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Respect for elders and ancestors
is a core value of Confucianism: these
young Chinese students are marking
the anniversary of Confucius’s birth
by honoring his image.
Filial piety remains one of the most
important Confucian virtues, and
its ties and duties extend beyond
death. Sons are expected to make
offerings at their parents’ graves,
and to honor them at shrines in the
home that contain ancestor tablets,
in which the spirits of the elders are
said to dwell. Even today, the key
moment in a Confucian wedding is
when the couple bow to the
groom’s ancestor tablets, thus
formally introducing the bride to
the ancestors of her husband’s family
in order to secure their blessing.
Confucianism evolves
It was during the Song dynasty that
the scholar Zhu Xi (1130–1200 CE)
incorporated elements of Daoism
and Buddhism into Confucianism,
creating an enduring religion that is
also known as Neo-Confucianism.
Confucius was not the first Chinese
sage to contemplate the eternal
truths, and Confucius himself
claimed to have invented nothing,
but merely to have studied the
ideas of earlier thinkers, gathering
them together in five books, known
as the Five Classics. Under the
Western Zhou dynasty, from 1050
to 771 BCE, scholars were highly
valued at court, and in the 7th
century BCE the so-called Hundred
Schools of Thought emerged.
Confucius lived in a time of
philosophical ferment, but also of
social change, as the power of the
Zhou emperors declined and the
whole social order seemed to be
under threat. His focus on order
and harmony emerged from a
genuine concern about potential
societal breakdown. The emperors
of later dynasties such as the
Han (206 BCE–220 CE), the Song
(960–1279 CE) and the Ming
(1368–164 4 CE) recognized the value
of Confucian ideals in maintaining
social order, and Confucianism
became the Chinese state religion.
It was also a profound influence on
daily life and thought into the 20th
century, and was attacked during
the Cultural Revolution for its social
conservatism, but in recent years a
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS
New Confucianism has emerged
in China, blending Confucian ideas
with modern Chinese thinking
and Western philosophy. Although
Confucius built his philosophy on
existing concepts and practices, he
was remarkable for his insistence
that human beings are naturally
good—only needing to be taught
and encouraged, to be virtuous—
and that this goodness is not
confined to the aristocracy. ■
Men’s natures are alike,
it is their habits that
carry them far apart.
The Analects
Hold faithfulness
and sincerity
as first principles.
The Analects