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Chinese
Philosophies & Religions --- Confucianism
The
age of Confucius is often described as the period of the "hundred schools"
of thought in ancient China. Of course, the designation of a "hundred
schools" did not come about on the basis of an exact count of competing
schools but rather reflects a general recognition that the period was
one of great ferment in the world of ideas, a time when many different
points of view on politics and ethics were being brought to the forefront
and actively debated.
CONFUCIUS is a latinized form of the honorific
title Kong Fuzi (Master Kong) given to a wandering scholar from the state
of Lu in Shandong Province in northeastern China (history link here).
Although little known in his lifetime, Confucius was revered as the greatest
of sages throughout most of China's history. His teaching, Confucianism,
was the state teaching from the beginning of the Han Dynasty in 202 BC
to the end of the imperial period in 1911.
Disturbed by constant warfare among the states,
Confucius taught that most of the ills of society happened because people
forgot their stations in life and rulers lost virtue. He advocated
a return to the golden antiquity of emperors Yao and Shun, when rulers
were virtuous and people knew their places. Therefore, Confucius'
primary concern lay in social relations, proper conduct and social harmony.
Confucius defined five cardinal relationships: between ruler and ruled,
between husband and wife, between parents and children, between older
and younger brothers and between friends. Except for the last case,
all of the defined relationships are between superiors and inferiors.
He emphasized the complete obedience and loyalty of the inferior to the
superior but also mentioned the benevolence of the superior to the inferior.
The ideal Confucian family was an extended one of three or four generations
in which authority rested with the elderly male members. Filial piety
(obedience to parents) was one of the most important virtues emphasized
by later Confucians.
Confucius reportedly spent his last years editing
and completing some of the books that came to be known as Five Classics.
These include the `Classic of Poetry', `Classic of History', `Spring and
Autumn Annals', `Record of Rites', and `Classic of Changes', or `I Ching'.
Memorized by scholars for generations in China, these books and four other
works, including the `Analects', a compilation of Confucian teachings,
were the subjects of civil service examinations for over 2,000 years.
Confucianism commanded a greater following
some 200 years later, during the time of Mencius, or Mengzi (371-289 BC).
He was second only to Confucius himself in shaping Confucianism.
His three main tenets were the basic good nature of human beings, the
notion of society with a distinct distribution of functions and the ruler's
obligation to the people. On the last point, Mencius elaborated on the
concept of the mandate of heaven, which allows that rulers lose support
of heaven when they cease to be virtuous. The concept served as
the basis of revolts in China and the succession of new rulers.
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