TITLE:
The Philosophy of Mind (Xinxue) System of Wang Yangming
AUTHORS:
Cheng Gong
KEYWORDS:
Xinxue (The Philosophy of Mind), System, Trilogy (Tao, Morals and Doing), Artificial Products, Artificial Materials, Spiritual Wealth, Brightness
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Philosophy,
Vol.16 No.1,
January
23,
2026
ABSTRACT: Wang Yangming (October 31, 1472-January 9, 1529), a Ming Dynasty Chinese philosopher, inherited the teachings of Confucius and Mencius from antiquity and integrated them with the Neo-Confucian thought of the Song and Ming eras. Building on these foundations, he developed their core principles and established Xinxue (The Philosophy of Mind). To this day, scholars worldwide continue to engage in extensive research and debate on Xinxue, yet systematic exploration of its theoretical framework remains limited. This article addresses this gap by proposing a systematic framework that synthesizes the key tenets of Xinxue into a coherent structure. The framework consists of three hierarchical layers: the Tao layer (“Mind is Principle.”), the Morals layer (“Reaching Conscience”), and the Doing layer (“Unity of Knowledge and Action”). Organized sequentially as “Tao No. 1, Morals No. 2, Doing No. 3.”, this structure aligns with the principle of systemic progression—moving from the top layer to the middle and lower layers—and is thus termed the “Xinxue System”.