Lin Mosei
Lin Mosei (Chinese: 林茂生; pinyin: Lín Màoshēng; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lîm Bō͘-seng; born 30 October 1887, disappeared 11 March 1947) was a Taiwanese academic, educator, and the first Taiwanese to receive a Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degree. He was additionally an esteemed calligrapher,[1] and was a baptized Christian.
Lin Mosei 林茂生 | |
---|---|
Born | 30 October 1887 |
Nationality | Taiwanese |
Occupation | Academician |
Lin disappeared within days of the February 28 Incident in Taiwan in 1947; he is generally believed to have been killed as a part of Chinese Nationalist Party's crackdown after the island-wide civilian uprising.
Lin's second son, Lin Tsung-yi, was an academic and educator in psychiatry.
Timeline
- 1887 – Born in the city of Tainan-fu, Qing Taiwan (present-day Tainan, Taiwan), to a Presbyterian minister
- 1916 – B.A. in philosophy from the Tokyo Imperial University. He was the first Taiwanese graduate at the university.[2]
- 1928 – M.A. in literature from Columbia University in New York. He studied under John Dewey and Paul Monroe.[3]
- 1929 – Ph.D. in education from Columbia. His doctoral dissertation was entitled Public Education in Formosa Under the Japanese Administration: A Historical and Analytical Study of the Development and the Cultural Problems.[4] The paper, written in English, was not translated into Chinese until 2000.
- 1945 – Became Dean of Arts at the National Taiwan University in Taipei.
- 1947 – Disappeared on March 11.
References
- "台灣首位哲學博士 林茂生詩墨展 - 大紀元". Dajiyuan.com. 8 April 2004. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
- "與媒體對抗". Mychannel.pchome.com.tw. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
- 李筱峰. 追尋個人與民族的尊嚴─為林茂生博士論文中譯本而寫 (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 2006-07-26.
- Lin Mosei (1929). Public Education in Formosa Under the Japanese Administration: A Historical and Analytical Study of the Development and the Cultural Problems (Ph.D.). Columbia University. OCLC 62316617.
External links
- Lin Mei-chun (Mar 22, 2001). "Seventy-year-old thesis still seen as valuable today". Taipei Times. p. 2.
- 歷史的228-消失的台灣精英. 228.org.tw (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 2010-01-21.
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