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Explain Five Confucian Concepts

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Taylor Walsh: A12597627
Professor Magagna
PS113A
4 November 2016
Explain five Confucian (East Asian) concepts Eastern Asian history and tradition is deeply rooted in study of the mind, body, and soul. On the other hand, ancient East Asian Confucianism also emphasized the importance of structure and order in one’s personal life, as well as, in a nations governing body. East Asian Confucianism was a deeply metaphysical belief system that spent a great deal of time analyzing the intangible aspects of one’s spirit and how ones actions in the earthly realm will affect their time in the afterlife and the continued lives of the family everyone inevitably leaves behind. East Asian Confucian practices were mainly merit based allowing for, at the …show more content…

The path to becoming a person of honor came down to believing and practicing four key concepts of the Confucian way of life along with a fifth that encompassed all other concepts with the idea of one’s density and one’s ability to reach heaven. It was considered crutial to, “[Devote oneself] wholeheartedly to solving human problems, Confucius propagated the value of education, virtue and self-cultivation” (Yao 26). There are a multitude of concepts that comprise the East Asian Confucian way of life, however, “ Of these concepts four became the underlying ideas of the Confucian tradition, namely, the Way (dao), ritual/propriety (li), humaneness (ren) and virtue (de), and later the backbone of the ideological structure of a Confucian state” (Yao 26). These four concepts coupled with the slightly contradictory idea that, “Confucius kept a distance from religious matters such as serving ‘spirits and ghosts’, and would rather talk about this life than the life after (Lunyu, 11: 12)… [While holding] a deep faith in Heaven and destiny (ming), and [thus preserving] religious ritual strictly” (Yao 26). This practical approach to living one’s life and ultimately reaching heaven saw great success …show more content…

As the empire has its basis in the state, the state in the family, and the family in one’s own self, then in order to win the people’s hearts, there is no need for the ruler to use force or power. Being correct in one’s self, a ruler would bring the whole empire to himself. Peace and harmony are the natural results of moral cultivation and ethical correction” (Yao

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