Chang has been described as a
renaissance man. He was a playwright, musician, diplomat; a lover of traditional Chinese literature and music and someone who knew both
Western and
Islamic culture. His philosophy was strongly based on the teachings of
Confucius. At the first meeting of
United Nations Economic and Social Council he quoted
Mencius stating that ECOSOC's highest aim should be to "nourish people with goodness" so that the world can be subdued. He also argued that many influential western thinkers on rights were guided by Chinese ideas. "In the 18th century, when progressive ideas with respect to human rights had been first put forward in Europe, translations of Chinese philosophers had been known to, and had inspired, such thinkers as Voltaire, Quesnay and Diderot in their humanistic revolt against feudalism," he told the
UN General Assembly in 1948. On the Universal Declaration of Human Rights drafting committee, he served both as an effective Asian delegate and also as a mediator when the negotiations reached a stalemate. He served as Vice-Chairman of the original
UN Commission on Human Rights, meaning he was next in position to the chairman
Eleanor Roosevelt, and was also the
Republic of China delegate to its committee, playing a pivotal role in the drafting of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) in 1948. Fellow delegate
Charles Malik, the
Lebanese philosopher-diplomat, who was the rapporteur compared to Vice-Chairman Chang, did not share the same ideals of universal human rights, which to him was more Western than universal, and instead he heatedly debated what they were and how they could be described in an international document. Another member of the committee confided to his diary that Chang and Malik "hate[d] each other." Yet by most accounts, Chang and Malik were the philosophical leaders of the deliberations. Malik argued for conservative Christian views, while Chang argued that the modern world should pay heed to international views, and frequently brought up Chinese philosophers such as
Mencius not because they were Chinese, but because their ideas had universal validity. In a speech, Malik stated that there were too many people to thank, but singled out Chang, who was considered a renaissance man for his work in directing plays, diplomacy, philosophy, and other intellectual pursuits, and acknowledged Chang's ideas as the philosophical backbone of the declaration. ==Further reading==