Travel Experience:
· Japan: 1937, 1938, 1958, 1973, 1975, 1978, 1982, 1985, 1987.
· China: 1939, 1940, 1944, 1987.
· Hong Kong: 1987.
· South Korea: 1973, 1975, 1978, 1982, 1985, 1987, 1988, 1996.
· Moscow, USSR: August-September 1990.
Professional Activities:
1. Publications
· "Confucian Publications in Western Languages," Korea Journal, 12, no.7 (July 1972), 24-32.
· "The Role of Confucian Leadership and Ideology in the Political Development of Korea, 1864-1910," Journal of Korean Affairs (U.S.A.), 3, no.1 (April 1973), 21-27.
· Huang, Kan. Chu Hsi Hsing Chang (Biography of Chu Hsi). Translated from the Chinese Text into Korean. Seoul: Eul Yoo Munhwasa, 1975. 239p. (Eul Yoo Munko, 189).
· "Korean Flunkeyism of Yijo Korea Political Ideology: Its Origin and Development," In Report, the First Joint Conference of the Association of Korean Political Science and the Association of Korean Political Scientists in North America, June 9-12, 1975. Seoul: The Korean Political Science Association, 1975. pp.57-78.
· "Confucian Society under Democracy in South Korea and under Communism in North Korea," In Whither Korea: Views of Korean Christian Scholars in North America. Dallas, Texas: The Association of Korean Christian Scholars in North Korea. 1975. pp. 32-49.
· "Reconciliation and Confucianism in Korea," In Whither Korea: Views of Korean Christian Scholars in North America. Dallas, Texas: The Association of Korean Christian Scholars in North America. 1975. pp. 50-57.
· "In Search of Model to Analyze the Confucian Cultural Zone: Confucian Political Culture and Its Typology," In The Chinese Mind in the Making compiled by Thomas Hosuck Kang. Honolulu: Human Development/ East, 1976. pp. 1-26.
· "Korean Literature and Bibliography (One Chapter of the Oriental literature and bibliography including China, Japan, Korea)," In The Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science. New York: Marcel Dekker (1977). O Section. pp. 176-240.
· "The Changing Nature of Korean Confucian Personality under Japanese Rule," In Korea's Response to Japan: The Colonial Period, 1910-1945. Kalamazoo: The Center for Korean Studies, Western Michigan University, 1977. pp. 293-315. The same article appears in Korea Journal, 17, 3 (March 1977). Also In The Korea Herald (April 1977) : four days in series.
· "Changes in the North Korean Personality from Confucian to Communist," In The Politics of North Korea, edited by Jae Kyu Park and Jung Gun Kim. The Institute for Far Eastern Studies, 1979. pp. 61-110.
· "North Korean Captured Records at the Washington National Records Center, Suitland, Maryland," In The Association for Asian Studies, Committee Asia Libraries Bulletin (Feb 1979). 30-37.
· "A Bibliographical Survey on Confucian Studies in Western Languages: Retrospect and Prospect," Synthesis Philosophica (Yugoslavia), v.4, no.2 (1989), 699-711. Its Serbian translation, "Bibliografski prikaz konfucijanskih studija na zapadnim jezicima: retrospektiva i perspektive," Filozofskam Istrazivanja, 9, Sv.2 (1989). 575-586. Its translation into Chinese and published in Kung-Meng yeh pao (Taiwan), v 27, no.5 (1989). Its translation into Korean and published in The Journal of the Institute for Korean Culture (Korea), no.10 (Dec. 1989), 235-248.
· "The Confucian Paradigm for World Peace," Global Awareness Society International First Annual Meeting Proceedings, 1992, 55-60.
· "Global Religions in Global Society," Global Awareness Society International, Annual Conference Proceedings, 1993, 35-45.
· "The Thorny Road of Confucian Religion Mission to the West," Global Awareness Society International, 1994 Annual Conference Proceedings, 1994. Journal of Global Awareness, 70--79.
· "Why the North Koreans Behave As They Do," Washington, D.C.: Center for Confucian Science, 1994.
· "Is Confucianism a Religion?," Proceedings of Global Awareness Society International, 1997 Annual Conference, May 1997, 176-185.
· "The Global Model of Confucian Religion: the Universality of One God at the top and the Diversity of Religions in Practices at the Bottom," Proceedings of Global Awareness Society International, 2000 Annual Conference, May 27, 2000, 275-284.
· "A Discovery of Confucian Cultural DNA: A Comparative Analysis of Assimilations of Zhu Xi's Neo-Confucian Ideology into China, Japan, and Korea," Proceedings of Global Awareness Society International, Eleventh Annual Conference, May 23-26, 2002, 83-94.
· "In Defense of One Universal God with the Diverse Faiths To Save the World and Civilizations. The Clash of Civilizations: between Christianity and Islam," Proceedings of Global Awareness Society International, Twelfth Annual Conference, Washington Marriott Hotel, Washington, DC, May 22-25, 2003.
2. Unpublished Manuscripts
· "Asian-American Source Materials: A Bibliographical Survey," prepared for the Core Committee on Asian-American Materials. 1973. 20p.
· Romanization System of the Korean Chinese Characters (2000 Characters), Completed in 1979.
· Bibliography of Confucian Studies in Western Languages. Completed on June, 1994. (Ready for Publication)
3. Papers Presented at Conferences
· "Confucian Behavior toward the Modernization of Korea, 1864-1910." Delivered at the Annual Meeting of the Association for Asian Studies, Palmer House, Chicago. March 29-April 1,1973. 29p.
· "Confucian Society under Democracy in South Korea and under Communism in North Korea." Delivered at the 7th Annual Meeting of the Association of Korean Christian Scholars in the United States, Concordia Theological Seminary, St. Louis, Missouri, April 13-15, 1973. 30p.
· "Chuhsian Confucianism in the Making of Tokugawa Society of Japan and Yijo Society of Korea," Delivered at the Annual Meeting of the Association for Studies, Statler Hilton Hotel, Boston. April 1-3, 1974. 42p.
· "Reconciliation and Confucianism in Korea." Delivered at the 8th Annual Meeting of the Association of Korean Christian Scholars in the United States, Stony Point Conference Center, New York. April 11-13. 1974. 13p.
· "A Comparative Study in Confucianism in the Making of Tokugawa Society of Japan and Yijo Society of Korea, " Delivered at the Neo-Confucian Seminar, Columbia University, New York, October 5, 1974.
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