| Confucius (551 B.C. - 479 B.C.), founder of Confucianism,
was born in today's Qufu, Shandong province. He was named
Kong Qiu and styled Zhongni and respected by Chinese as
Kong Fuzi or Kong Zi. He was an outstanding thinker and
educationist in the late Spring and Autumn period. He
was born poor, however he managed to get good education.
It was said that at the age of fifty Confucius finally
ascended to Prime Minister of State Lu. However, his political
foes conspired to force him to retire at the age of fifty-five.
Then he led his disciples to trek around those competing
states to advocate his teachings and to advise rulers
how to govern, however he was frustrated. In his late
years, he engaged in education, with 3,000 disciples and
72 famous ones according to legend. He died in 479B.C.
Politically, he insisted strict social stratification
to maintain public order and contended moral cultivation
and opposed tyranny. Main ethic feature he advocated
was benevolence, called ren in Chinese. On the educational
theory, he stressed individual aptitude education and
combination of learning and thinking, proposing "
learning without thinking leads to bewilderment; thinking
without learning results in idleness."
Confucianism is a system of philosophy and humanism
instead of a religion though it features a few religious
characteristics. Confucius and Mencius never intended
to set up a religion although they were enshrined in
almost everywhere in the nation.
Confucius lived in a time of social and moral chaos,
when common values were generally rejected or simply
disregarded. In the ethos of uncertainty and fear created
by warlords, Confucianism flourished and eventually
transformed Chinese society with its values and dominated
it for centuries. Since Confucius saw a sharp difference
between the disunity and lack of harmony that existed
in this chaotic society as opposed to the harmony and
orderliness of nature, his philosophy sought to consciously
restore primary set values and norms.
In the Qin dynasty (221B.C. - 206B.C.), Emperor Qin
Shi Huang slaughtered Confucian intellectuals and burnt
Confucian canons, in order to unite chaotic thoughts
to facilitate ruling. It was soon over thrown. In the
Han dynasty under the reign of Emperor Wu (140B.C. -
87 B.C.), Confucianism was accepted as state ideology
and orthodoxy since Confucianism claimed regality was
god-given, and other ideologies were banned to maintain
law, social stratification and social order with Confucian
values. From then on, other ideologies never got a chance
to attempt a comeback.
The reason why Confucianism was dominant was it conformed
to needs of the ruling classing. It presented a utopian
world for both the ruling class and the common people.
Confucianism thinks that ruler be a father to his people
and look after their basic needs. It encouraged officials
to be loyal to their rulers and refuse to serve the
corrupt; advocated absolute authority of a king over
his subject, a husband over his wife, and a father over
his son; and stressed five constant virtues, namely
benevolence (ren), righteousness (yi), propriety (li),
wisdom (zhi) and fidelity (xin) as basic ethical code.
Confucianism was an androcentrism in which women has
no dignity and human rights. According to Confucianism,
women had to obey absolutely their fathers when they
were not married, to obey their husbands absolutely
after in the wedlock and to obey absolutely their sons
in their widowhood. Morality, proper speech, modest
manner and diligent work were basic virtues they ought
have. In case women were barren, unfilial, talkative,
jealous, heavily sick, or in adultery and theft, they
would be divorced no matter what the reasons were.
Although Confucian is condemned for some of its views,
it has branded Chinese and their life.
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