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Meritocracy
Although Confucius claimed that he never invented anything but was only
transmitting ancient knowledge (see Analects VII, 1), he did produce a number of
new ideas. Many western admirers such as Voltaire and H. G. Creel point to the
(then) revolutionary idea of replacing the nobility of blood with one of virtue.
Jūnzǐ, which had meant "noble man" before Confucius' work, slowly assumed a new
connotation in the course of his writings, rather as "gentleman" did in English.
A virtuous plebeian who cultivates his qualities can be a "gentleman", while a
shameless son of the king is only a "small man". That he allowed students of
different classes to be his disciples is a clear demonstration that he fought
against the feudal structures in Chinese society.
Another new intense idea, that of meritocracy, led to the introduction of the
Imperial examination system in China. This system allowed anyone who passed an
examination to become a government officer, a position which would bring wealth
and honor to the whole family. Though the European enthusiasm toward China died
away after 1789, China gave Europe one very important practical legacy: the
modern civil service. The Chinese examination system seems to have been started
in 165 BCE, when certain candidates for public office were called to the Chinese
capital for examination of their moral excellence by the emperor. Over the
following centuries the system grew until finally almost anyone who wished to
become an official had to prove his worth by passing written government
examinations.
Confucius praised those kings who left their kingdoms to those apparently most
qualified rather than to their elder sons. His achievement was the setting up of
a school that produced statesmen with a strong sense of state and duty, known as
Rujia 儒家, the 'School of the Literati'. During the Warring States Period and the
early Han dynasty China grew greatly and the need for a solid and centralized
corporation of government officers able to read and write administrative papers
arose. As a result Confucianism was promoted and the corporation of men it
produced became an effective counter to the remaining landowner aristocrats
otherwise threatening the unity of the state.
Since then Confucianism has been used as a kind
of "state religion", with authoritarianism, legitimism, paternalism and
submission to authority used as political tools to rule China. In fact most
emperors used a mix of legalism and Confucianism
as their ruling doctrine, often with the latter embellishing the former. They
also often used different varieties of Taoism or Buddhism as their personal
philosophy or religion.
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