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ConfucianismConfucianism (儒家 ru2jia1; literal meaning: "The School (of Thought) of the Scholars") is an East Asian belief system formulated in the 6th - 5th century BC and followed by people in China, Korea, Japan, Vietnam and other Asian countries for more than two thousand years.This great ethical and philosophical system is named after its founder, K'ung Fu-tzu (Master K'ung, 孔夫子), an ethical philosopher of the late sixth and early fifth centuries B.C. whose Chinese name was later latinised to Confucius by Jesuit missionaries. This form became the convention in most western languages, and accordingly we shall refer to him by this westernised name. He is credited with a number of books, the best-known of which is the Analects (論語 lun4yu3), a collection of his sayings that was compiled and edited to its modern form during the Han dynasty. It is debatable whether the system he founded should be called a religion. While it prescribes a great deal of ritual, little of it could be construed as worship or meditation in a formal sense. Confucius occasionally made statements about the existence of other-worldly beings that sound distinctly agnostic and humanistic to western ears. However, its effect on Chinese society and culture was very deep and parallels the effects of religious movements seen in other cultures. Also, one should guard against too narrow a definition of religion. Those who follow the teachings of Confucius are comforted by it; it makes their lives more complete and their sufferings bearable - who are we to deny them the title of religious people? Finally, consider the fact that religions in Chinese culture are not mutually exclusive entities - each tradition was free to find its specific niche, its field of specialisation. One can be a Taoist, Christian, Muslim, Shintoist or Buddhist and still profess Confucianist beliefs. And Confucianism specialised in ethics, in the orderly arrangement of society and correct relationships between people. Confucius himself lived in an era (The Eastern Zhou dynasty) when China was divided into a number of small states each ruled by a warlord or nobleman who paid little more than lip service to the emperor who in theory still ruled the Middle Kingdom (China) from the capital, Luoyang. The frequent wars between these states disrupted the structure of society. As a result, there was a deeply felt need for a theory of society that would act as a cohesive factor and that could reunite the Chinese nation. A number of philosophies (e.g. Mohism and Legalism) arose to fulfil this need. That of Confucius was eventually the most successful, due largely to the supremacy it achieved during the Han Dynasty. Some key concepts in Confucian thought
Later developments in Confucianism Between the gentlemen and the "small people" (xiaoren) was an intermediate class called the shih (仕), commonly translated as "knights", who filled minor administrative posts and served as junior officers in the army. To these, too, Confucius and his disciples recommended the same virtues prescribed for the gentlemen. In time, the shih were transformed into a class of scholars and bureaucrats who owed their positions to the official civil service examinations. Because these examinations were entirely based on verbatim knowledge of Confucius's books, these people became the staunchest supporters of Confucian orthodoxy. Confucius considered himself to be little more than a aspirant gentleman; he refused to be addressed as a sage. Confucianism also had a remarkable influence on neighbouring countries such as Korea, Japan and Vietnam.
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To simplify this discussion, we shall simply define Confucianism as any system of thinking that has at its basis the works that are regarded as the "Confucian classics," but even this definition runs into problems as it isn't clear what are the "Confucian classics."
One of the advocates of "New Confucianism" is Tu Wei-Ming, who is a member of the Boston Confucians. This group attempts to develop the humanistic elements of Confucianism as a philosophy that is allied with religious morality, but yet maintains a secular focus.
See also: Eastern philosophy, list of Confucianists, Buddhism in China
were a lovely duchess.html">duchess of the realm, I would ride in a coach-and-
and ermine.html">ermine even in the dog.html">dog-days.
Alas! these are the dog-days. Many dogs.html">dogs are abroad--snarling dogs,
such with your flaming red velvet and dazzling ermine. It makes
gold; and so if I were a beauteous duchess . . . Silence, vain
nor gibe at thy betters of "the Duke of B----'s establishment--
ON BOARD THE "ANTWERPEN," OFF EVERYWHERE.
We have bidden adieu to Billingsgate, we have passed the Thames
being hungry. What a merry place a steamer is on a calm sunny
are, I assure you, no less than 170 noblemen and gentlemen
sofas in the cabin, and hardly have we passed Greenwich when the
an instant (there is a sort of legend that the beverage is a
of gentlemen who partook of the drink. In the first place, the
choke you; and, secondly, the soda-water, being kept as near as
when presented to the hot and thirsty traveller. Thus he is
him.
The forepart of the vessel is crowded to the full as much as the
imperials and aristocratic gimcracks of travel, under the wheels of
the bowsprit, and perhaps to smoke a cigar at ease. The carriages
oxen, lying on hay.html">hay and surrounded by a barricade of oars. Fifteen
bellowing. Beyond the cows come a heap of cotton-bags, beyond the
valets and couriers bustling and swearing round about them. And
black tar-cloths, ragged cloaks, or hay, you see a score of those
look unhappy, and appear getting ready to be sick.
At one, dinner begins in the after-cabin--boiled salmon, boiled
wine for any gentlemen who like it, and two roast-ducks between
.
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