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Neo-Confucianism

Neo-Confucianism (Chinese: 宋明理學; pinyin: Sòng-Míng lǐxué, often shortened to lǐxué 理學, literally "School of Principle") is a moral, ethical, and metaphysical Chinese philosophy influenced by Confucianism, and originated with Han Yu (768–824) and Li Ao (772–841) in the Tang dynasty, and became prominent during the Song and Ming dynasties under the formulations of Zhu Xi (1130–1200). After the Mongol conquest of China in the thirteenth century, Chinese scholars and officials restored and preserved neo-Confucianism as a way to safeguard the cultural heritage of China.[1]

Neo-Confucianism
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese宋明理學
Simplified Chinese宋明理学
Literal meaning"Song-Ming [dynasty] rational idealism"
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinSòng-Míng lǐxué
Gwoyeu RomatzyhSonq-Ming liishyue
Wade–GilesSung4-Ming2 li3-hsüeh2
IPA[sʊ̂ŋ mǐŋ lìɕɥě]
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationSung-Mìhng léih-hohk
JyutpingSung3-Ming4 lei5-hok6
Southern Min
Tâi-lôSòng-Bîng lí-ha̍k
Vietnamese name
VietnameseLý học
Chữ Hán理學
Korean name
Hangul성리학
Hanja性理學
Transcriptions
Revised RomanizationSeongnihak
Japanese name
Kanji宋明理学
Kanaそうみんりがく
Transcriptions
RomanizationSō Min rigaku

Neo-Confucianism could have been an attempt to create a more rationalist and secular form of Confucianism by rejecting superstitious and mystical elements of Taoism and Buddhism that had influenced Confucianism during and after the Han dynasty.[2] Although the neo-Confucianists were critical of Taoism and Buddhism, the two did have an influence on the philosophy, and the neo-Confucianists borrowed terms and concepts. However, unlike the Buddhists and Taoists, who saw metaphysics as a catalyst for spiritual development, religious enlightenment, and immortality, the neo-Confucianists used metaphysics as a guide for developing a rationalist ethical philosophy.[3][4] Traditional Confucian beliefs such as gender roles were also included, leading to the devaluing of women in Korea.

Origins

 

Neo-Confucianism has its origins in the Tang dynasty; the Confucianist scholars Han Yu and Li Ao are seen as forebears of the neo-Confucianists of the Song dynasty.[3] The Song dynasty philosopher Zhou Dunyi (1017–1073) is seen as the first true "pioneer" of neo-Confucianism, using Taoist metaphysics as a framework for his ethical philosophy.[4] Neo-Confucianism was both a revival of classical Confucianism updated to align with the social values of the Song dynasty and a reaction to the challenges of Buddhist and Taoist philosophy and religion which emerged during the Zhou and Han dynasties.[5] Although the neo-Confucianists denounced Buddhist metaphysics, Neo-Confucianism did borrow Taoist and Buddhist terminology and concepts.[3]

One of the most important exponents of neo-Confucianism was Zhu Xi (1130–1200), his teachings were so influential that they were integrated into civil-service examination from approximately 1314 until 1905.[6] He was a rather prolific writer, maintaining and defending his Confucian beliefs of social harmony and proper personal conduct. One of his most remembered was the book Family Rituals, where he provided detailed advice on how to conduct weddings, funerals, family ceremonies, and the veneration of ancestors. Buddhist thought soon attracted him, and he began to argue in Confucian style for the Buddhist observance of high moral standards. He also believed that it was important to practical affairs that one should engage in both academic and philosophical pursuits, although his writings are concentrated more on issues of theoretical (as opposed to practical) significance. It is reputed that he wrote many essays attempting to explain how his ideas were not Buddhist or Taoist and included some heated denunciations of Buddhism and Taoism. After the Xining era [zh] (1068–1077), Wang Yangming (1472–1529) is commonly regarded as the most important Neo-Confucian thinker. Wang's interpretation of Confucianism denied the rationalist dualism of Zhu's orthodox philosophy.

There were many competing views within the neo-Confucian community, but overall, a system emerged that resembled both Buddhist and Taoist (Daoist) thought of the time and some of the ideas expressed in the I Ching (Book of Changes) as well as other yin yang theories associated with the Taiji symbol (Taijitu). A well known neo-Confucian motif is paintings of Confucius, Buddha, and Lao Tzu all drinking out of the same vinegar jar, paintings associated with the slogan "The three teachings are one!"

While neo-Confucianism incorporated Buddhist and Taoist ideas, many neo-Confucianists strongly opposed Buddhism and Taoism. Indeed, they rejected the Buddhist and Taoist religions. One of Han Yu's most famous essays decries the worship of Buddhist relics. Nonetheless, neo-Confucian writings adapted Buddhist thoughts and beliefs to the Confucian interest. In China, neo-Confucianism was an officially recognized creed from its development during the Song dynasty until the early twentieth century, and lands in the sphere of Song China (Vietnam, Korea, and Japan) were all deeply influenced by neo-Confucianism for more than half a millennium.

Philosophy

Neo-Confucianism is a social and ethical philosophy using metaphysical ideas, some borrowed from Taoism, as its framework. The philosophy can be characterized as humanistic and rationalistic, with the belief that the universe could be understood through human reason, and that it was up to humanity to create a harmonious relationship between the universe and the individual.[7]

The rationalism of neo-Confucianism is in contrast to the mysticism of the previously dominant Chan Buddhism. Unlike the Buddhists, the neo-Confucians believed that reality existed, and could be understood by humankind, even if the interpretations of reality were slightly different depending on the school of neo-Confucianism.[7]

But the spirit of Neo-Confucian rationalism is diametrically opposed to that of Buddhist mysticism. Whereas Buddhism insisted on the unreality of things, Neo-Confucianism stressed their reality. Buddhism and Taoism asserted that existence came out of, and returned to, non-existence; Neo-Confucianism regarded reality as a gradual realization of the Great Ultimate... Buddhists, and to some degree, Taoists as well, relied on meditation and insight to achieve supreme reason; the Neo-Confucianists chose to follow Reason.[8]

The importance of li in Neo-Confucianism gave the movement its Chinese name, literally "The study of Li".

Schools

Neo-Confucianism was a heterogeneous philosophical tradition, and is generally categorized into two different schools.

Two-school model vs. three-school model

In medieval China, the mainstream of neo-Confucian thought, dubbed the "Tao school", had long categorized a thinker named Lu Jiuyuan among the unorthodox, non-Confucian writers. However, in the 15th century, the esteemed philosopher Wang Yangming took sides with Lu and critiqued some of the foundations of the Tao school, albeit not rejecting the school entirely.[9] Objections arose to Yangming's philosophy within his lifetime, and shortly after his death, Chen Jian (1497–1567) grouped Wang together with Lu as unorthodox writers, dividing neo-Confucianism into two schools.[10] As a result, neo-Confucianism today is generally categorized into two different schools of thought. The school that remained dominant throughout the medieval and early modern periods is called the Cheng–Zhu school for the esteem it places in Cheng Yi, Cheng Hao, and Zhu Xi. The less dominant, opposing school was the Lu–Wang school, based on its esteem for Lu Jiuyuan and Wang Yangming.

In contrast to this two-branch model, the New Confucian Mou Zongsan argues that there existed a third branch of learning, the Hu-Liu school, based on the teachings of Hu Hong (Hu Wufeng, 1106–1161) and Liu Zongzhou (Liu Jishan, 1578–1645). The significance of this third branch, according to Mou, was that they represented the direct lineage of the pioneers of neo-Confucianism, Zhou Dunyi, Zhang Zai and Cheng Hao. Moreover, this third Hu-Liu school and the second Lu–Wang school, combined, form the true mainstream of neo-Confucianism instead of the Cheng–Zhu school. The mainstream represented a return to the teachings of Confucius, Mengzi, the Doctrine of the Mean and the Commentaries of the Book of Changes. The Cheng–Zhu school was therefore only a minority branch based on the Great Learning and mistakenly emphasized intellectual studies over the study of sagehood.[11]

Cheng–Zhu school

Zhu Xi's formulation of the neo-Confucian world view is as follows. He believed that the Tao (Chinese: ; pinyin: dào; lit. 'way') of Tian (Chinese: ; pinyin: tiān; lit. 'heaven') is expressed in principle or li (Chinese: ; pinyin: ), but that it is sheathed in matter or qi (Chinese: ; pinyin: ). In this, his system is based on Buddhist systems of the time that divided things into principle (again, li), and function (Chinese: ; pinyin: shì). In the neo-Confucian formulation, li in itself is pure and almost-perfect, but with the addition of qi, base emotions and conflicts arise. Human nature is originally good, the neo-Confucians argued (following Mencius), but not pure unless action is taken to purify it. The imperative is then to purify one's li. However, in contrast to Buddhists and Taoists, neo-Confucians did not believe in an external world unconnected with the world of matter. In addition, neo-Confucians in general rejected the idea of reincarnation and the associated idea of karma.

Different neo-Confucians had differing ideas for how to do so. Zhu Xi believed in gewu (Chinese: 格物; pinyin: géwù), the Investigation of Things, essentially an academic form of observational science, based on the idea that li lies within the world.

Lu–Wang school

Wang Yangming (Wang Shouren), probably the second most influential neo-Confucian, came to another conclusion: namely, that if li is in all things, and li is in one's heart-mind, there is no better place to seek than within oneself. His preferred method of doing so was jingzuo (Chinese: 靜坐; pinyin: jìngzuò; lit. 'quiet sitting'), a practice that strongly resembles Chan (Zen) meditation, or zuochan (Japanese: 座禅; Chinese: 坐禪; pinyin: zuòchán; lit. 'seated meditation'). Wang Yangming developed the idea of innate knowing, arguing that every person knows from birth the difference between good and evil. Such knowledge is intuitive and not rational. These revolutionizing ideas of Wang Yangming would later inspire prominent Japanese thinkers like Motoori Norinaga, who argued that because of the Shinto deities, Japanese people alone had the intuitive ability to distinguish good and evil without complex rationalization. Wang Yangming's school of thought (Ōyōmei-gaku in Japanese) also provided, in part, an ideological basis for some samurai who sought to pursue action based on intuition rather than scholasticism. As such, it also provided an intellectual foundation for the radical political actions of low ranking samurai in the decades prior to the Meiji Restoration (1868), in which the Tokugawa shogunate (1600–1868) was overthrown.

In Korea

 
Portrait of Jo Gwang-jo

In Joseon Korea, neo-Confucianism was established as the state ideology. The Yuan occupation of the Korean Peninsula introduced Zhu Xi's school of neo-Confucianism to Korea.[12][13] Neo-Confucianism was introduced to Korea by An Hyang during the Goryeo dynasty.[citation needed] At the time that he introduced neo-Confucianism, the Goryeo dynasty was in the last century of its existence and influenced by the Mongol Yuan dynasty.[citation needed]

Many Korean scholars visited China during the Yuan era and An was among them. In 1286, he read a book of Zhu Xi in Yanjing and was so moved by it that he transcribed the book in its entirety and came back to Korea with it. It greatly inspired Korean intellectuals at the time and many, predominantly from the middle class and disillusioned with the excesses of organized religion (namely Buddhism) and the old nobility, embraced neo-Confucianism. The newly rising neo-Confucian intellectuals were leading groups aimed at the overthrow of the old (and increasingly foreign-influenced) Goryeo dynasty.

After the fall of Goryeo and the establishment of the Joseon dynasty by Yi Song-gye in 1392, neo-Confucianism was installed as the state ideology. Buddhism, and organized religion in general, was considered poisonous to the neo-Confucian order. Buddhism was accordingly restricted and occasionally persecuted by Joseon. As neo-Confucianism encouraged education, a number of neo-Confucian schools (서원 seowon and 향교 hyanggyo) were founded throughout the country, producing many scholars including Jo Gwang-jo (조광조, 趙光祖; 1482–1520), Yi Hwang (이황, 李滉; pen name Toegye 퇴계, 退溪; 1501–1570) and Yi I (이이, 李珥; 1536–1584).

In the early 16th century, Jo attempted to transform Joseon into an ideal neo-Confucian society with a series of radical reforms until he was executed in 1520. Despite this, neo-Confucianism soon assumed an even greater role in the Joseon dynasty. Soon neo-Confucian scholars, no longer content to only read and remember the Chinese original precepts, began to develop new neo-Confucian theories. Yi Hwang and Yi I were the most prominent of these new theorists.

Yi Hwang's most prominent disciples were Kim Seong-il (金誠一, 1538–1593), Yu Seong-ryong (柳成龍 1542–1607) and Jeong Gu (한강 정구, 寒岡 鄭逑, 1543–1620), known as the "three heroes". They were followed by a second generation of scholars who included Jang Hyungwang (張顯光, 1554–1637) and Jang Heung-Hyo (敬堂 張興孝, 1564–1633), and by a third generation (including Heo Mok, Yun Hyu, Yun Seon-do and Song Si-yeol) who brought the school into the 18th century [14]

But neo-Confucianism became so dogmatic in a relatively rapid time that it prevented much needed socioeconomic development and change, and led to internal divisions and criticism of many new theories regardless of their popular appeal. For instance, Wang Yangming's theories, which were popular in the Chinese Ming dynasty, were considered heresy and severely condemned by Korean neo-Confucianists. Furthermore, any annotations on Confucian canon different from Zhu Xi were excluded. Under Joseon, the newly emerging ruling class called Sarim (사림, 士林) also split into political factions according to their diversity of neo-Confucian views on politics. There were two large factions and many subfactions.

During the Japanese invasions of Korea (1592–1598), many Korean neo-Confucian books and scholars were taken to Japan and influenced Japanese scholars such as Fujiwara Seika and affected the development of Japanese neo-Confucianism.

In Japan

In Vietnam

 
Portrait of Chu Văn An (1292–1370), prominently Vietnamese Confucianist teacher in 14th century.

In 1070, emperor Lý Thánh Tông opened first Confucius university in Hanoi named Văn Miếu. The Lý, Trần court expanded the Confucianism influences in Vietnamese Mandarin through year examinations, continued the model of Tang dynasty until being annexed by the Ming invaders in 1407. In 1460, emperor Lê Thánh Tông of Lê dynasty adopted Neo-Confucianism as Đại Việt's basic values.

Bureaucratic examinations

Neo-Confucianism became the interpretation of Confucianism whose mastery was necessary to pass the bureaucratic examinations by the Ming, and continued in this way through the Qing dynasty until the end of the Imperial examination system in 1905. However, many scholars such as Benjamin Elman have questioned the degree to which their role as the orthodox interpretation in state examinations reflects the degree to which both the bureaucrats and Chinese gentry actually believed those interpretations, and point out that there were very active schools such as Han learning which offered competing interpretations of Confucianism.

The competing school of Confucianism was called the Evidential School or Han Learning and argued that neo-Confucianism had caused the teachings of Confucianism to be hopelessly contaminated with Buddhist thinking. This school also criticized neo-Confucianism for being overly concerned with empty philosophical speculation that was unconnected with reality.

Confucian canon

The Confucian canon as it exists today was essentially compiled by Zhu Xi. Zhu codified the canon of Four Books (the Great Learning, the Doctrine of the Mean, the Analects of Confucius, and the Mencius) which in the subsequent Ming and Qing dynasties were made the core of the official curriculum for the civil service examination.

New Confucianism

In the 1920s, New Confucianism, also known as modern neo-Confucianism, started developing and absorbed the Western learning to seek a way to modernize Chinese culture based on the traditional Confucianism. It centers on four topics: The modern transformation of Chinese culture; Humanistic spirit of Chinese culture; Religious connotation in Chinese culture; and Intuitive way of thinking, to go beyond the logic and to wipe out the concept of exclusion analysis. Adhering to the traditional Confucianism and the neo-confucianism, the modern neo-Confucianism contributes the nation's emerging from the predicament faced by the ancient Chinese traditional culture in the process of modernization; furthermore, it also promotes the world culture of industrial civilization rather than the traditional personal senses.[citation needed]

Prominent neo-Confucian scholars

China

Korea

Japan

Vietnam

Citations

  1. ^ Taylor, Jay (2011). The Generalissimo: Chiang Kai-shek and the Struggle for Modern China. Harvard University Press. p. 13.
  2. ^ Blocker, H. Gene; Starling, Christopher L. (2001). Japanese Philosophy. SUNY Press. p. 64.
  3. ^ a b c Huang 1999, p. 5.
  4. ^ a b Chan 1963, p. 460.
  5. ^ Levinson & Christensen 2002, pp. 302–307.
  6. ^ Levinson & Christensen 2002, pp. 305–307.
  7. ^ a b Craig 1998, p. 552.
  8. ^ Chan 1946, p. 268
  9. ^ Wilson, Thomas A. (1995). Genealogy of the Way: The Construction and Uses of the Confucian Tradition in Late Imperial China. Stanford, CA: Stanford Univ. Press. pp. 168–169. ISBN 978-0804724258.
  10. ^ de Bary 1989, pp. 94–95.
  11. ^ Yao, Xinzhong (2000). An Introduction to Confucianism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 259. ISBN 978-0-521-64430-3.
  12. ^ Paragraph 12 in Emanuel Pastreich "The Reception of Chinese Literature in Korea"
  13. ^ Mair 2001, chapter 53.
  14. ^ 【李甦平】 Lisu Ping, 论韩国儒学的特点和精神 "On the characteristics and spirit of Korean Confucianism", 《孔子研究》2008年1期 (Confucius Studies 2008.1). See also List of Korean philosophers.

General sources

  • Chan, Wing-tsit (1963), A Sourcebook of Chinese Philosophy, Princeton: Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-07137-4
  • Chan, Wing-tsit, trans. Instructions for Practical Living and Other Neo-Confucian Writings by Wang Yang-ming. New York: Columbia University Press, 1963.
  • Chan, Wing-tsit (1946). China. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
  • Craig, Edward (1998). Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Volume 7. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-415-07310-3.
  • Daehwan, Noh. . Korea Journal (Winter 2003).
  • de Bary, William Theodore; Chaffee, John W., eds. (1989). Neo-confucian Education: The Formative Stage. University of California Press. pp. 455–. ISBN 978-0-520-06393-8.
  • de Bary, William Theodore; et al., eds. (2008). Sources of East Asian Tradition. New York: Columbia University Press. (Vol. 1 ISBN 978-0-231-14305-9) (Vol. 2 ISBN 978-0-231-14323-3)
  • de Bary, William Theodore (1989). The Message of the Mind in Neo-Confucianism. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0231068085.
  • Ebrey, Patricia Buckley. Chinese Civilization: A Sourcebook. New York: Free, 1993. Print.
  • Henderson, John B. (1998). The Construction of Orthodoxy and Heresy: Neo-Confucian, Islamic, Jewish, and Early Christian Patterns. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. ISBN 9780791437599.
  • Huang, Siu-chi (1999). Essentials of Neo-Confucianism: Eight Major Philosophers of the Song and Ming Periods. Westport: Greenwood Press.
  • Levinson, David; Christensen, Karen, eds. (2002). Encyclopedia of Modern Asia. Vol. 4. Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 302–307.
  • Mair, Victor H., ed. (2001). The Columbia History of Chinese Literature. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-10984-9. (Amazon Kindle edition).
  • Tu Weiming. Neo-Confucian Thought in Action: Wang Yang-ming’s Youth (1472–1509). Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1976.
  • Tu Weiming. Confucian Thought: Selfhood as Creative Transformation. New York: State University of New York Press, 1985.

External links

confucianism, this, article, about, movement, developed, during, song, ming, dynasties, movement, that, emerged, 20th, century, confucianism, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help,. This article is about a movement developed during the Song and Ming dynasties For a movement that emerged in the 20th century see New Confucianism This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations August 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Neo Confucianism Chinese 宋明理學 pinyin Song Ming lǐxue often shortened to lǐxue 理學 literally School of Principle is a moral ethical and metaphysical Chinese philosophy influenced by Confucianism and originated with Han Yu 768 824 and Li Ao 772 841 in the Tang dynasty and became prominent during the Song and Ming dynasties under the formulations of Zhu Xi 1130 1200 After the Mongol conquest of China in the thirteenth century Chinese scholars and officials restored and preserved neo Confucianism as a way to safeguard the cultural heritage of China 1 Neo ConfucianismChinese nameTraditional Chinese宋明理學Simplified Chinese宋明理学Literal meaning Song Ming dynasty rational idealism TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinSong Ming lǐxueGwoyeu RomatzyhSonq Ming liishyueWade GilesSung4 Ming2 li3 hsueh2IPA sʊ ŋ mi ŋ li ɕɥe Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationSung Mihng leih hohkJyutpingSung3 Ming4 lei5 hok6Southern MinTai loSong Bing li ha kVietnamese nameVietnameseLy họcChữ Han理學Korean nameHangul성리학Hanja性理學TranscriptionsRevised RomanizationSeongnihakJapanese nameKanji宋明理学KanaそうみんりがくTranscriptionsRomanizationSō Min rigakuNeo Confucianism could have been an attempt to create a more rationalist and secular form of Confucianism by rejecting superstitious and mystical elements of Taoism and Buddhism that had influenced Confucianism during and after the Han dynasty 2 Although the neo Confucianists were critical of Taoism and Buddhism the two did have an influence on the philosophy and the neo Confucianists borrowed terms and concepts However unlike the Buddhists and Taoists who saw metaphysics as a catalyst for spiritual development religious enlightenment and immortality the neo Confucianists used metaphysics as a guide for developing a rationalist ethical philosophy 3 4 Traditional Confucian beliefs such as gender roles were also included leading to the devaluing of women in Korea Contents 1 Origins 2 Philosophy 3 Schools 3 1 Two school model vs three school model 3 2 Cheng Zhu school 3 3 Lu Wang school 4 In Korea 5 In Japan 6 In Vietnam 7 Bureaucratic examinations 8 Confucian canon 9 New Confucianism 10 Prominent neo Confucian scholars 10 1 China 10 2 Korea 10 3 Japan 10 4 Vietnam 11 Citations 12 General sources 13 External linksOrigins EditFurther information Religion in the Song dynasty Neo Confucianism Bronze statue of Zhou Dunyi in White Deer Grotto Academy Neo Confucianism has its origins in the Tang dynasty the Confucianist scholars Han Yu and Li Ao are seen as forebears of the neo Confucianists of the Song dynasty 3 The Song dynasty philosopher Zhou Dunyi 1017 1073 is seen as the first true pioneer of neo Confucianism using Taoist metaphysics as a framework for his ethical philosophy 4 Neo Confucianism was both a revival of classical Confucianism updated to align with the social values of the Song dynasty and a reaction to the challenges of Buddhist and Taoist philosophy and religion which emerged during the Zhou and Han dynasties 5 Although the neo Confucianists denounced Buddhist metaphysics Neo Confucianism did borrow Taoist and Buddhist terminology and concepts 3 One of the most important exponents of neo Confucianism was Zhu Xi 1130 1200 his teachings were so influential that they were integrated into civil service examination from approximately 1314 until 1905 6 He was a rather prolific writer maintaining and defending his Confucian beliefs of social harmony and proper personal conduct One of his most remembered was the book Family Rituals where he provided detailed advice on how to conduct weddings funerals family ceremonies and the veneration of ancestors Buddhist thought soon attracted him and he began to argue in Confucian style for the Buddhist observance of high moral standards He also believed that it was important to practical affairs that one should engage in both academic and philosophical pursuits although his writings are concentrated more on issues of theoretical as opposed to practical significance It is reputed that he wrote many essays attempting to explain how his ideas were not Buddhist or Taoist and included some heated denunciations of Buddhism and Taoism After the Xining era zh 1068 1077 Wang Yangming 1472 1529 is commonly regarded as the most important Neo Confucian thinker Wang s interpretation of Confucianism denied the rationalist dualism of Zhu s orthodox philosophy There were many competing views within the neo Confucian community but overall a system emerged that resembled both Buddhist and Taoist Daoist thought of the time and some of the ideas expressed in the I Ching Book of Changes as well as other yin yang theories associated with the Taiji symbol Taijitu A well known neo Confucian motif is paintings of Confucius Buddha and Lao Tzu all drinking out of the same vinegar jar paintings associated with the slogan The three teachings are one While neo Confucianism incorporated Buddhist and Taoist ideas many neo Confucianists strongly opposed Buddhism and Taoism Indeed they rejected the Buddhist and Taoist religions One of Han Yu s most famous essays decries the worship of Buddhist relics Nonetheless neo Confucian writings adapted Buddhist thoughts and beliefs to the Confucian interest In China neo Confucianism was an officially recognized creed from its development during the Song dynasty until the early twentieth century and lands in the sphere of Song China Vietnam Korea and Japan were all deeply influenced by neo Confucianism for more than half a millennium Philosophy EditNeo Confucianism is a social and ethical philosophy using metaphysical ideas some borrowed from Taoism as its framework The philosophy can be characterized as humanistic and rationalistic with the belief that the universe could be understood through human reason and that it was up to humanity to create a harmonious relationship between the universe and the individual 7 The rationalism of neo Confucianism is in contrast to the mysticism of the previously dominant Chan Buddhism Unlike the Buddhists the neo Confucians believed that reality existed and could be understood by humankind even if the interpretations of reality were slightly different depending on the school of neo Confucianism 7 But the spirit of Neo Confucian rationalism is diametrically opposed to that of Buddhist mysticism Whereas Buddhism insisted on the unreality of things Neo Confucianism stressed their reality Buddhism and Taoism asserted that existence came out of and returned to non existence Neo Confucianism regarded reality as a gradual realization of the Great Ultimate Buddhists and to some degree Taoists as well relied on meditation and insight to achieve supreme reason the Neo Confucianists chose to follow Reason 8 The importance of li in Neo Confucianism gave the movement its Chinese name literally The study of Li Schools EditNeo Confucianism was a heterogeneous philosophical tradition and is generally categorized into two different schools Two school model vs three school model Edit In medieval China the mainstream of neo Confucian thought dubbed the Tao school had long categorized a thinker named Lu Jiuyuan among the unorthodox non Confucian writers However in the 15th century the esteemed philosopher Wang Yangming took sides with Lu and critiqued some of the foundations of the Tao school albeit not rejecting the school entirely 9 Objections arose to Yangming s philosophy within his lifetime and shortly after his death Chen Jian 1497 1567 grouped Wang together with Lu as unorthodox writers dividing neo Confucianism into two schools 10 As a result neo Confucianism today is generally categorized into two different schools of thought The school that remained dominant throughout the medieval and early modern periods is called the Cheng Zhu school for the esteem it places in Cheng Yi Cheng Hao and Zhu Xi The less dominant opposing school was the Lu Wang school based on its esteem for Lu Jiuyuan and Wang Yangming In contrast to this two branch model the New Confucian Mou Zongsan argues that there existed a third branch of learning the Hu Liu school based on the teachings of Hu Hong Hu Wufeng 1106 1161 and Liu Zongzhou Liu Jishan 1578 1645 The significance of this third branch according to Mou was that they represented the direct lineage of the pioneers of neo Confucianism Zhou Dunyi Zhang Zai and Cheng Hao Moreover this third Hu Liu school and the second Lu Wang school combined form the true mainstream of neo Confucianism instead of the Cheng Zhu school The mainstream represented a return to the teachings of Confucius Mengzi the Doctrine of the Mean and the Commentaries of the Book of Changes The Cheng Zhu school was therefore only a minority branch based on the Great Learning and mistakenly emphasized intellectual studies over the study of sagehood 11 Cheng Zhu school Edit Main article Cheng Zhu school Zhu Xi s formulation of the neo Confucian world view is as follows He believed that the Tao Chinese 道 pinyin dao lit way of Tian Chinese 天 pinyin tian lit heaven is expressed in principle or li Chinese 理 pinyin lǐ but that it is sheathed in matter or qi Chinese 氣 pinyin qi In this his system is based on Buddhist systems of the time that divided things into principle again li and function Chinese 事 pinyin shi In the neo Confucian formulation li in itself is pure and almost perfect but with the addition of qi base emotions and conflicts arise Human nature is originally good the neo Confucians argued following Mencius but not pure unless action is taken to purify it The imperative is then to purify one s li However in contrast to Buddhists and Taoists neo Confucians did not believe in an external world unconnected with the world of matter In addition neo Confucians in general rejected the idea of reincarnation and the associated idea of karma Different neo Confucians had differing ideas for how to do so Zhu Xi believed in gewu Chinese 格物 pinyin gewu the Investigation of Things essentially an academic form of observational science based on the idea that li lies within the world Lu Wang school Edit Main article Lu Wang school Wang Yangming Wang Shouren probably the second most influential neo Confucian came to another conclusion namely that if li is in all things and li is in one s heart mind there is no better place to seek than within oneself His preferred method of doing so was jingzuo Chinese 靜坐 pinyin jingzuo lit quiet sitting a practice that strongly resembles Chan Zen meditation or zuochan Japanese 座禅 Chinese 坐禪 pinyin zuochan lit seated meditation Wang Yangming developed the idea of innate knowing arguing that every person knows from birth the difference between good and evil Such knowledge is intuitive and not rational These revolutionizing ideas of Wang Yangming would later inspire prominent Japanese thinkers like Motoori Norinaga who argued that because of the Shinto deities Japanese people alone had the intuitive ability to distinguish good and evil without complex rationalization Wang Yangming s school of thought Ōyōmei gaku in Japanese also provided in part an ideological basis for some samurai who sought to pursue action based on intuition rather than scholasticism As such it also provided an intellectual foundation for the radical political actions of low ranking samurai in the decades prior to the Meiji Restoration 1868 in which the Tokugawa shogunate 1600 1868 was overthrown In Korea EditFurther information Korean Confucianism Further information Political factions during the Joseon dynasty Portrait of Jo Gwang jo In Joseon Korea neo Confucianism was established as the state ideology The Yuan occupation of the Korean Peninsula introduced Zhu Xi s school of neo Confucianism to Korea 12 13 Neo Confucianism was introduced to Korea by An Hyang during the Goryeo dynasty citation needed At the time that he introduced neo Confucianism the Goryeo dynasty was in the last century of its existence and influenced by the Mongol Yuan dynasty citation needed Many Korean scholars visited China during the Yuan era and An was among them In 1286 he read a book of Zhu Xi in Yanjing and was so moved by it that he transcribed the book in its entirety and came back to Korea with it It greatly inspired Korean intellectuals at the time and many predominantly from the middle class and disillusioned with the excesses of organized religion namely Buddhism and the old nobility embraced neo Confucianism The newly rising neo Confucian intellectuals were leading groups aimed at the overthrow of the old and increasingly foreign influenced Goryeo dynasty After the fall of Goryeo and the establishment of the Joseon dynasty by Yi Song gye in 1392 neo Confucianism was installed as the state ideology Buddhism and organized religion in general was considered poisonous to the neo Confucian order Buddhism was accordingly restricted and occasionally persecuted by Joseon As neo Confucianism encouraged education a number of neo Confucian schools 서원 seowon and 향교 hyanggyo were founded throughout the country producing many scholars including Jo Gwang jo 조광조 趙光祖 1482 1520 Yi Hwang 이황 李滉 pen name Toegye 퇴계 退溪 1501 1570 and Yi I 이이 李珥 1536 1584 In the early 16th century Jo attempted to transform Joseon into an ideal neo Confucian society with a series of radical reforms until he was executed in 1520 Despite this neo Confucianism soon assumed an even greater role in the Joseon dynasty Soon neo Confucian scholars no longer content to only read and remember the Chinese original precepts began to develop new neo Confucian theories Yi Hwang and Yi I were the most prominent of these new theorists Yi Hwang s most prominent disciples were Kim Seong il 金誠一 1538 1593 Yu Seong ryong 柳成龍 1542 1607 and Jeong Gu 한강 정구 寒岡 鄭逑 1543 1620 known as the three heroes They were followed by a second generation of scholars who included Jang Hyungwang 張顯光 1554 1637 and Jang Heung Hyo 敬堂 張興孝 1564 1633 and by a third generation including Heo Mok Yun Hyu Yun Seon do and Song Si yeol who brought the school into the 18th century 14 But neo Confucianism became so dogmatic in a relatively rapid time that it prevented much needed socioeconomic development and change and led to internal divisions and criticism of many new theories regardless of their popular appeal For instance Wang Yangming s theories which were popular in the Chinese Ming dynasty were considered heresy and severely condemned by Korean neo Confucianists Furthermore any annotations on Confucian canon different from Zhu Xi were excluded Under Joseon the newly emerging ruling class called Sarim 사림 士林 also split into political factions according to their diversity of neo Confucian views on politics There were two large factions and many subfactions During the Japanese invasions of Korea 1592 1598 many Korean neo Confucian books and scholars were taken to Japan and influenced Japanese scholars such as Fujiwara Seika and affected the development of Japanese neo Confucianism In Japan EditMain article Edo Neo Confucianism Further information Kansei Edict Fujiwara Seika Hayashi Razan and Toju NakaeIn Vietnam EditFurther information Văn Miếu Quốc Tử Giam Le Thanh Tong and Minh Mạng Portrait of Chu Văn An 1292 1370 prominently Vietnamese Confucianist teacher in 14th century In 1070 emperor Ly Thanh Tong opened first Confucius university in Hanoi named Văn Miếu The Ly Trần court expanded the Confucianism influences in Vietnamese Mandarin through year examinations continued the model of Tang dynasty until being annexed by the Ming invaders in 1407 In 1460 emperor Le Thanh Tong of Le dynasty adopted Neo Confucianism as Đại Việt s basic values Bureaucratic examinations EditNeo Confucianism became the interpretation of Confucianism whose mastery was necessary to pass the bureaucratic examinations by the Ming and continued in this way through the Qing dynasty until the end of the Imperial examination system in 1905 However many scholars such as Benjamin Elman have questioned the degree to which their role as the orthodox interpretation in state examinations reflects the degree to which both the bureaucrats and Chinese gentry actually believed those interpretations and point out that there were very active schools such as Han learning which offered competing interpretations of Confucianism The competing school of Confucianism was called the Evidential School or Han Learning and argued that neo Confucianism had caused the teachings of Confucianism to be hopelessly contaminated with Buddhist thinking This school also criticized neo Confucianism for being overly concerned with empty philosophical speculation that was unconnected with reality Confucian canon EditThe Confucian canon as it exists today was essentially compiled by Zhu Xi Zhu codified the canon of Four Books the Great Learning the Doctrine of the Mean the Analects of Confucius and the Mencius which in the subsequent Ming and Qing dynasties were made the core of the official curriculum for the civil service examination New Confucianism EditIn the 1920s New Confucianism also known as modern neo Confucianism started developing and absorbed the Western learning to seek a way to modernize Chinese culture based on the traditional Confucianism It centers on four topics The modern transformation of Chinese culture Humanistic spirit of Chinese culture Religious connotation in Chinese culture and Intuitive way of thinking to go beyond the logic and to wipe out the concept of exclusion analysis Adhering to the traditional Confucianism and the neo confucianism the modern neo Confucianism contributes the nation s emerging from the predicament faced by the ancient Chinese traditional culture in the process of modernization furthermore it also promotes the world culture of industrial civilization rather than the traditional personal senses citation needed Prominent neo Confucian scholars EditChina Edit Cheng Yi and Cheng Hao Lu Xiangshan also known as Lu Jiuyuan 1139 1193 Ouyang Xiu 1007 1072 Shao Yong 1011 1077 Su Shi also known as Su Dongpo 1037 1101 Wang Yangming also known as Wang Shouren Wu Cheng 1249 1333 Ye Shi 1150 1223 Zhang Shi 1133 1180 Zhang Zai Zhou Dunyi 1017 1073 Zhu Xi 1130 1200 Cheng Duanli 1271 1345 Korea Edit See also Korean Confucianism An Hyang 1243 1306 U Tak 1263 1342 Yi Saek 1328 1396 Jeong Mong ju 1337 1392 Jeong Dojeon 1342 1398 Gil Jae 1353 1419 Ha Ryun Gwon Geun Jeong Inji 1396 1478 Kim Suk ja Kim Jong jik 1431 1492 Nam Hyo on Kim Goil pil Jo Gwang jo 1482 1519 Seo Gyeongdeok Yi Eon jeok Yi Hwang Pen name Toegye 1501 1570 Jo Sik 1501 1572 Ryu Seongryong Yi Hang Kim Inhu Ki Daeseung 1527 1572 Song Ik pil 1534 1599 Seong Hon 1535 1598 Yi I Pen name Yulgok 1536 1584 Kim Jangsaeng 1548 1631 Song Si yeol 1607 1689 Yi Gan 1677 1727 Yi Ik 1681 1763 Han Wonjin 1682 1751 Hong Daeyong 1731 1783 Park Jiwon 1737 1805 Park Jega 1750 1815 Jeong Yak yong 1762 1836 Japan Edit See also Edo Neo Confucianism and Kansei Edict Fujiwara Seika 1561 1619 Hayashi Razan 1583 1657 Nakae Tōju 1608 1648 Yamazaki Ansai 1619 1682 Kumazawa Banzan 1619 1691 Yamaga Sokō 1622 1685 Itō Jinsai 1627 1705 Kaibara Ekken also known as Ekiken 1630 1714 Arai Hakuseki 1657 1725 Ogyu Sorai 1666 1728 Nakai Chikuzan 1730 1804 Ōshio Heihachirō 1793 1837 Vietnam Edit Le Văn Thịnh 1050 1096 Bui Quốc Khai 1141 1234 Trần Thai Tong 1218 1277 Trương Han Sieu 1274 1354 Chu Văn An 1292 1370 Le Quat 1319 1386 Nguyễn Trai 1380 1442 Ngo Sĩ Lien 1400 1498 Le Thanh Tong 1442 1497 Nguyễn Bỉnh Khiem 1491 1585 Le Quy Đon 1726 1784 Nguyễn Khuyến 1835 1909 Phan Đinh Phung 1847 1896 Minh Mạng 1791 1841 Tự Đức 1829 1883 Citations Edit Taylor Jay 2011 The Generalissimo Chiang Kai shek and the Struggle for Modern China Harvard University Press p 13 Blocker H Gene Starling Christopher L 2001 Japanese Philosophy SUNY Press p 64 a b c Huang 1999 p 5 a b Chan 1963 p 460 Levinson amp Christensen 2002 pp 302 307 Levinson amp Christensen 2002 pp 305 307 a b Craig 1998 p 552 Chan 1946 p 268 Wilson Thomas A 1995 Genealogy of the Way The Construction and Uses of the Confucian Tradition in Late Imperial China Stanford CA Stanford Univ Press pp 168 169 ISBN 978 0804724258 de Bary 1989 pp 94 95 Yao Xinzhong 2000 An Introduction to Confucianism Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 259 ISBN 978 0 521 64430 3 Paragraph 12 in Emanuel Pastreich The Reception of Chinese Literature in Korea Mair 2001 chapter 53 李甦平 Lisu Ping 论韩国儒学的特点和精神 On the characteristics and spirit of Korean Confucianism 孔子研究 2008年1期 Confucius Studies 2008 1 See also List of Korean philosophers General sources EditChan Wing tsit 1963 A Sourcebook of Chinese Philosophy Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 07137 4 Chan Wing tsit trans Instructions for Practical Living and Other Neo Confucian Writings by Wang Yang ming New York Columbia University Press 1963 Chan Wing tsit 1946 China Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press Craig Edward 1998 Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Volume 7 Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 07310 3 Daehwan Noh The Eclectic Development of Neo Confucianism and Statecraft from the 18th to the 19th Century Korea Journal Winter 2003 de Bary William Theodore Chaffee John W eds 1989 Neo confucian Education The Formative Stage University of California Press pp 455 ISBN 978 0 520 06393 8 de Bary William Theodore et al eds 2008 Sources of East Asian Tradition New York Columbia University Press Vol 1 ISBN 978 0 231 14305 9 Vol 2 ISBN 978 0 231 14323 3 de Bary William Theodore 1989 The Message of the Mind in Neo Confucianism New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0231068085 Ebrey Patricia Buckley Chinese Civilization A Sourcebook New York Free 1993 Print Henderson John B 1998 The Construction of Orthodoxy and Heresy Neo Confucian Islamic Jewish and Early Christian Patterns Albany NY State University of New York Press ISBN 9780791437599 Huang Siu chi 1999 Essentials of Neo Confucianism Eight Major Philosophers of the Song and Ming Periods Westport Greenwood Press Levinson David Christensen Karen eds 2002 Encyclopedia of Modern Asia Vol 4 Charles Scribner s Sons pp 302 307 Mair Victor H ed 2001 The Columbia History of Chinese Literature New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 10984 9 Amazon Kindle edition Tu Weiming Neo Confucian Thought in Action Wang Yang ming s Youth 1472 1509 Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press 1976 Tu Weiming Confucian Thought Selfhood as Creative Transformation New York State University of New York Press 1985 External links Edit Neo Confucian Philosophy Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Writings of the Orthodox School from the Song dynasty in English and Chinese Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Neo Confucianism amp oldid 1148042481, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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