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Han Fei

Han Fei (c. 280 – 233 BC), also known as Han Feizi or Han Fei Zi, was a Chinese philosopher or statesman[2] of the "Legalist" (Fajia) school during the Warring States period, and a prince of the state of Han.[3]

Han Feizi
韓非
BornUnknown, c. 280 BC
Died233 BC
Cause of deathForced to commit suicide by drinking poison
Notable workHan Feizi
EraAncient philosophy
RegionChinese philosophy
SchoolLegalism
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese韓非
Simplified Chinese韩非
Hanzi
Traditional Chinese韓子
Simplified Chinese韩子
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinHán zǐ
Wade–GilesHan2 Tzu3
Han2-tzu3
Han Feizi
Traditional Chinese韓非子
Simplified Chinese韩非子
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinHán Fēi zǐ
Wade–GilesHan2 Fei1 Tzu3
Han2 Fei1-tzu3

Han Fei is often considered to be the greatest representative of "Chinese Legalism" for his eponymous work the Han Feizi,[4] synthesizing the methods of his predecessors.[5] Han Fei's ideas are sometimes compared with those of Niccolò Machiavelli,[6] author of The Prince.[7] Zhuge Liang is said to have attached great importance to the Han Feizi, as well as Shen Buhai.[8] [9]

Sima Qian recounts that Qin Shi Huang even went to war with the neighboring state of Han to obtain an audience with Han Fei, but was ultimately convinced to imprison him, whereupon he commits suicide.[10] After the early demise of the Qin dynasty, the "Legalist" school became officially vilified by the following Han dynasty. Despite its outcast status throughout the history of imperial China, Han Fei's political theory and the "Legalist" school continued to heavily influence every dynasty thereafter, and the Confucian ideal of a rule without laws was never to be realised.[5]

Han Fei borrowed Shang Yang's emphasis on laws, Shen Buhai's emphasis on administrative technique, and Shen Dao's ideas on authority and prophecy, emphasizing that the autocrat will be able to achieve firm control over the state with the mastering of his predecessors' methodologies: his position of power (勢; Shì), technique (術; Shù), and law (法; ). He stressed the importance of the concept of Xing-Ming (holding actual outcome accountable to speech), coupled with the system of the "Two Handles" (punishment and reward), as well as Wu wei (non-exertion).

Names

Han Fei is written as 韓非 in traditional Chinese characters and as 韩非 in simplified ones. The pinyin transcription of the modern Mandarin pronunciation of the name is Hán Fēi (IPA: /xan˧˥.fei˥˥/). He is also known respectfully as Hanzi ("Master Han") or as Han Feizi ("Master Han Fei"). In Wade-Giles transcription, the same name was written Han Tzu, Han-tzu, Han Fei Tzu, or Han Fei-tzu. The same name—sometimes as "the Hanfeizi" or "the Han-fei-tzu"—is used to denote the later book whose contents are traditionally attributed to him.

Life

The exact year of Han Fei's birth remains unknown, however, scholars have placed it at around 280 BCE.[3]

Unlike the other famed philosophers of the time, Han Fei was a member of the ruling aristocracy, having been born into the ruling family of the State of Han during the end phase of the Warring States period. In this context, his works have been interpreted by some scholars as being directed to his cousin, the King of Han.[1] Sima Qian's Shi Ji says that Han Fei studied together with future Qin chancellor Li Si under the Confucian philosopher Xunzi. It is said that because of his stutter, Han Fei could not properly present his ideas in court. His advice otherwise being ignored, but observing the slow decline of his Han state, he developed "one of the most brilliant (writing) styles in ancient China."[4][5]

Sima Qian's biography of Han Fei is as follows:

Han Fei was a prince of Han, in favor of the study of name/form and law/art, which Sima Qian dubiously espoused as taking root in the Huang-Lao philosophy. He was born a stutterer and was not able to dispute well, but he was good at writing papers. Together with his friend, Li Si, he served Xun Qing, and Si himself admitted that he was not as competent as Fei. Seeing Han was on the decline, he often remonstrated with the king of Han by submitting papers, but the king did not agree to employ him. At this, Han Fei was frustrated with the reality that, in governing a state, the king did not endeavor to refine and clarify the juridical system of the state, to control his subjects by taking over power, to enhance state property and defense, or to call and employ the wise by enhancing the state.

Rather, the king employed the corrupted and treacherous and put them in higher positions over the wise. He regarded the intellectuals as a disturbance to the law by employing their literature and thought that knights violate the prohibition of the state by using armed forces. While the state was in peace, the king liked to patronize the honored; while in need, he employed warriors with armor and helmet. So the cultivated men could not be employed and the men employed could not be cultivated. Severely distressed over the reality that men of high integrity and uprightness were not embraced by the subjects with immorality and corruption, he observed the changes in the gaining and losing of the past. Therefore, he wrote several papers like "Solitary Indignation", "Five Vermin", "Inner and Outer Congeries of Sayings", "Collected Persuasions", and "Difficulties in the Way of Persuasion", which amount to one hundred thousand words. However, while Han Fei himself knew well of the difficulty of persuasion for his work on the difficulties in the way of persuasion was very comprehensive, he eventually met an untimely death in Qin. He could not escape the trap of words for himself.[11]

His works ultimately ended up in the hands of the thrilled Qin king, Ying Zheng, who commented, "If I can make friends with this person [Han Fei], I may die without regrets." and invited Han Fei to the Qin court. Han Fei presented the essay "Preserving the Han" to ask the king not to attack his homeland, but his ex-friend and rival Li Si used that essay to have Han Fei imprisoned on account of his likely loyalty to Han. Han Fei responded by writing another essay named "In the first time of meeting Qin king", hoping to use his writing talent to win the king's heart. Han Fei did win the king's heart, but not before Li Si forced him to commit suicide by drinking poison. The Qin king afterward regretted Han Fei's death.[4][5]

Xunzi formed the hypothesis that human nature is evil and virtueless, therefore suggesting that human infants must be brought to their virtuous form through social-class-oriented Confucian moral education. Without such, Xunzi argued, man would act virtueless and be steered by his own human nature to commit immoral acts. Han Fei's education and life experience during the Warring States period, and in his own Han state, contributed his synthesis of a philosophy for the management of an amoral and interest-driven administration, to which morality seemed a loose and inefficient tool. Han agreed with his teacher's theory of "virtueless by birth", but as in previous "Legalist" philosophy, pragmatically proposed to steer people by their own interest-driven nature.

Notes

  1. ^ Watson, Burton, Han Fei Tzu: Basic Writings. 1964, p. 2. The king in question is believed to be either King An (238–230 BC) or his predecessor, King Huanhui (272–239 BC).

References

  1. ^ "Leader Taps into Chinese Classics in Seeking to Cement Power". The New York Times. 12 October 2014.
  2. ^ 2018 Henrique Schneider. p.1. An Introduction to Hanfei's Political Philosophy: The Way of the Ruler.
  3. ^ a b Watson, Burton (2003). Han Feizi – Basic Writings. Columbia University Press. p. 2. ISBN 9780231521321. OCLC 796815905.
  4. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on 2015-08-08. Retrieved 2015-07-25.
  5. ^ a b c d Hàn Phi Tử, Vietnamese translation by Phan Ngọc, Nhà xuất bản Văn học, HCMC 2011
  6. ^ Nguyển Hiến Lê, Giản Chi (1995). Hàn Phi Tử. NXB Văn hóa thông tin.
  7. ^ "PGS – TS Trần Ngọc Vương: Ngụy thiện cũng vừa phải thôi, không thì ai chịu được!".
  8. ^ Guo, Baogang (2008). China in Search of a Harmonious Society. p. 38.
  9. ^ Pines, Yuri (10 December 2014). "Legalism in Chinese Philosophy".
  10. ^ The biography by Sima Qian is presented in "The Biography of Han Fei Tzŭ By Ssŭ-ma Ch'ien" chapter of The Complete Works of Han Fei Tzu, translated by W.K. Liao, 1939, reprinted by Arthur Probsthain, 1959. https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=op8KAQAAIAAJ http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/saxon/servlet/SaxonServlet?source=xwomen/texts/hanfei.xml&style=xwomen/xsl/dynaxml.xsl&chunk.id=d1.4&toc.depth=1&toc.id=0&doc.lang=bilingual
  11. ^ Tae Hyun KIM 2010 p.15, Other Laozi Parallels in the Hanfeizi

Further reading

  • Burton Watson (1964). Han Fei Tzu: Basic Writings. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-08609-7.
  • Hàn Phi Tử, Vietnamese translation by Phan Ngọc, Nhà xuất bản Văn học, HCMC 2011.

External links

imperial, chinese, consorts, consort, disambiguation, this, chinese, name, family, name, also, known, chinese, philosopher, statesman, legalist, fajia, school, during, warring, states, period, prince, state, zi韓非bornunknown, bcstate, zhou, dynastydied233, bcst. For imperial Chinese consorts see Consort Han disambiguation In this Chinese name the family name is Han Han Fei c 280 233 BC also known as Han Feizi or Han Fei Zi was a Chinese philosopher or statesman 2 of the Legalist Fajia school during the Warring States period and a prince of the state of Han 3 Han Feizi韓非BornUnknown c 280 BCState of Han Zhou dynastyDied233 BCState of QinCause of deathForced to commit suicide by drinking poisonNotable workHan FeiziEraAncient philosophyRegionChinese philosophySchoolLegalismInfluences Shang Yang Shen Buhai Shen Dao Li KuiInfluenced Qin Shi Huang Emperor Wen of Han Emperor Wu of Han Cao Cao Zhuge Liang Emperor Wen of Sui Li Shanchang Zhang Juzheng Yongzheng Emperor Xi Jinping 1 et al Chinese nameTraditional Chinese韓非Simplified Chinese韩非TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinHan FeiBopomofoㄏㄢˊ ㄈㄟGwoyeu RomatzyhHarn FeiWade GilesHan2 Fei1IPA xa n fe ɪ Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationHohn FeiJyutpingHon4 Fei1IPA hɔ ːn fe i Southern MinTai loHan HuiMiddle ChineseMiddle ChineseHan PjiOld ChineseBaxter Sagart 2014 g ˤar pejHanziTraditional Chinese韓子Simplified Chinese韩子TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinHan zǐWade GilesHan2 Tzu3Han2 tzu3Han FeiziTraditional Chinese韓非子Simplified Chinese韩非子TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinHan Fei zǐWade GilesHan2 Fei1 Tzu3Han2 Fei1 tzu3Han Fei is often considered to be the greatest representative of Chinese Legalism for his eponymous work the Han Feizi 4 synthesizing the methods of his predecessors 5 Han Fei s ideas are sometimes compared with those of Niccolo Machiavelli 6 author of The Prince 7 Zhuge Liang is said to have attached great importance to the Han Feizi as well as Shen Buhai 8 9 Sima Qian recounts that Qin Shi Huang even went to war with the neighboring state of Han to obtain an audience with Han Fei but was ultimately convinced to imprison him whereupon he commits suicide 10 After the early demise of the Qin dynasty the Legalist school became officially vilified by the following Han dynasty Despite its outcast status throughout the history of imperial China Han Fei s political theory and the Legalist school continued to heavily influence every dynasty thereafter and the Confucian ideal of a rule without laws was never to be realised 5 Han Fei borrowed Shang Yang s emphasis on laws Shen Buhai s emphasis on administrative technique and Shen Dao s ideas on authority and prophecy emphasizing that the autocrat will be able to achieve firm control over the state with the mastering of his predecessors methodologies his position of power 勢 Shi technique 術 Shu and law 法 Fǎ He stressed the importance of the concept of Xing Ming holding actual outcome accountable to speech coupled with the system of the Two Handles punishment and reward as well as Wu wei non exertion Contents 1 Names 2 Life 3 Notes 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksNames EditHan Fei is written as 韓非 in traditional Chinese characters and as 韩非 in simplified ones The pinyin transcription of the modern Mandarin pronunciation of the name is Han Fei IPA xan fei He is also known respectfully as Hanzi Master Han or as Han Feizi Master Han Fei In Wade Giles transcription the same name was written Han Tzu Han tzu Han Fei Tzu or Han Fei tzu The same name sometimes as the Hanfeizi or the Han fei tzu is used to denote the later book whose contents are traditionally attributed to him Life EditThe exact year of Han Fei s birth remains unknown however scholars have placed it at around 280 BCE 3 Unlike the other famed philosophers of the time Han Fei was a member of the ruling aristocracy having been born into the ruling family of the State of Han during the end phase of the Warring States period In this context his works have been interpreted by some scholars as being directed to his cousin the King of Han 1 Sima Qian s Shi Ji says that Han Fei studied together with future Qin chancellor Li Si under the Confucian philosopher Xunzi It is said that because of his stutter Han Fei could not properly present his ideas in court His advice otherwise being ignored but observing the slow decline of his Han state he developed one of the most brilliant writing styles in ancient China 4 5 Sima Qian s biography of Han Fei is as follows Han Fei was a prince of Han in favor of the study of name form and law art which Sima Qian dubiously espoused as taking root in the Huang Lao philosophy He was born a stutterer and was not able to dispute well but he was good at writing papers Together with his friend Li Si he served Xun Qing and Si himself admitted that he was not as competent as Fei Seeing Han was on the decline he often remonstrated with the king of Han by submitting papers but the king did not agree to employ him At this Han Fei was frustrated with the reality that in governing a state the king did not endeavor to refine and clarify the juridical system of the state to control his subjects by taking over power to enhance state property and defense or to call and employ the wise by enhancing the state Rather the king employed the corrupted and treacherous and put them in higher positions over the wise He regarded the intellectuals as a disturbance to the law by employing their literature and thought that knights violate the prohibition of the state by using armed forces While the state was in peace the king liked to patronize the honored while in need he employed warriors with armor and helmet So the cultivated men could not be employed and the men employed could not be cultivated Severely distressed over the reality that men of high integrity and uprightness were not embraced by the subjects with immorality and corruption he observed the changes in the gaining and losing of the past Therefore he wrote several papers like Solitary Indignation Five Vermin Inner and Outer Congeries of Sayings Collected Persuasions and Difficulties in the Way of Persuasion which amount to one hundred thousand words However while Han Fei himself knew well of the difficulty of persuasion for his work on the difficulties in the way of persuasion was very comprehensive he eventually met an untimely death in Qin He could not escape the trap of words for himself 11 His works ultimately ended up in the hands of the thrilled Qin king Ying Zheng who commented If I can make friends with this person Han Fei I may die without regrets and invited Han Fei to the Qin court Han Fei presented the essay Preserving the Han to ask the king not to attack his homeland but his ex friend and rival Li Si used that essay to have Han Fei imprisoned on account of his likely loyalty to Han Han Fei responded by writing another essay named In the first time of meeting Qin king hoping to use his writing talent to win the king s heart Han Fei did win the king s heart but not before Li Si forced him to commit suicide by drinking poison The Qin king afterward regretted Han Fei s death 4 5 Xunzi formed the hypothesis that human nature is evil and virtueless therefore suggesting that human infants must be brought to their virtuous form through social class oriented Confucian moral education Without such Xunzi argued man would act virtueless and be steered by his own human nature to commit immoral acts Han Fei s education and life experience during the Warring States period and in his own Han state contributed his synthesis of a philosophy for the management of an amoral and interest driven administration to which morality seemed a loose and inefficient tool Han agreed with his teacher s theory of virtueless by birth but as in previous Legalist philosophy pragmatically proposed to steer people by their own interest driven nature Notes Edit Watson Burton Han Fei Tzu Basic Writings 1964 p 2 The king in question is believed to be either King An 238 230 BC or his predecessor King Huanhui 272 239 BC References Edit Leader Taps into Chinese Classics in Seeking to Cement Power The New York Times 12 October 2014 2018 Henrique Schneider p 1 An Introduction to Hanfei s Political Philosophy The Way of the Ruler a b Watson Burton 2003 Han Feizi Basic Writings Columbia University Press p 2 ISBN 9780231521321 OCLC 796815905 a b c Han Feizi Archived from the original on 2015 08 08 Retrieved 2015 07 25 a b c d Han Phi Tử Vietnamese translation by Phan Ngọc Nha xuất bản Văn học HCMC 2011 Nguyển Hiến Le Giản Chi 1995 Han Phi Tử NXB Văn hoa thong tin PGS TS Trần Ngọc Vương Ngụy thiện cũng vừa phải thoi khong thi ai chịu được Guo Baogang 2008 China in Search of a Harmonious Society p 38 Pines Yuri 10 December 2014 Legalism in Chinese Philosophy The biography by Sima Qian is presented in The Biography of Han Fei Tzŭ By Ssŭ ma Ch ien chapter of The Complete Works of Han Fei Tzu translated by W K Liao 1939 reprinted by Arthur Probsthain 1959 https books google com tw books id op8KAQAAIAAJ http www2 iath virginia edu saxon servlet SaxonServlet source xwomen texts hanfei xml amp style xwomen xsl dynaxml xsl amp chunk id d1 4 amp toc depth 1 amp toc id 0 amp doc lang bilingual Tae Hyun KIM 2010 p 15 Other Laozi Parallels in the HanfeiziFurther reading EditBurton Watson 1964 Han Fei Tzu Basic Writings New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 08609 7 Han Phi Tử Vietnamese translation by Phan Ngọc Nha xuất bản Văn học HCMC 2011 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Han Fei The complete works of Han Fei Tzu A classic of Chinese political science Translator Wenkui Liao Works by Han Fei at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Han Fei at Internet Archive Li Guangcan Han Fei Quotes Encyclopedia of China Law Edition 1st ed Gu Fang Han Fei Life Quotes Encyclopedia of China Philosophy Edition 1st ed Full text of Han Feizi Han Fei at PhilPapers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Han Fei amp oldid 1135354038, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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