Confucius Essay

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    Ancient Chinese Culture Section 1 - Philosophy What did Confucius teach the people of China? Chinese culture was strongly influenced by Confucius. He taught people of China that everyone must accept their role in life and responsibilities towards others. Social Teachings One of the things that Confucius taught was that people should have compassion and respect for one another and to not treat others in a way that they would not like to be treated. "What you do not wish for yourself, do not do

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    The Mandate of Heaven Based on the Teachings of Confucius The Chinese concept of the "Mandate of Heaven," was based on the teachings of Confucius and further enhanced a century later by a man named Mencius. Mencius added to the Confucian teachings by addressing human nature and the right to govern. Previously, China had been ruled by two divergent schools of thought. One was "selfish" religion in how you could obtain happiness in an unsettled world by living a simple

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    He is known for having been a philosopher, politician and literary figure who wrote the famous texts that are known in English as the Five Classics as well as many other classic Chinese texts. Confucius' ideas have fallen in and out of favour over the course of history, being censored by governments as well as being adopted as official policy by others. What is certain is that few historical figures have had a greater effect upon Chinese culture

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    Moral values make people develop their character, by the way,they are raised up and from religious teachings and ideology in shaping the people’s life. This paper evaluate moral values that are learnt from characters from the books Analects of Confucius and St. Augustine Confessions. There are numerous moral values that are learnt from these

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    Analysis of Confucius Lives Next Door Reading T. R. Reid's new book brought me back to that conversation. ''Confucius Lives Next Door'' is aptly named. Reid, a longtime reporter and Asia correspondent for The Washington Post, has nailed his copy of the Analects to the mast. Drawing on the experience of his own and his family's life in Tokyo and other east Asian points, he has written a paean to what he terms ''east Asia's social miracle -- how the Asians have built modern industrial societies

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    Erica Wilson Professor Heather Hartel REL 223 17 September 2017 Book Review One Confucius Lives Next Door by T. R. Reid is about his family of five, who moved from Colorado to Tokyo in the 1900s. During this time Tokyo was going through an economic stagnation. Not long after arriving Reid and his family found themselves “smack in the middle of a fundamental shift in world history—a basic realignment of global stature and political power that will change the way the world has worked for the past

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    Confucius is an educator having over three thousand disciples, a statesman employed not only in his own State but in several other, but most importantly, he is a ritualist who is a firm believer and steadfast advocator of the Way, which has long been discarded by rulers in Confucius time. During his time, the House of Chou had declined, the ancient rites and moral standard were forgotten, but he had been striving to become a “superior person”, a gentleman, in his whole life, and developed a variety

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    College of Education. Although the age of Confucius has passed, his ideas live on through his contributions to Ancient Chinese culture. As discussed in this article, Confucius was engulfed in the field of education. He “was the first most important great educationalist in the history of Chinese education.” (Youwei 121). The author discusses fundamental ideas of Confucianism being loyalty and forbearance, these ideas are exemplified through the way Confucius lived and the things he did. Honesty and

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    In the literature, Confucius Lives Next Door, the author, T.R. Reid, tells a story about his life with his family residing in Tokyo, Japan. Reid and his family moved for his job in the Washington Post. No one in his family wanted to leave the states, but in the end, his family did not want to return home. Reid has a wife and three children who went to Japan with him. He noticed little details of their society, which later became one big picture that shows that the citizens were living their religion

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    idea instead relies on action, the use of virtue with rituals, and the overall betterment of the self for the community to reach the Way. Actions dictate the experiences in humans' lives, and Confucius and Laozi disagreed in their view of whether individuals should take action to achieve the Way. Confucius believed it was necessary and prevalent in society to act, since he lived during the period of the Warring States. He wanted to fix the leaders' problems, and he felt he could only achieve this

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