317 St. Maximus
(Platonist/Christian,
Byzantium)
Figure 4.1. Emergence of Chinese
Network, 500–365 b.c.e.: Rival
Confucian Lineages, Mohists,
Primitivists
500 b.c.e.
1 Têng Hsi (lawyer/debater)
2 Yen Hui (Confucian)
3 Tzu-lu (Confucian)
4 Tzu Kung (Confucian,
diplomat)
i 5 Jan Yu (politician)
i 6 Chung Kung (Confucian)
i 7 Yu Tzu (soldier)
i 8 Tseng Hsi (Confucian)
9 Tzu-hsia (f. school of
Confucian disciples)
10 Tzu-yu (same)
11 Tzu-chang (same)
i 12 Mi Tzu-chien (Confucian)
i 13 Tzu-ch’ih (Confucian)
i 14 Tzu-hua (Confucian)
15 Shih Shih (Confucian)
16 Ch’i Tiao-K’ai (f. school of
Confucian disciples)
17 Kung-sun Ni-tzu (Confucian)
18 Fu Tzu-chien (Confucian)
19 Tzu-ssu (Confucius’ grandson;
f. school of disciples)
19a? Chung-liang (f. school of
Confucian disciples)
i 20 T’ien Tzu-Fung (Confucian,
instructor of kings)
i 21 Tuan-kun Mu (same)
i 22 Wu Ch’i (Confucian general)
i 23 Kung-meng Tzu (Confucian)
23a Li K’uei (“agriculturalist”
politician)
i 24 Ch’eng-tzu (Confucian)
25 Kêng Chu (Mohist)
26 Sui Ch’ao Ti (Mohist)
400 b.c.e.
27 Wü Lu (“agriculturalist”
self-sufficiency)
28 Ch’in Ku-li (major disciple of
Mo Ti)
Figure 4.2. Intersecting Centers of
the Warring States, 365–200 b.c.e.
365 b.c.e.
29 Tzu Hua Tzu (Yang Chu
follower)
i 30 Yi Chih (Mohist)
31 Hsu Fan (from Mohist
school; neo-Confucian,
possibly identical w Hsü
Hsing)
32 Ch’en Hsiang
(“agriculturalist” primitivist)
i 33 Ch’en Liang
34? Shih Ch’iu (individualist like
Ch’en Chung)
i 35 Kung-tu Tzu (disciple of
Mencius)
i 36 Wan Chang (same)
i 37 Meng Chi Tzu (same)
i 38 Kungsun Ch’ou (same)
39 Shunyü Kun (debater at Wei
court, then Chi-hsia Academy)
40 Ch’en Chung
(“agriculturalist” primitivist;
of Ch’i royal house)
43 P’eng Meng
45 Chieh Tzu (Chi-hsia Acad.)
46 Huan Yuan (Chi-hsia Acad.)
47 Wei Mou (Prince of Wei,
hedonist/individualist)
49 Yo-chêng Tzu-chun (school of
Tsêng-Tzu, Confucian)
50 K’ung Chuan (descendant of
Confucius)
300 b.c.e.
51 Huan T’uan
52 T’ien Pa
Keys to Figures • 901