20 “Moderation in Use I” in the Mozi. Retrieved from [website link].

Chapter 26 “Heaven’s Intention I” in the Mozi. Retrieved from [website link].

Chapter 35 “Against Fate I” in the Mozi. Retrieved from [website link].

Fung, YL. (1983). A History of Chinese Philosophy (Derk Bodde Trans.). Princeton:
Princeton University Press.

Rachels J. and Rachels, S. (2010). The Elements of Moral Philosophy (6th edition).
Boston: McGraw-Hill. pp. 32-47, 97-123, 124-145,

Sandel, M. (2009). Justice: What’s The Right Thing to Do? London: Penguin Books.

Selected Passages in the Analects. Retrieved from [website link].

Selected Passages in the Dao De Jing. Retrieved from [website link].

Selected Passages in the Mencius. (Module 2c). Retrieved from [website link].

Selected Passages in the Mencius. (Module 4b). Retrieved from [website link].

Selected Passages in the Zhuangzi. (Module 4a). Retrieved from [website link].

Selected Passages in the Zhuangzi. (Module 5a). Retrieved from [website link].

Singer, P. (1999, September 5). “The Singer Solution to World Poverty,” in The New
York Times Magazine, pp. 60-63. Retrieved from [website link].

1
Lecture Slides in Bibliography (Example only)

Nam, S. L. (2020). Categorical Imperative in Kantianism. [Lecture notes or PowerPoint


slides]. Retrieved from [website link].

Dos

 Any ideas / statements / texts that do not originate from you (or previously published
by yourself) must have their primary sources cited properly.

Don’ts

 Solely according to what the lecturer says in the lectures / PowerPoint slides / handouts.

 Directly summarize, paraphrase, or copy-and-paste a large portion of any materials.

Beware of plagiarism.

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