Thinkers whose frameworks illuminate this section.
Phronesis (practical wisdom), arete (excellence), habituation, and eudaimonia — the conceptual vocabulary that aligns most closely with Confucian virtue ethics and pervades Chapter 3's argument about li as character formation
The examined life, socratic ignorance, and the insistence that the unexamined life is not worth living parallel the Confucian emphasis on self-examination and the rectification of one's own motivations
Practice, tradition, and internal vs external goods — MacIntyre's framework for virtue ethics in the modern world is the closest Western analogue to the Confucian insistence on practices that constitute character
Meaning as the irreducible human capacity — Frankl's logotherapy resonates with the epilogue's answer to the twelve-year-old's question about what she is for in an age when machines outperform on every measurable dimension
Experience and education, learning through doing, and the insistence that genuine understanding emerges from the friction of engagement — Dewey's pedagogy parallels Chapter 6's argument about study without thought
The rationalization of social life, the iron cage of bureaucracy, and the charismatic vs traditional vs rational-legal authority — Weber's framework illuminates Chapter 4's rectification of names in organizational discourse
Action as the distinctly human activity that takes place between persons, the public realm, and the vita activa — Arendt's framework resonates with the Confucian insistence that moral life is constituted through relationships
The amplifier that serves whatever signal it receives — Wiener's cybernetic framing of AI as indifferent amplifier is the technological substrate that Chapter 1's ren argument addresses
The knowledge worker, the abandonment discipline, and management as a liberal art — Drucker's insistence that managers need wisdom not just skill resonates directly with the junzi-as-judgment-holder argument
Attention as a moral act, the danger of affliction, and the insistence that genuine care requires total presence — Weil's ethics of attention parallels the Confucian cultivation of embodied moral awareness
The difference that makes a difference, double-loop learning, and the ecology of mind — Bateson's systemic thinking connects the Confucian insistence on rectifying the framework not just the action
Counter-productivity, the threshold where tools undermine their own purposes, and the conviviality critique — Illich's analysis of tools that exceed their proper scale resonates with Chapter 7's engagement optimization argument