Associate Professor & Master Supervisor
Office: Kuang Yaming Building 441
Email: jlong@jlu.edu.cn
Personal Blog: The Road to Chinese Renaissance (Lectures, Prose, Poetry) http://blog.sina.com.cn/u/2082210545
Biography
Long Jing, male, born in Wenchang, Hainan Province in January 1963.
Currently he is teaching in the School of Philosophy and Social Sciences of Jilin University.
2001-2002: He got his bachelor degree at University of Toronto, Canada and finally he received his bachelor degree of philosophy as a special student.
2002: He got master degree at McMaster University, Canada.
2004: He received his master degree of philosophy when he finished his dissertation Conscience and Morality under the supervision of Barry Allen.
2009: He received his PhD from University of Guelph, Canada where he wrote his dissertation “Identity and the I” under the supervision of John Russon.
September 2012: He became an associate professor of the School of Philosophy and Sociology Sciences at Jilin University.
Research Interests
Heidegger, Phenomenology, Comparative Study of Chinese and Western Philosophy, History of World Philosophy.
Publications
Books
The Voice of Tai Chi—The Road to Chinese Renaissance (China Social Science Press, November 2019).
Pluris:Capital-Normal-University Journal of Philosophy, 2010, Vol. 2.
Papers
The Body and the Worldhood of the World, Journal of Philosophical Research, 2006, Vol. 31.
Does Everyone Have the Duty to Act in the Public Interest?
Being-in-the-World and Being-in-the-Situation, Philosophy Today, 2010, Vol. 54:3.
A Phenomenological Analysis of Heaven and Earth (The Journal of Humanities, Issue 02, 2014).
A Phenomenological Analysis of Life (Jilin University Journal Social Sciences Edition, 2015-02).
“Who Am I?”—A Phenomenological Analysis of the Basic Questions of Philosophy (The Research on Fundamentals of Philosophy, Seventh Series, 2014).
Courses
Research on Heidegger’s Existence and Time, and Professional Foreign Language (Junior Spring Semester for Undergraduate Courses).
Heidegger’s Late Philosophy (First-year Fall Semester for Graduate Course).