Gyegok Jang Yu (張維, 1587-1638) was a prominent scholar-official who navigated the upheavals of the Japanese invasion of Korea (1592-1598), the Second Manchu invasion of Korea (1636), and the Injo Restoration while serving in senior government positions. He is widely regarded as the first to articulate the Discourse on the True and the False (眞假論) and its theoretical foundation, the Theory of Heaven-Gifted Nature (天機論), both of which later shaped key debates in late Joseon intellectual culture. Rejecting the confinement of scholarship to Zhu Xi orthodoxy, Jang Yu criticized the lack of plurality in Korean thought and embraced Yangming learning as well as Lao-Zhuang philosophy. From this standpoint, he exposed contradictions and irrationalities in prevailing values and systems. He advocated systemic renewal and extended these concerns into social thought and the arts. Although he used the true-false discourse primarily as a framework for literary criticism, Jang Yu extended the question of authenticity beyond literature to being and cognition. In the postwar milieu—marked by the stirrings of practical learning and a demand for new sensibilities in literature and art—he departed from efforts to subordinate all arts to orthodox Neo-Confucian reasoning, instead interpreting them through the Theory of Heaven-Gifted Nature. Accordingly, he argued that the calligrapher’s “mind-painting” (心畫) is the vessel that contains heaven-gifted nature (天機), while heaven-gifted nature provides the foundational ground of mind-painting. However, his writings on calligraphy often reflect a relatively fixed application of the true-false discourse. Overall, Jang Yu advances an understanding of calligraphy that emphasizes the principles of nature and the writer’s moral-emotional disposition over technical virtuosity or formal appreciation, thereby enriching mid-Joseon calligraphic aesthetics.Gyegok Jang Yu (張維, 1587-1638) was a prominent scholar-official who navigated the upheavals of the Japanese invasion of Korea (1592-1598), the Second Manchu invasion of Korea (1636), and the Injo Restoration while serving in senior government positions. He is widely regarded as the first to articulate the Discourse on the True and the False (眞假論) and its theoretical foundation, the Theory of Heaven-Gifted Nature (天機論), both of which later shaped key debates in late Joseon intellectual culture. Rejecting the confinement of scholarship to Zhu Xi orthodoxy, Jang Yu criticized the lack of plurality in Korean thought and embraced Yangming learning as well as Lao-Zhuang philosophy. From this standpoint, he exposed contradictions and irrationalities in prevailing values and systems. He advocated systemic renewal and extended these concerns into social thought and the arts. Although he used the true-false discourse primarily as a framework for literary criticism, Jang Yu extended the question of authenticity beyond literature to being and cognition. In the postwar milieu—marked by the stirrings of practical learning and a demand for new sensibilities in literature and art—he departed from efforts to subordinate all arts to orthodox Neo-Confucian reasoning, instead interpreting them through the Theory of Heaven-Gifted Nature. Accordingly, he argued that the calligrapher’s “mind-painting” (心畫) is the vessel that contains heaven-gifted nature (天機), while heaven-gifted nature provides the foundational ground of mind-painting. However, his writings on calligraphy often reflect a relatively fixed application of the true-false discourse. Overall, Jang Yu advances an understanding of calligraphy that emphasizes the principles of nature and the writer’s moral-emotional disposition over technical virtuosity or formal appreciation, thereby enriching mid-Joseon calligraphic aesthetics.
Myung-nam Lim (Tue,) studied this question.