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Themes in Confucian thought
A simple way to appreciate Confucian thought is to consider it as being based on
varying levels of honesty. In practice, the elements of Confucianism accumulated
over time and matured into the following forms:
Ritual
Ritual originally signified "to sacrifice" in a religious ceremony. In
Confucianism the term was soon extended to include secular ceremonial behavior
before being used to refer to the propriety or politeness which colors everyday
life. Rituals were codified and treated as an all-embracing system of norms.
Confucius himself tried to revive the etiquette of
earlier dynasties, but following his death he himself became regarded as the
great authority on ritual behavior.
Relationships
One theme central to Confucianism is that of relationships, and the differing
duties arising from the different status one held in relation to others.
Individuals are held to simultaneously stand in different degrees of
relationship with different people, namely, as a junior in relation to their
parents and elders, and as a senior in relation to their children, younger
siblings, students, and others. While juniors are considered in Confucianism to
owe strong duties of reverence and service to their seniors, seniors also have
duties of benevolence and concern toward juniors. This theme consistently
manifests itself in many aspects of East Asian culture even to this day, with
extensive filial duties on the part of children toward parents and elders, and
great concern of parents toward their children.
Filial piety
Filial piety, or filial devotion is considered among the greatest of virtues and
must be shown towards both the living and the dead (ancestors). The term
"filial", meaning "of a child", denotes the respect and obedience that a child,
originally a son, should show to his parents, especially to his father. This
relationship was extended by analogy to a series of five relationships or five
cardinal relationships
ruler and subject
father and son
husband and wife
elder and younger brother
friend and friend
Specific duties were prescribed to each of the participants in these sets of
relationships. Such duties were also extended to the dead, where the living
stood as sons to their deceased family. This led to the veneration of ancestors.
In time, filial piety was also built into the Chinese legal system: a criminal
would be punished more harshly if the culprit had committed the crime against a
parent, while fathers exercised enormous power over their children. Much the
same was true of other unequal relationships.
The main source of our knowledge of the importance of filial piety is The Book
of Filial Piety, a work attributed to Confucius but almost certainly written in
the third century BCE. Filial piety has continued to play a central role in
Confucian thinking to the present day.
Loyalty
Loyalty is the equivalent of filial piety on a different plane, between
ruler and minister. It was particularly relevant for the social class to which,
most of Confucius' students belonged, because the
only way for an ambitious young scholar to make his way in the Confucian Chinese
world was to enter a ruler's civil service. Like filial piety, however, loyalty
was often subverted by the autocratic regimes of China. Confucius had advocated
a sensitivity to the realpolitik of the class relations that existed in his
time; he did not propose that "might makes right", but that a superior who had
received the "Mandate of Heaven" (see below) should be obeyed because of his
moral rectitude.
In later ages, however, emphasis was placed more on the obligations of the ruled
to the ruler, and less on the ruler's obligations to the ruled.
Humaneness
Confucius was concerned with people's individual
development, which he maintained took place within the context of human
relationships. Ritual and filial piety are the ways in which one should act
towards others from an underlying attitude of humaneness. Confucius' concept of
humaneness (rén, 仁) is probably best expressed in the Confucian version of the
Golden Rule phrased in the negative: "Do not do to others what you would not
like them to do to you".
Rén also has a political dimension. If the ruler lacks rén, Confucianism holds,
it will be difficult if not impossible for his subjects to behave humanely. Rén
is the basis of Confucian political theory: it presupposes an autocratic ruler,
exhorted to refrain from acting inhumanely towards his subjects. An inhumane
ruler runs the risk of losing the "Mandate of Heaven", the right to rule. Such a
mandateless ruler need not be obeyed. But a ruler who reigns humanely and takes
care of the people is to be obeyed strictly, for the benevolence of his dominion
shows that he has been mandated by heaven. Confucius himself had little to say
on the will of the people, but his leading follower Mencius did state on one
occasion that the people's opinion on certain weighty matters should be polled.
The perfect
gentleman
The term "Jūnzǐ" is a term crucial to classical Confucianism. Literally meaning
"son of a ruler", "prince" or "noble", the ideal of a "gentleman", "proper man",
"exemplary person" or "perfect man" is that for which Confucianism exhorts all
people to strive. A succinct description of the "perfect man" is one who "combine[s]
the qualities of saint, scholar, and gentleman" (CE). (In modern times, the
masculine bias in Confucianism may have weakened, but the same term is still
used; the masculine translation in English is also traditional and still
frequently used.) A hereditary elitism was bound up with the concept, and
gentlemen were expected to act as moral guides to the rest of society. They were
to:
cultivate themselves morally;
participate in the correct performance of ritual;
show filial piety and loyalty where these are due;
cultivate humaneness.
The great exemplar of the perfect gentleman is Confucius himself. Perhaps the
greatest tragedy of his life was that he was never awarded the high official
position which he desired, from which he wished to demonstrate the general
well-being that would ensue if humane persons ruled and administered the state.
The opposite of the Jūnzǐ was the Xiǎorén , literally "small person" or "petty
person." Like English "small", the word in this context in Chinese can mean
petty in mind and heart, narrowly self-interested, greedy, superficial, and
materialistic
Is Confucianism a religion?
Confucius
Teachings
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