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Confucianism |
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Confucianism (kənfy
`shənĭzəm), moral and religious system of China. Its origins go back to the Analects (see Chinese literature Chinese literature, the literature of ancient and modern China.
Early Writing and LiteratureIt is not known when the current system of writing Chinese first developed. The oldest written records date from about 1400 B.C. ..... Click the link for more information. ), the sayings attributed to Confucius Confucius , Chinese K'ung Ch'iu or K'ung Fu-tzu [Master K'ung], c.551–479? B.C., Chinese sage. Positive evidence concerning the life of Confucius is scanty; modern scholars base their accounts largely on the Analects, ..... Click the link for more information. , and to ancient commentaries, including that of Mencius Mencius , Mandarin Meng-tzu, 371?–288? B.C., Chinese Confucian philosopher. The principal source for Mencius' life is his own writings. He was born in the ancient state of Ch'ao, in modern Shandong prov. ..... Click the link for more information. . Early History and PreceptsIn its early form (before the 3d cent. B.C.) Confucianism was primarily a system of ethical precepts for the proper management of society. It envisaged man as essentially a social creature who is bound to his fellows by jen, a term often rendered as "humanity," or "human-kind-ness." Jen is expressed through the five relations—sovereign and subject, parent and child, elder and younger brother, husband and wife, and friend and friend. Of these, the filial relation is usually stressed. The relations are made to function smoothly by an exact adherence to li, which denotes a combination of etiquette and ritual. In some of these relations a person may be superior to some and inferior to others. If a person in a subordinate status wishes to be properly treated that person must—applying a principle similar to the Golden Rule—treat his or her own inferiors with propriety. Correct conduct, however, proceeds not through compulsion, but through a sense of virtue inculcated by observing suitable models of deportment. The ruler, as the moral exemplar of the whole state, must be irreproachable, but a strong obligation to be virtuous rests upon all. The early philosophers recognized that the epochal "great commonwealth," the union of mankind under ethical rule, would take a long time to achieve, but believed that it might be constantly advanced by practicing the "rectification of names." This is the critical examination of the degree to which the behavior of a functionary or an institution corresponds to its name; thus, the title of king should not be applied to one who exacts excessive taxes, and the criticism of the undeserving claimant should force him to reform. The practice of offering sacrifices and other veneration to Confucius in special shrines began in the 1st cent. A.D. and continued into the 20th cent. Renaissance and DeclineConfucianism has often had to contend with other religious systems, notably Taoism Taoism , refers both to a Chinese system of thought and to one of the four major religions of China (with Confucianism, Buddhism, and Chinese popular religion). The neo-Confucian eclecticism was unified and established as an orthodoxy by Chu Hsi Chu Hsi , 1130–1200, Chinese philosopher of Neo-Confucianism. While borrowing heavily from Buddhism, his new metaphysics reinvigorated Confucianism. According to Chu Hsi, the normative principle of human nature is pure and good. BibliographySee R. Wilhelm, Confucius and Confucianism (tr. 1931, repr. 1970); S. Kaizuka, Confucius (tr. 1956); H. Fingarette, Confucius (1972); The Analects (tr. 1979); W. T. de Bary, Neo-Confucian Orthodoxy and the Learning of the Mind-and-Heart (1981); R. Dawson, Confucius (1981); B. I. Schwartz, The World of Thought in Ancient China (1985). ConfucianismScholarly tradition and way of life propagated by Confucius in the 6th–5th century BC and followed by the Chinese for more than two millennia. Though not organized as a religion, it has deeply influenced East Asian spiritual and political life in a comparable manner. The core idea is ren (“humaneness,” “benevolence”), signifying excellent character in accord with li (ritual norms), zhong (loyalty to one's true nature), shu (reciprocity), and xiao (filial piety). Together these constitute de (virtue). Mencius, Xunzi, and others sustained Confucianism, but it was not influential until Dong Zhongshu emerged in the 2nd century BC. Confucianism was then recognized as the Han state cult, and the Five Classics became the core of education. In spite of the influence of Daoism and Buddhism, Confucian ethics have had the strongest influence on the moral fabric of Chinese society. A revival of Confucian thought in the 11th century produced Neo-Confucianism, a major influence in Korea during the Choson dynasty and in Japan during the Tokugawa period. Confucianism the ethical system of Confucius, the Chinese philosopher and teacher of ethics (551--479 bc), emphasizing moral order, the humanity and virtue of China's ancient rulers, and gentlemanly education http://www.wam.umd.edu/~tkang/ Confucianism ethical and political teachings that arose in ancient China and exercised an enormous influence on the development of culture, political life, and social structure in China for more than 2,000 years. The foundations of Confucianism were established in the sixth century B.C. by Confucius and further developed by Mencius (Meng-tzu), Hsiin-tzu, and other disciples. From its inception Confucianism expressed the interests of part of the ruling class (the hereditary aristocracy) and played an active role in sociopolitical struggles. It called for the strengthening of the social order and of forms of state administration through strict observance of ancient traditions, idealized by the Confucians, and through set forms of interrelations among people in families and society. Confucians believed that the existence of exploiters and exploited (in Confucian terminology, men doing mental labor and men doing physical labor) was a universal law of justice, natural and legitimate: the former were to rule, and the latter to submit to and to support the former through their labor. Struggles among various schools of thought in ancient China reflected the sharp social and political battles waged between social forces of that time. Consequently, there were contradictory interpretations by Confucianist thinkers of China’s fundamental problems, such as the concept of heaven and its role, the nature of man, and the relationship between ethical principles and the law. Ethics, morality, and state rule were the fundamental concerns of Confucianism. The concept of jen (“humaneness”) as the highest law of interrelations between people in society and in the family is the fundamental principle of Confucianist ethics. Jen is achieved by moral self-improvement through observance of li (“decorum”)—norms of behavior, based on deference and respect for elders and superiors, respect for parents, devotion to the sovereign, and politeness. According to Confucianism, jen may be achieved only by the elect, the chün tzu (“noble men”), that is, the members of the highest strata of society. Commoners, or hsiaojen (literally, “little people”), were not capable of achieving jen. This opposition of “noble persons” to commoners and the affirmation of the superiority of the first over the second, frequently encountered in the writings of Confucius and his followers, is a clear expression of the social bias and class nature of Confucianism. Confucianism devoted considerable attention to problems of “humane” rule, based on the deification of the power of the ruler. This idea existed before Confucianism but was further developed and substantiated. The sovereign was declared to be the son of heaven (t’ien-tzu), who ruled by heaven’s command and fulfilled its will. The power of the ruler was recognized by Confucianism as sacred and granted from above, by heaven. Believing that “to rule means to rectify,” Confucianism attributed great significance to the teaching of cheng ming (“the rectification of names”), which urged that each person be given his place in society and that his responsibilities be strictly and precisely defined. This found expression in the words of Confucius: “The sovereign must be a sovereign, the subject a subject, the father a father, the son a son.” Confucianism called on the sovereigns to rule the people not on a basis of laws and punishment but through virtue, through an example of highly moral behavior, on a basis of common law. The sovereigns were asked not to burden the people with heavy taxes and obligations. Mencius (fourth-third centuries B.C.), one of the most prominent followers of Confucius, even voiced the idea that the people had the right to overthrow a cruel ruler by means of insurrection. This idea was determined, in the final analysis, by the complexity of sociopolitical conditions, the presence of powerful vestiges of primitive communal relations, acute social struggles, and strife between the kingdoms that then existed in China. Criticism of individual rulers, contrasting them with “wise” and “virtuous” sovereigns of the distant past (that is, ancestral tribal chiefs)— Yao, Shun, and Wen Wang—was at times allowed in such a situation by Confucianism, which was directed at strengthening the existing social order. In conjunction with this, Confucianism preached the social utopia of the ta t’ung society (the “great unity”), the “golden age” in the history of China, when there were supposedly no wars or strife, when there was equality of all men and genuine concern for the people. Confucianism subsequently evolved by adopting many features of other ancient Chinese ideological currents, particularly Legalism. This was an objective necessity because of the formation of the centralized Han Empire, the rule of which required a flexible and ramified administrative apparatus. Confucians who had mastered the science of administration that was based on paternalism and traditions and who had assimilated Legalist methods of rule relying on law and punishment were able to head the administrative apparatus. The reformed Confucianism of the Han period strengthened its position in a society of centralized despotism. One of its main representatives was Tung Chung-shu (second century B.C.), who combined Confucian ethics with the natural philosophy and cosmological ideas of Taoism and the school of natural philosophers (yin-yang chid). In 136 B.C. under Emperor Wu Ti, Confucianism was proclaimed the official doctrine and after this remained the ruling ideology for more than 2,000 years (until the bourgeois Hsin-hai Revolution of 1911), supporting feudal-absolutist despotic power. Religious, mystical, and reactionary features were intensified. Great emphasis was placed on the ideas of heaven as a predetermining divine force, of the dependence of man and society on the will of heaven, of the divine origin of the sovereign’s power (the son of heaven), of the loyalty of the subject to the sovereign, and of the rule of the son of heaven over all peoples of the universe. In this way, Confucianism, as a ruling ideology that for centuries preached the cult of the emperor as the executor of the will of heaven instilled in the people fanatical devotion to the son of heaven, Sinocentrism, chauvinism, and a disdainful attitude toward other peoples. Confucianism as an ethical-political and religious system penetrated all aspects of societal life and in the course of many centuries determined norms of morality, family and social traditions, and scientific and philosophical thinking, hindering their further development and establishing fixed stereotypes in the consciousness of the people, particularly among the intelligentsia. Confucianism was further strengthened after an acute struggle with Buddhism in the seventh and eighth centuries A.D. An important role in this struggle was played by the well-known writer and thinker Han Yü (768–824), who sharply criticized Buddhism and defended Confucianism. The next stage of Confucianism dates to the Sung period (960–1279) and is linked with the name of Chu Hsi (1130–1200), a well-known historical scholar, philologist, and philosopher who was the founder of a revivified Confucianism—the philosophical system of Neo-Confucianism. Neo-Confucianism absorbed and preserved the basic principles of ancient Confucianism, including its reactionary theses about the permanence of the social order, the natural division of people into higher and lower and noble and base, and the supreme role of the son of heaven—the sovereign of the universe. Neo-Confucianism was also placed at the service of the ruling class and officially recognized as the orthodox ruling ideology, which until the modern period inhibited and retarded the development of sociopolitical and philosophical thinking, hindered progress in science and technology, and contributed to the isolation of China from European civilization and its progressive scientific and technological ideas. It was one factor determining the relative backwardness of China in the modern period. Neo-Confucianism played the same role in Japan, Korea, and Vietnam as in China. In the late 19th century the bourgeois reformer K’ang Yu-wei and his followers made an unsuccessful attempt to modernize Confucianism, which was entering into increasing contradictions with conditions of social life (these conditions were changing with the development of capitalistic relations in the country). Confucianism was dealt a severe blow during the period of the May Fourth Movement (1919), when along with the social and political struggle there were demands to replace the old, obsolete culture with a new, democratic, and more progressive one. Nevertheless, even after this Confucianism continued to play an important role in the social life of China. During the rule of the Chiang Kai-shek Kuomintang (1927^9), the ideology of Confucianism was placed at the service of Kuomintang reaction. Even after the formation of the People’s Republic of China, Confucianism has continued to exercise a certain influence on various segments of the population, their social psychology in particular. The Maoist leadership has also come under its influence, arming itself with the Confucian principles of Sinocentrism and of authoritarian rule of the supreme leader over unconditionally submissive masses and with the personality cult ideology. The campaign of “criticizing Lin Piao, criticizing Confucius”carried out by Maoists in 1970–75 was purely a political move aimed primarily at Lin Piao and his followers. SOURCESLun yü cheng i. (“Conversations and Opinions [Analects]” With Commentaries.) In Chu-tzu chi-ch’eng (Collected Works of Ancient Thinkers), vol. 1. Peking, 1957.Meng-tzu cheng i. (“Meng-tzu” With Commentaries.) In Chu-tzu chich’eng (Collected Works of Ancient Thinkers), vol. 2. Peking, 1957. Hsün-tzu chi chieh. (“Hsün-tzu” With Summarized Commentaries.) In Chu-tzu chi-ch’eng (Collected Works of Ancient Thinkers), vol. 2. Peking, 1957. Popov, P. S. Kitaiskii filosof Men-tszy. St. Petersburg, 1904. Popov. P. S. Izrecheniia Konfutsiia, uchenikov ego i drugikh lits. St. Petersburg, 1910. Legge, J. The Chinese Classics, vols. 1–5. Hong Kong, 1960. REFERENCESGeorgievskii, S. Printsipy zhizni Kitaia. St. Petersburg, 1888.VasiPev, V. P. Religii Vostoka: Konfutsianstvo, buddizm i daosizm. St. Petersburg, 1873. Petrov, A. A. “Ocherk filosofii Kitaia.” In Kitai. Moscow, 1940. Radul-Zatulovskii, Ia. B. Konfutsianstvo i ego rasprostranenie v laponii. Moscow-Leningrad, 1947. Bykov, F. S. Zarozhdenie obshchestvenno-politicheskoi i filosofskoi mysli v Kitae. Moscow, 1966. Vasil’ev, L. S. Kul’ty, religii, traditsii v Kitae. Moscow, 1970. Creel, H. G. Confucius: The Man and the Myth. London, 1951. Levenson, J. R. Confucian China and Its Modern Fate, vols. 1–3. Berkeley-Los Angeles-London, 1958–65. Wright, A. F., ed. The Confucian Persuasion. Stanford, 1960. L. I. DUMAN How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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