Confucious
The Spring and
Autumn (770 - 476 B.C.) and Warring States (475 -
221 B.C.) periods, though marked by disunity and
civil strife, witnessed an unprecedented era of
cultural prosperity in China.
The atmosphere of
reform and new ideas was attributed to the
struggle for survival among warring regional
lords who competed in building strong and loyal
armies and in increasing economic production to
ensure a broader base for tax collection. To
effect these economic, military, and cultural
developments, the regional lords needed
ever-increasing numbers of skilled, literate
officials and teachers, the recruitment of whom
was based on merit.
So many different
philosophies developed during the late Spring and
Autumn and early Warring States periods that the
era is often known as that of the Hundred Schools
of Thought. From the Hundred Schools of Thought
came many of the great classical writings on
which Chinese practices were to be based for the
next two and one-half millennia. Many of the
thinkers were itinerant intellectuals who,
besides teaching their disciples, were employed
as advisers to one or another of the various
state rulers on methods of government, war and
diplomacy.
The body of
thought that had the most enduring effect on
subsequent Chinese life was that of the School of
Literati, often called the Confucian School in
the West. The written legacy of the School of
Literati is embodied in the Confucian Classics,
which were to become the basis for the order of
traditional society.
Confucius
(551 - 479 B.C.), also called Kong Zi, believed
that the only way such a society could work
properly was for each person to act according to
prescribed relationships.
"Let the
ruler be a ruler and the subject a subject"
he said, but he added that to rule properly a
king must be virtuous. To Confucius, the
functions of government and social stratification
were facts of life to be sustained by ethical
values. His ideal was the JunZi (or ruler's son),
which came to mean gentleman in the sense of a
cultivated or superior man.
Mencius
(372-289 B.C.), or Meng Zi, was a Confucian
disciple who made major contributions to the
humanism of Confucian thought. Mencius declared
that man was by nature good. He expostulated the
idea that a ruler could not govern without the
people's tacit consent and that the penalty for
unpopular, despotic rule was the loss of the
"mandate of heaven".
The effect of the
combined work of Confucius, the codifier and
interpreter of a system of relationships based on
ethical behavior, and Mencius, the synthesizer
and developer of applied Confucian thought, was
to provide traditional Chinese society with a
comprehensive framework on which to order
virtually every aspect of life.
There were
accretions to the corpus of Confucian thought
over the millennia, from within and outside the
Confucian School. Interpretations made to suit or
influence contemporary society made Confucianism
dynamic while preserving a fundamental system of
model behavior based on ancient texts.
Diametrically
opposed to Mencius, for example, was the
interpretation of Xun Zi (ca.
300-237 B.C.), another Confucian follower. Xun Zi
preached that man is innately selfish and evil
and that goodness is attainable only through
education and conduct befitting one's status. He
also argued that the best government is one based
on authoritarian control, not ethical or moral
persuasion.
Xun Zi's
unsentimental and authoritarian inclinations were
developed into the doctrine embodied in the
School of Law, or Legalism. The doctrine was
formulated by Han Fei Zi (d. 233 B.C.) and Li Si
(d. 208 B.C.), who maintained that human nature
was incorrigibly selfish and therefore the only
way to preserve the social order was to impose
discipline from above and to enforce laws
strictly. The Legalists exalted the state and
sought its prosperity and martial prowess above
the welfare of the common people. Legalism became
the philosophic basis for the imperial form of
government.
When the most
practical and useful aspects of Confucianism and
Legalism were synthesized in the Han period (206
B.C. - A.D. 220), a system of governance came
into existence that was to survive largely intact
until the late nineteenth century.
Taoism,
the second most important stream of Chinese
thought, also developed during the Zhou period.
Its formulation is attributed to the legendary
sage Lao Zi (or Old Master), said to predate
Confucius, and Zhuang Zi (369 - 286 B.C.). The
focus of Taoism is the individual in nature
rather than the individual in society. It holds
that the goal of life for each individual is to
find one's own personal adjustment to the rhythm
of the natural (and supernatural) world, to
follow the Way (Tao) of the universe.
In many ways the
opposite of rigid Confucian moralism, Taoism
served many of its adherents as a complement to
their ordered daily lives. A scholar on duty as
an official would usually follow Confucian
teachings but at leisure or in retirement might
seek harmony with nature as a Taoist recluse. The
Taoist approach to life is embodied in the
classic Tao Te Ching.
Another strain of
thought dating to the Warring States Period is
the school of Yin-Yang and the Five
Elements. The theories of this school
attempted to explain the universe in terms of
basic forces in nature, the complementary agents
of yin (dark, cold, female, negative) and yang
(light, hot, male, positive) and the five
elements (water, fire, wood, metal, and earth).
In later periods these theories came to have
importance both in philosophy and in popular
belief.
Still another
school of thought was based on the doctrine of Mo
Zi (470 - 391 B.C.), or Mo Di. Mo Zi
believed that "all men are equal before
God" and that mankind should follow heaven
by practicing universal love. Advocating that all
action must be utilitarian, Mo Zi condemned the
Confucian emphasis on ritual and music. He
regarded warfare as wasteful and advocated
pacificism.
Mo Zi also
believed that unity of thought and action were
necessary to achieve social goals. He maintained
that the people should obey their leaders and
that the leaders should follow the will of
heaven. Although Moism failed to establish itself
as a major school of thought, its views are said
to be "strongly echoed" in Legalist
thought. In general, the teachings of Mo Zi left
an indelible impression on the Chinese mind.
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