An Outline Review
of
Huston Smith's
The World's Religions
(Our Great Wisdom Traditions)
Chapter IV. Confucianism
Part One: The First Teacher.
Born around 551 B.C.
Prompted as if by call - "At fifty I
perceived the divine mission" - he gave his next thirteen years, with
many a backward look and resisting footsteps, to "the long trek," in
which he wandered from state to state proffering unsolicited advice to
rulers on how to improve their governing and seeking a real opportunity
to put his ideas into practice. The opportunity never came.
Only a small band of faithful disciples
stood by him through rebuff, discouragement, and near starvation.
He spent his last five years quietly
teaching and editing the classics of China's past. In 479 B.C., at the
age of seventy-two he died.
With hid death began his glorification.
Within a few generations he was regarded throughout China as "the mentor
and model of ten thousand generations."
Part Two: The Problem Confucius Faced.
By Confucius' time interminable warfare had
degenerated from chivalry toward the unrestrained horror of the Period
of the Warring States.
The old mortar that had held society
together was chipping and flaking. Unreflective solidarity was a thing
of the past.
Part Three: Rival Answers.
As the alternative to tradition, the United
States has proposed reason. Educate citizens and inform them, and they
can be counted on to behave sensibly - this is the
Jeffersonian-Enlightenment faith on which the United States was founded.
It has not been fulfilled. Until recently the world's leader in
education, the United States leads likewise in crime, delinquency, and
divorce.
One option that ancient China proposed was
put forward by the Realists. What do you do when people don't behave?
Hit them. The Realists' philosophy of social order proceeded by way of
an elaborate mechanism of "penalties and rewards".
A social philosophy as different from the
Realists' as fire from ice existed alongside it in Confucius' China.
Known as Mohism, it proposed as the solution to China's social problem
not force but love - universal love. One should "feel toward all people
under heaven exactly as one feels toward one's own people, and regard
other states exactly as one regards one's own state."
Neither of these rival answers to the
problem of social cohesion impressed Confucius. He rejected the
Realists' answer of force because it was clumsy and external. As for the
Mohists' reliance on love, Confucius agreed with the Realists in
dismissing it as utopian. The West's current approach to the social
problem - through the cultivation of reason - probably did not occur to
Confucius. If it had he would have dismissed it as not thought through.
Part Four: Confucius' Answer.- Deliberate
Tradition
Confucius was all but obsessed with
tradition, he saw it as the chief shaper of inclinations and attitudes.
Spontaneous tradition- tradition that had
emerged without conscious intent had ruled villages without dissent but
could no longer be counted on.
The most appropriate solution must be
continuous with the past and at the same time must take a clear-eyed
account of developments that rendered the old answer unworkable.
The shift from spontaneous to deliberate
tradition requires a power of suggestion that can prompt society's
members to behave socially even when the law is not looking. The
technique pivots around "patterns of prestige."
The interminable anecdotes and maxims of
Confucius' Analects were designed to create the prototype of what
the Chinese hoped the Chinese character would become.
A. The Content of Deliberate Tradition.
Deliberate
tradition requires attention first to maintain its force and
second attention to the content of that education. The
character of the social life Confucius intended to engender can
be gathered under five key terms:
1. Jen.-
The ideal relationship that
should pertain between people
Involves simultaneously a
feeling of humanity toward others and respect for oneself
Expressed in courtesy,
unselfishness, and empathy
"Do not do unto others what you
would not want others to do unto you."
2. Chun tzu - The mature
person
Opposite of a petty person, a
mean person, a small-spirited person
Armed with self-respect that
generates respect for others
Speech free of coarseness and
vulgarity
Person who is entirely real
3. Li - Has two meanings:
a. Propriety, the way things
should be done - Confucius taught this mainly by:
the Rectification of
Names - the creation of a language in which key
nouns carry the meaning they should carry if life is to
be well ordered.
the Doctrine of the Mean
- the way that is "constantly in the middle" between
unworkable extremes
the Five constant
Relationships - those between parent and child,
husband and wife, elder and junior sibling, elder friend
and junior friend, and ruler and subject -It is vital to
the health of society that these key relationships be
rightly constituted.
the Family - "The
duty of children to their parents is the fountain from
which all virtues spring.
Age - Confucius saw
age as deserving veneration by reason of its intrinsic
worth.
b. Ritual - When right behavior
is detailed to Confucian lengths, the individual's entire
life becomes stylized in a sacred dance, leaving little need
for improvisation.
4. Te - the power by which
men are ruled
No state, Confucius was
convinced, can constrain all its citizens all the time, nor
even any large fraction of them a large part of the time. It
must rely on acceptance of its will, an appreciable
confidence in what it is doing.
This spontaneous consent arises
only when people sense their leaders to be people of
capacity, sincerely devoted to the common good and possessed
of the kind of character that compels respect.
For the process to work,
however, rulers must have no personal ambition. Only those
are worthy to govern who would rather be excused.
5. Wen -
The arts of peace as contrasted to the arts of war
Music, art, poetry, the sum of
culture in its aesthetic and spiritual mode
Ultimately, victory goes to the
state that develops the highest wen, the most exalted
culture - the state that has the finest art, the noblest
philosophy, the grandest poetry.
B. The Confucian Project. - how life
would appear to a Chinese set within it
As a never-ending project of
self-cultivation toward the end of becoming more fully human
Apart from human relationships
there is no self. The self is a center of relationships. It is
constructed through its interactions with others and is defined
by the sum of its social roles.
A notion very different from
Western individualism - the human self as a node, not an entity.
Ascent means becoming a fully
realized human being through expanding one's sympathy and
empathy indefinitely.
The expansion is in concentric
circles that begins with oneself and spreads from there to
include successively one's family, one's face-to-face community,
one's nation, and finally all humanity.
In shifting the center of one's
empathic concern from oneself to one's family one transcends
selfishness. The move from family to community transcends
nepotism. The move from community to nation overcomes
parochialism, and the move to all humanity counters chauvinistic
nationalism.
Inside and outside work together in
the Confucian scheme.
Always the practice field is the
Five Constant Relationships. Mastering a role in one of the five
sheds light on the other roles. To improve as a parent throws
light on what being a good child (of one's own parents) entails.
The nuances of the other roles likewise illuminate one another.
C. Ethics or Religion?
If religion is taken in its widest
sense, as a way of life woven around a people's ultimate
concerns, Confucianism clearly qualifies. Even if religion is
taken in a narrower sense, as a concern to align humanity with
the transcendental ground of its existence,
Confucianism is still a religion.
To understand the total dimension
of Confucianism as a religion it is important to see Confucius
shifting his people's attention from Heaven to Earth without
dropping Heaven from the picture entirely.
The Confucian project of becoming
fully human involves transcending, sequentially, egoism,
nepotism, parochialism. ethnocentrism, and chauvinistic
nationalism and (we now add) isolating self-sufficient humanism.
D. Impact on China.
For over two thousand years
Confucius' teachings have profoundly affected a quarter of the
population of this globe. Confucian values merged with the
generic values of the Chinese people to the point where it is
difficult to separate the two.
The features mentioned below pretty
much blanket East Asia as a whole, for Japan, Korea, and much of
Southeast Asia deliberately imported Confucian ethic.
1. Confucius' social emphasis
produced, in the Chinese, a conspicuous social effectiveness - a
capacity to get things done in a large scale when need arose.
2. Unique among the world's
civilizations, China syncretized her religions. Traditionally,
every Chinese was Confucian in ethics and public life, Taoist in
private life and hygiene, and Buddhist at the time of death,
with a healthy dash of shamanistic folk religion thrown in along
the way.
3. The importance of the family in
China - Strong family bonds can smother, but they also bring
benefits, and these work for East Asians right down to the
present.
4. East Asian respect for age
borders on veneration.
5. Confucius' Doctrine of the Mean
continues to this day in the Chinese preference for negotiation,
mediation, and the
"middle man" as against resorting to rigid, impersonal statutes.
6. China honors Confucius'
conviction that learning and the arts are not mere veneer but
are powers that transform societies and the human heart.
7. The East Asian economic miracle
of the last forty years, shaped by the Confucian ethic,
constitutes the dynamic center of economic growth in the latter
twentieth century.
8. The courtesy for which Orientals
have been famous echoes the Confucian spirit.
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