1 / 22

Three Chinese Philosophies

Three Chinese Philosophies. Daoism. Lao-Tzu. 604 B.C.E. - ? His name means “Old Master”. Major Daoist Principles. 1. Dao [Tao] is the first-cause of the universe. It is a force that flows through all life. 2. Goal is to become one with Dao ; one with nature.

Download Presentation

Three Chinese Philosophies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Three Chinese Philosophies

  2. Daoism

  3. Lao-Tzu • 604 B.C.E. - ? • His name means “Old Master”

  4. Major Daoist Principles 1.Dao [Tao] is the first-cause of the universe. It is a force that flows through all life. 2. Goal is to become one with Dao; one with nature. 3.Wu wei --> “Let nature take its course.” --> “The art of doing nothing.” --> “Go with the flow!” 4. Man is unhappy because he lives by man-made laws, customs, & traditions that are contrary to the ways of nature.

  5. The "Dao" [Tao] Toescape the “social, political, & cultural traps” of life, one must: 1. Reject formal knowledge and learning. 2. Rely on the senses and instincts. 3. Discover the nature and “rhythm” of the universe. 4. Ignore political and social laws.

  6. The Dao De Jing • The basic text of Daoism. • In Chinese, it means “The Classic in the Way and Its Power”. • “Those who speak know nothing: Those who know are silent.” These words were spoken by Lao Tzu. If we are to believe that Lao Tzu was himself one who knew, how is it that he wrote a book of five thousand words?

  7. The Universe of Opposites: Find the Balance! Yin • Masculine • Active • Light • Warmth • Strong • Heaven; Sun • Feminine • Passive • Darkness • Cold • Weak • Earth; Moon Yang

  8. Confucianism

  9. Confucius • 551 – 479 B.C.E. • Became a teacher and editor of books.

  10. Confucian Temple Complex

  11. Confucius' Tomb

  12. Confucian Principles Li--> Rules, ritual behavior Binding force of a stable society Ren --> kindness Shu --> Reciprocity, empathy Do not do unto others what you would not want others to do unto you. Yi--> Righteousness Xiao --> Filial Piety (Respect your elders!)

  13. Determining Relationships • Status • Age • Gender

  14. 5 Principle Relationships 1.Ruler Subject 2. Father Son 3. Husband Wife 4. Older Brother YoungerBrother 5. Older Friend YoungerFriend

  15. Confucianism • Assumes “people are basically good.” • If someone does something bad, education, not punishment, is the answer. • People will mend their ways in accordance to their inherent goodness.

  16. The Analects • The most important Confucian book. • Focus on rules of personal relationships, and the relationship of conduct of rulers to the government.

  17. Social Cohesion is Paramount! • The emperor should be the example of proper behavior. • Father of the nation, “big daddy” • Social relationships are based on “rites” or “rituals.” • Even religious rituals are important for SOCIAL, not religious reasons.

  18. Sayings from The Analects • Knowing what he knows and knowing what he doesn’t know, is characteristic of the wise person. • Making a mistake and not correcting it is making another mistake. • The superior man blames himself; the inferior man blames others. • To go too far is as wrong as to fall short.

  19. Legalism

  20. Major Legalist Principles 1. Human nature is naturally selfish. 2. Intellectualism and literacy is discouraged. 3. Law is the supreme authority and replaces morality. 4. The ruler must rule with a strong, punishing hand. 5. War is the means of strengthening a ruler’s power.

  21. Authoritarian Individuals should obey a powerful authority, not exercise individual freedom. The ruler, therefore, “cracks his whip” on the backs of his subjects!This builds a strong state.

  22. The Question of Chinese Philosophy How are we to live in a world of chaos, suffering, and absurdity?? Daoism--> Freedom for individuals and less govt. to avoid uniformity and conformity. Confucianism--> Moral order in society. Legalism--> Rule by harsh law & order.

More Related