Sunday, August 10, 2025

(S12) (1140823) (ChatGPT, 2025-8-10) (自體的心理學)(車行哲學)除了巨嬰國 (武志紅,2016)之外,有沒有其他中國的學者,寫過批判中國人的內心世界的書或論文?

 You’re asking for Chinese-language works—by scholars, writers, critics—that offer critical psychological (or cultural‑psychological) insights into the inner world of the Chinese people, beyond 武志红’s 巨婴国. Here are some notable works and authors that have taken similarly bold stances:





Important Works Critically Engaging the Chinese Psyche




柏楊 — 《醜陋的中國人》 (“The Ugly Chinese”)



A classic polemic that helped spark national introspection in the 1980s, describing “醬缸文化” (fermentation‑jar culture) and calling for collective self-awareness.




鍾祖康 — 《來生不做中國人》 (“In the Next Life, Don’t Want to Be Chinese”)



A provocative collection of essays critiquing cultural habits, moral norms, and political structures, and juxtaposing Chinese society with Northern European ideals.




陳破空 — 《不受歡迎的中國人》 (“The Unwelcome Chinese”)



A bold account asserting that “the world hates the Chinese,” examining cultural and behavioral patterns like self-preservationism, lack of collective empathy, and moral decay across society.




邓晓芒 — 《灵魂之旅》 (“Journey of the Soul”)



An incisive literary critique of modern Chinese writers—such as Mo Yan and Shi Tiesheng—highlighting recurrent psychological patterns: absence of love, childlike attachment, spiritual stagnation, and self-deception under cultural pressure.




梁晓聲 — 《中國人的人性與人生》 (“The Chinese People’s Humanity and Lives”)



A humane yet tough sociocultural dissection of contemporary Chinese people’s psychological and moral condition, offering both critique and a measured hope for change.




劉再復 — 《性格組合論》《人論二十五種》



Literary critic and social psychologist whose works dissect personality types and moral shadows within contemporary Chinese society, expressing concern about spiritual decline and loss of conscience.






Additional Academic Perspectives




“Chinese Modernity and the Individual Psyche” (ed. Andrew Kipnis, 2012)



A scholarly collection examining how modernization in China reshapes individual psychology, framed through psychological anthropology. Though edited in English, it includes insightful contributions by Chinese scholars.




“Beyond the Chinese Face”



While not deeply critical, this psychology text explores cultural dimensions of “face”, academic expectations, and family dynamics through a cultural-psychological lens.






Summary



These authors and works span genres—essay, literary criticism, social observation—and converge on a shared concern: the inner struggles, moral blind spots, and psychological paralysis within Chinese culture, whether rooted in tradition or induced by modern pressures.


If you’d like, I can help you frame these into a comparative conceptual map—grouping them by tone (biting satire vs. empathetic critique), type of insight (cultural norm critique vs. psychological typology), or rhetorical style. Just let me know!