A Warring States philosophical movement focused on paradoxes about the relationship between these things and “stuff,” or shì (“shurr”). For 10 points each:
[10e] Hui Shi (“hway shurr”) and Gongsun Long were members of a philosophical grouping known as the “School of” what things?
ANSWER: names [or School of Names or Xíngmíngjiā]
[10h] Members of the School of Names typically belonged to a social group named for its focus on this activity. This activity partly titles an A. C. Graham book on Chinese philosophy in the Axial Age.
ANSWER: disputation [or dialectics or disputing or discrimination or distinction drawing or biàn zhě; accept Disputers of the Tao]
[10m] An early history of Warring States philosophy is found in Book 33 of Zhuangzi (“jwong-zuh”), which is titled for this concept. Alongside a more accessible concept, this concept names a set of pipes in the Zhuangzi and is said to be “not humane” in the Daodejing.
ANSWER: heaven [or tiān; accept “Under Heaven” or tiānxià or pipes of heaven; accept “heaven and Earth are not humane”]
<JG, Philosophy>