Jeong Yag-yong, also Jeong Yak-yong or Dasan (1762-1836), was a leading Korean philosopher during the Joseon Dynasty. He is commonly regarded as the greatest of the Silhak thinkers, who advocated that the formalist Neo-Confucian philosophy of Joseon return to practical concerns. Jeong Yag-yong and his brothers were also among the earliest Korean converts to Roman Catholicism.
In the service of this idea, Jeong criticized the philosophers of his time for engaging in both fruitless etymological scholarship and pursuing philosophical theory for its own sake. He argued that scholarship should be re-focused on more important concerns such as music, ritual, and law. This was not only an intellectual but a political assertion: he argued that the gwageo examinations by which people qualified for royal service should be reformed to focus on these concerns.
At birth, his father gave Jeong the courtesy name Gwi-nong, (귀농/歸農), which means "returning to the land." This reflected his father's decision to leave government service in the wake of King Yeongjo's murder of the crown prince.
As a Roman Catholic, he received the baptismal name John, or 요한 (Yo-Han), in Korean.
After his death, the King bestowed on Jeong the posthumous name Mun-do (문도/文度). "Mun" refers to writing or literature, and "do" to law.
Korean philosophers | 1762 births | 1836 deaths | Joseon Dynasty people
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