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Tian

Tiān () is one of the oldest Chinese terms for heaven and a key concept in Chinese mythology, philosophy, and religion. During the Shang dynasty (17th―11th century BCE), the Chinese referred to their supreme god as Shàngdì (上帝, "Lord on High") or (, "Lord").[1] During the following Zhou dynasty, Tiān became synonymous with this figure. Before the 20th century, worship of Tiān was an orthodox state religion of China.[further explanation needed]

Tian
Chinese Bronze script character for tiān.
Chinese name
Chinese
Literal meaningheaven(s)
Vietnamese name
Vietnamese alphabetthiên
Chữ Hán
Korean name
Hangul
Hanja
Transcriptions
Revised Romanizationcheon
Japanese name
Kanji
Kanaてん
Transcriptions
Romanizationten

In Taoism and Confucianism, Tiān (the celestial aspect of the cosmos, often translated as "Heaven") is mentioned in relationship to its complementary aspect of (, often translated as "Earth").[2][3] They are thought to maintain the two poles of the Three Realms (三界) of reality, with the middle realm occupied by Humanity (, rén), and the lower world occupied by demons (魔, ) and "ghosts", the damned, (鬼, guǐ).[4] Tiān was variously thought as a "supreme power reigning over lesser gods and human beings"[5][6] that brought "order and calm...or catastrophe and punishment",[7] a god,[8][9] destiny,[9][7] an "impersonal" natural force that controlled various events,[5][9] a holy world or afterlife containing other worlds or afterlives,[10][11] or one or more of these.[5]

Characters Edit

 
Chinese Seal script for tiān "heaven"
 
Chinese Oracle script for tiān "heaven"

The modern Chinese character and early seal script both combine "great; large" and "one", but some of the original characters in Shāng oracle bone script and Zhōu bronzeware script anthropomorphically portray a large head on a great person. The ancient oracle and bronze ideograms for depict a stick figure person with arms stretched out denoting "great; large". The oracle and bronze characters for tiān emphasize the cranium of this "great (person)", either with a square or round head, or head marked with one or two lines. Schuessler notes the bronze graphs for tiān, showing a person with a round head, resemble those for dīng "4th Celestial stem", and suggests "The anthropomorphic graph may or may not indicate that the original meaning was 'deity', rather than 'sky'."[12]

Two variant Chinese characters for tiān "heaven" are 二人 (written with er "two" and ren "human") and the Daoist coinage [13] (with qīng "blue" and "", i.e., "blue sky").

Pronunciation and etymology Edit

The Modern Standard Chinese pronunciation of "sky, heaven; heavenly deity, god" is tiān [tʰi̯ɛn˥] in level first tone. The character is read as Cantonese tin1; Taiwanese thiN1 or thian1; Vietnamese thiên; Korean cheon or ch'ŏn (천); and Japanese ten in On'yomi (borrowed Chinese reading) and ama- (bound), ame (free), or sora in Kun'yomi (native Japanese reading).[needs IPA]

Tiān reconstructions in Middle Chinese (c. 6th–10th centuries CE) include t'ien,[14] t'iɛn,[15] tʰɛn > tʰian,[16] and then.[17] Reconstructions in Old Chinese (c. 6th–3rd centuries BCE) include *t'ien,[14] *t'en,[18] *hlin,[19] *thîn,[20] and *l̥ˤin.[21]

For the etymology of tiān, Schuessler links it with the Mongolian word tengri "sky, heaven, heavenly deity" or the Tibeto-Burman words taleŋ (Adi) and tǎ-lyaŋ (Lepcha), both meaning "sky".[12] He also suggests a likely connection between Chinese tiān , diān "summit, mountaintop", and diān "summit, top of the head, forehead", which have cognates such as Zemeic Naga tiŋ "sky".[22] However, other reconstructions of 天's OC pronunciation *qʰl'iːn [23] or *l̥ˤi[n] [24] reconstructed a voiceless lateral onset, either a cluster or a single consonant, respectively. Baxter & Sagart pointed to attested dialectal differences in Eastern Han Chinese, the use of 天 as a phonetic component in phono-semantic compound Chinese characters, and the choice of 天 to transcribe foreign syllables, all of which prompted them to conclude that, around 200 CE, 天's onset had two pronunciations: coronal * & dorsal *x, both of which likely originated from an earlier voiceless lateral *l̥ˤ.[25]

Compounds Edit

Tiān is one of the components in hundreds of Chinese compounds. Some significant ones include:

  • Tiānmìng (天命 "Mandate of Heaven") "divine mandate, God's will; fate, destiny; one's lifespan"
  • Tiānwèn (simplified Chinese: 天问; traditional Chinese: 天問; pinyin: Tiānwèn), the Heavenly Questions section of the Chǔ Cí.
  • Tiānzĭ (天子 "Son of Heaven"), an honorific designation for the "Emperor; Chinese sovereign" (Tiānzǐ accounts for 28 of the 140 tiān occurrences in the Shī Jīng above.)
  • Tiānxià (天下, lit. "all under heaven") "the world, earth; China"
  • Tiāndì (天地, lit "heaven and earth") "the world; the universe."
  • Xíngtiān (刑天) An early mythological hero who fought against Heaven, despite being decapitated.
  • Tiānfáng (天房, lit. "House of Heaven") A Chinese name for the Kaaba, from Bayt Allah (Arabic: بَيْت ٱللَّٰه, lit.'House of God').

Chinese interpretations Edit

"Lord Heaven" and "Jade Emperor" were terms for a supreme deity in Confucianism and Taoism who was an anthropromorphized Tian,[26] and some conceptions of it thought of the names as synonymous.

Tiān was viewed as "the dwelling place of God, gods,...other superhuman beings and the...state of being of the saved[27]".[9] It was also viewed as "the guardian of both the moral laws of mankind and the physical laws of nature...and is synonymous with the divine will."[9]

In Chinese culture, heaven tends to be "synonymous with order", "containing the blueprints for creation", "the mandate by which earthly rulers govern, and the standards by which to measure beauty, goodness, and truth."[27]

Zhou dynasty nobles made the worship of heaven a major part of their political philosophy and viewed it as "many gods" who embodied order and kingship, as well as the mandate of heaven.[28]

Confucianism Edit

"Confucianism has a religious side with a deep reverence for Heaven and Earth (Di), whose powers regulate the flow of nature and influence human events."[3] Yin and yang are also thought to be integral to this relationship and permeate both, as well as humans and man-made constructs.[3] This "cosmos" and its "principles" is something that "[t]he ways of man should conform to, or else" frustration will result.[3]

Many Confucianists, both historically and in current times, use the I Ching to divine events through the changes of Tiān and other "natural forces".[3] Historical and current Confucianists were/are often environmentalists[29] out of their respect for Heaven and the other aspects of nature and the "Principle" that comes from their unity and, more generally, harmony as a whole, which is "the basis for a sincere mind."[3]

The Emperor of China as Tianzi was formerly vital to Confucianism.[7]

Mount Tai is seen as a sacred place in Confucianism and was traditionally the most revered place where Chinese emperors offered sacrifices to heaven and earth.[30]

Confucius Edit

The concept of Heaven (Tiān, ) is pervasive in Confucianism. Confucius had a deep trust in Heaven and believed that Heaven overruled human efforts. He also believed that he was carrying out the will of Heaven, and that Heaven would not allow its servant, Confucius, to be killed until his work was done.[31] Many attributes of Heaven were delineated in his Analects.

Confucius honored Heaven as the supreme source of goodness:

The Master said, "Great indeed was Yao as a sovereign! How majestic was he! It is only Heaven that is grand, and only Yao corresponded to it. How vast was his virtue! The people could find no name for it. How majestic was he in the works which he accomplished! How glorious in the elegant regulations which he instituted!"[32]

Confucius felt himself personally dependent upon Heaven: "Wherein I have done improperly, may Heaven reject me! may Heaven reject me!"[33]

Confucius believed that Heaven cannot be deceived:

The Master being very ill, Zi Lu wished the disciples to act as ministers to him. During a remission of his illness, he said, "Long has the conduct of You been deceitful! By pretending to have ministers when I have them not, whom should I impose upon? Should I impose upon Heaven? Moreover, than that I should die in the hands of ministers, is it not better that I should die in the hands of you, my disciples? And though I may not get a great burial, shall I die upon the road?"[34]

Confucius believed that Heaven gives people tasks to perform to teach them of virtues and morality:

The Master said, "At fifteen, I had my mind bent on learning. At thirty, I stood firm. At forty, I had no doubts. At fifty, I knew the decrees of Heaven. At sixty, my ear was an obedient organ for the reception of truth. At seventy, I could follow what my heart desired, without transgressing what was right."[35]

He believed that Heaven knew what he was doing and approved of him, even though none of the rulers on earth might want him as a guide:

The Master said, "Alas! there is no one that knows me." Zi Gong said, "What do you mean by thus saying - that no one knows you?" The Master replied, "I do not murmur against Heaven. I do not grumble against men. My studies lie low, and my penetration rises high. But there is Heaven - that knows me!" [36]

Perhaps the most remarkable saying, recorded twice, is one in which Confucius expresses complete trust in the overruling providence of Heaven:

The Master was put in fear in Kuang. He said, "After the death of King Wen, was not the cause of truth lodged here in me? If Heaven had wished to let this cause of truth perish, then I, a future mortal, should not have got such a relation to that cause. While Heaven does not let the cause of truth perish, what can the people of Kuang do to me?" [37]

Mozi Edit

For Mozi, Heaven is the divine ruler, just as the Son of Heaven is the earthly ruler. Mozi believed that spirits and minor demons exist or at least rituals should be performed as if they did for social reasons, but their function is to carry out the will of Heaven, watching for evil-doers and punishing them. Mozi taught that Heaven loves all people equally and that each person should similarly love all human beings without distinguishing between his own relatives and those of others.[38] Mozi criticized the Confucians of his own time for not following the teachings of Confucius. In Mozi's Will of Heaven (天志), he writes:

Moreover, I know Heaven loves men dearly not without reason. Heaven ordered the sun, the moon, and the stars to enlighten and guide them. Heaven ordained the four seasons, Spring, Autumn, Winter, and Summer, to regulate them. Heaven sent down snow, frost, rain, and dew to grow the five grains and flax and silk that so the people could use and enjoy them. Heaven established the hills and rivers, ravines and valleys, and arranged many things to minister to man's good or bring him evil. He appointed the dukes and lords to reward the virtuous and punish the wicked, and to gather metal and wood, birds and beasts, and to engage in cultivating the five grains and flax and silk to provide for the people's food and clothing. This has been so from antiquity to the present."[39]

Schools of cosmology Edit

There are three major schools on the structure of tian.[further explanation needed] Most other hypothesis were developed from them.

  • Gaitian shuo (蓋天說) "Canopy-Heavens hypothesis" originated from the text Zhoubi Suanjing. The earth is covered by a material tian.
  • Huntian shuo (渾天說) "Egg-like hypothesis". The earth surrounded by a tian sphere rotating over it. The celestial bodies are attached to the tian sphere. (See Zhang Heng § Astronomy and mathematics, Chinese creation myth.)
  • Xuanye shuo (宣夜說) "Firmament hypothesis". The tian is an infinite space. The celestial bodies were light matters floating on it moved by Qi. A summary by Ji Meng (郗萌) is in the astronomical chapters of the Book of Jin.

Tiān schools influenced popular conception of the universe and earth until the 17th century, when they were replaced by cosmological science imported from Europe.[40]

Sometimes the sky is divided into Jiutian (九天) "the nine sky divisions", the middle sky and the eight directions.

Buddhism Edit

The Tian are the heaven worlds and pure lands in Buddhist cosmology.

Some devas are also called Tian.

Taoism Edit

The number of vertical heaven layers in Taoism is different. A common belief in Taoism is that there were 36 Tiān "arranged on six levels" that have "different deities".[7] The highest heaven is the "Great Web" which was sometimes said to be where Yuanshi Tianzun lived.[7]

After death, some Taoists were thought to explore "heavenly realms" and/or become Taoist immortals.[10][41] These immortals could be good or evil,[42] and there were sometimes rivalries between them.

Some heavens in Taoism were thought to be evil, as in Shangqing Daoism,[43] although Tiān was mostly thought of as a force for good.[44]

Heaven is sometimes seen as synonymous with the Dao or a natural energy that can be accessed by living in accordance with the Dao.[27]

A Tao realm inconceivable and incomprehensible by normal humans and even Confucius and Confucianists[45] was sometimes called "the Heavens".[46] Higher, spiritual versions of Daoists such as Laozi were thought to exist in there when they were alive and absorb "the purest Yin and Yang",[46] as well as xian who were reborn into it after their human selves' spirits were sent there. These spiritual versions were thought to be abstract beings that can manifest in that world as mythical beings such as xian dragons who eat yin and yang energy and ride clouds and their qi.[46]

Chinese folk religion Edit

Some tiān in Chinese folk religion were thought to be many different or a hierarchy of multiple, sphere-like[40] realms that contained morally ambiguous creatures and spirits such as huli jing[11] and fire-breathing dragons.[47]

The Tao realm was thought to exist by many ancient folk religion practitioners.[46]

Yiguandao Edit

In Yiguandao, Tian is divided into three vertical worlds. Li Tian (理天) "heaven of truth", Qi Tian (氣天) "heaven of spirit" and Xiang Tian (象天) "heaven of matter".

Japanese interpretations Edit

In some cases, the heavens in Shinto were thought to be a hierarchy of multiple, sphere-like realms that contained kami such as fox spirits.[11]

Myths about the kami were told "of their doings on Earth and in heaven."[48] Heaven was thought to be a clean and orderly place for nature gods in Shinto.[48]

Meanings Edit

The semantics of tian developed diachronically. The Hanyu dazidian, an historical dictionary of Chinese characters, lists 17 meanings of tian 天, translated below.

  1. Human forehead; head, cranium. 人的額部; 腦袋.
  2. Anciently, to tattoo/brand the forehead as a kind of punishment. 古代一種在額頭上刺字的刑罰.
  3. The heavens, the sky, the firmament. 天空.
  4. Celestial bodies; celestial phenomena, meteorological phenomena. 天體; 天象.
  5. Nature, natural. A general reference to objective inevitability beyond human will. 自然. 泛指不以人意志為轉移的客觀必然性.
  6. Natural, innate; instinctive, inborn. 自然的; 天性的.
  7. Natural character/quality of a person or thing; natural instinct, inborn nature, disposition. 人或物的自然形質; 天性.
  8. A reference to a particular sky/space. 特指某一空間.
  9. Season; seasons. Like: winter; the three hot 10-day periods [following the summer solstice]. 時令; 季節. 如: 冬天; 三伏天.
  10. Weather; climate. 天氣; 氣候.
  11. Day, time of one day and night, or especially the time from sunrise to sunset. Like: today; yesterday; busy all day; go fishing for three days and dry the nets for two [a xiehouyu simile for "unable to finish anything"]. 一晝夜的時間, 或專指日出到日落的時間. 如: 今天; 昨天; 忙了一天; 三天打魚, 兩天曬網.
  12. God, heaven, celestial spirit, of the natural world. 天神, 上帝, 自然界的主宰者.
  13. Heaven, heavenly, a superstitious person's reference to the gods, Buddhas, or immortals; or to the worlds where they live. Like: go to heaven ["die"]; heavenly troops and heavenly generals ["invincible army"]; heavenly goddesses scatter blossoms [a Vimalakirti Sutra reference to "Buddha's arrival"]. 迷信的人指神佛仙人或他們生活的那個世界. 如: 歸天; 天兵天將; 天女散花.
  14. Anciently, the king, monarch, sovereign; also referring to elders in human relationships. 古代指君王; 也指人倫中的尊者.
  15. Object upon which one depends or relies. 所依存或依靠的對象.
  16. Dialect. A measure of land [shang, about 15 acres]. 方言. 垧.
  17. A family name, surname. 姓.

The Chinese philosopher Feng Youlan differentiates five different meanings of tian in early Chinese writings:

(1) A material or physical T'ien or sky, that is, the T'ien often spoken of in apposition to earth, as in the common phrase which refers to the physical universe as 'Heaven and Earth' (T'ien Ti 天地).
(2) A ruling or presiding T'ien, that is, one such as is meant in the phrase, 'Imperial Heaven Supreme Emperor' (Huang T'ien Shang Ti), in which anthropomorphic T'ien and Ti are signified.
(3) A fatalistic T'ien, equivalent to the concept of Fate (ming ), a term applied to all those events in human life over which man himself has no control. This is the T'ien Mencius refers to when he says: "As to the accomplishment of a great deed, that is with T'ien" ([Mencius], Ib, 14).
(4) A naturalistic T'ien, that is, one equivalent to the English word Nature. This is the sort of T'ien described in the 'Discussion on T'ien' in the [Hsün Tzǔ] (ch. 17).

(5) An ethical T'ien, that is, one having a moral principle and which is the highest primordial principle of the universe. This is the sort of T'ien which the [Chung Yung] (Doctrine of the Mean) refers to in its opening sentence when it says: "What T'ien confers (on man) is called his nature."[49]

The Oxford English Dictionary enters the English loanword t'ien (also tayn, tyen, tien, and tiān) "Chinese thought: Heaven; the Deity." The earliest recorded usages for these spelling variants are: 1613 Tayn, 1710 Tien, 1747 Tyen, and 1878 T'ien.

In early Chinese writings, tiān was thought to be a subservient location that a higher deity owned,[50] and Shangdi was thought by some to be this being.

Interpretation by Western Sinologists Edit

The sinologist Herrlee Creel, who wrote a comprehensive study called "The Origin of the Deity T'ien", gives this overview.

For three thousand years it has been believed that from time immemorial all Chinese revered T'ien , "Heaven," as the highest deity, and that this same deity was also known as Shangdi, Ti , or Shang Ti 上帝. But the new materials that have become available in the present century, and especially the Shang inscriptions, make it evident that this was not the case. It appears rather that T'ien is not named at all in the Shang inscriptions, which instead refer with great frequency to Ti or Shang Ti. T'ien appears only with the Chou, and was apparently a Chou deity. After the conquest the Chou considered T'ien to be identical with the Shang deity Ti (or Shang Ti), much as the Romans identified the Greek Zeus with their Jupiter.[51]

Creel refers to the historical shift in ancient Chinese names for "god"; from Shang oracles that frequently used di and shangdi and rarely used tian to Zhou bronzes and texts that used tian more frequently than its synonym shangdi.

First, Creel analyzes all the tian and di occurrences meaning "god; gods" in Western Zhou era Chinese classic texts and bronze inscriptions. The Yi Jing "Classic of Changes" has 2 tian and 1 di; the Shi Jing "Classic of Poetry" has 140 tian and 43 di or shangdi; and the authentic portions of the Shu Jing "Classic of Documents" have 116 tian and 25 di or shangdi. His corpus of authenticated Western Zhou bronzes mention tian 91 times and di or shangdi only 4 times. Second, Creel contrasts the disparity between 175 occurrences of di or shangdi on Shang era oracle inscriptions with "at least" 26 occurrences of tian. Upon examining these 26 oracle scripts that scholars (like Guo Moruo) have identified as tian "heaven; god",[52] he rules out 8 cases in fragments where the contextual meaning is unclear. Of the remaining 18, Creel interprets 11 cases as graphic variants for da "great; large; big" (e.g., tian i shang 天邑商 for da i shang 大邑商 "great settlement Shang"), 3 as a place name, and 4 cases of oracles recording sacrifices yu tian 于天 "to/at Tian" (which could mean "to Heaven/God" or "at a place called Tian".)[53]

The Shu Jing chapter "Tang Shi" (湯誓 "Tang's Speech") illustrates how early Zhou texts used tian "heaven; god" in contexts with shangdi "god". According to tradition, Tang of Shang assembled his subjects to overthrow King Jie of Xia, the infamous last ruler of the Xia Dynasty, but they were reluctant to attack.

The king said, "Come, ye multitudes of the people, listen all to my words. It is not I, the little child [a humble name used by kings], who dare to undertake what may seem to be a rebellious enterprise; but for the many crimes of the sovereign of Hsiâ [Xia] Heaven has given the charge [...] to destroy him. Now, ye multitudes, you are saying, 'Our prince does not compassionate us, but (is calling us) away from our husbandry to attack and punish the ruler of Hsiâ.' I have indeed heard these words of you all; but the sovereign of Hsiâ is an offender, and, as I fear God [shangdi], I dare not but punish him. Now you are saying, 'What are the crimes of Hsiâ to us?' The king of Hsiâ does nothing but exhaust the strength of his people, and exercise oppression in the cities of Hsiâ. His people have all become idle in his service, and will not assist him. They are saying, 'When will this sun expire? We will all perish with thee.' Such is the course of the sovereign of Hsiâ, and now I must go and punish him. Assist, I pray you, me, the one man, to carry out the punishment appointed by Heaven [tian]. I will greatly reward you. On no account disbelieve me; — I will not eat my words. If you do not obey the words which I have spoken to you, I will put your children with you to death; — you shall find no forgiveness."[54]

Having established that Tiān was not a deity of the Shang people, Creel proposes a hypothesis for how it originated. Both the Shang and Zhou peoples pictographically represented da as "a large or great man". The Zhou subsequently added a head on him to denote tian meaning "king, kings" (cf. wang "king; ruler", which had oracle graphs picturing a line under a "great person" and bronze graphs that added the top line). From "kings", tiān was semantically extended to mean "dead kings; ancestral kings", who controlled "fate; providence", and ultimately a single omnipotent deity Tian "Heaven". In addition, tiān named both "the heavens" (where ancestral kings and gods supposedly lived) and the visible "sky".[55]

Another possibility is that Tiān may be related to Tengri and there was possibly a loan word from a prehistoric Central Asian language that contributed to the creation of the word.[56]

Kelly James Clark argued that Confucius himself saw Tiān as an anthropomorphic god that Clark hypothetically refers to as "Heavenly Supreme Emperor", although most other scholars on Confucianism disagree with this view.[57]

See also Edit

Tian related terms Edit

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Stefon, Matt (2010-02-03). "Shangdi". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2023-05-01.
  2. ^ Woodhead, Linda; Partridge, Christopher; Kawanami, Hiroko (2016). Religions in the Modern World (Third ed.). New York, NY: Routledge. pp. 147–148. ISBN 978-0-415-85881-6.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Wilson, Andrew, ed. (1995). World Scripture: A Comparative Anthology of Sacred Texts (1st paperback ed.). St. Paul, Minnesota: Paragon House Publishers. p. 19. ISBN 978-1-55778-723-1.
  4. ^ Woolf, Greg (2007). Ancient civilizations: the illustrated guide to belief, mythology, and art. Barnes & Noble. p. 212. ISBN 978-1-4351-0121-0.
  5. ^ a b c "tian". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2023-04-28.
  6. ^ Harari, Yuval Noah (2015). Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind. Translated by Harari, Yuval Noah; Purcell, John; Watzman, Haim. London: Penguin Random House UK. p. 219. ISBN 978-0-09-959008-8. OCLC 910498369.
  7. ^ a b c d e Storm, Rachel (2011). Sudell, Helen (ed.). Myths & Legends of India, Egypt, China & Japan (2nd ed.). Wigston, Leicestershire: Lorenz Books. p. 233.
  8. ^ World Religions: Eastern Traditions. Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby (2nd ed.). Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press. 2002. p. 424. ISBN 0-19-541521-3. OCLC 46661540.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  9. ^ a b c d e Carrasco et al. 1999, p. 1096.
  10. ^ a b "xian". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2023-04-29.
  11. ^ a b c Carlson, Kathie; Flanagin, Michael N.; Martin, Kathleen; Martin, Mary E.; Mendelsohn, John; Rodgers, Priscilla Young; Ronnberg, Ami; Salman, Sherry; Wesley, Deborah A.; et al. (Authors) (2010). Arm, Karen; Ueda, Kako; Thulin, Anne; Langerak, Allison; Kiley, Timothy Gus; Wolff, Mary (eds.). The Book of Symbols: Reflections on Archetypal Images. Köln: Taschen. p. 280. ISBN 978-3-8365-1448-4.
  12. ^ a b Schuessler (2007), p. 495
  13. ^ Carrasco et al. 1999, p. 1068.
  14. ^ a b Karlgren (1922)[pages needed]
  15. ^ Zhou (1972)[pages needed]
  16. ^ Pulleyblank (1991)[pages needed]
  17. ^ Baxter (1992)[pages needed], Baxter & Sagart (2014)[pages needed]
  18. ^ Zhou (1972)[pages needed]
  19. ^ Baxter (1992)[pages needed]
  20. ^ Schuessler (2007)[pages needed]
  21. ^ Baxter & Sagart (2014)[pages needed]
  22. ^ Schuessler (2007), p. 211; #6312 NEIA *t(s)iŋ celestial / sky / weath (provisional) at Sino-Tibetan Etymological Dictionary and Thesaurus
  23. ^ Zhengzhang (2003)
  24. ^ Baxter & Sagart (2011), p. 110
  25. ^ Baxter & Sagart (2014), pp. 113–114
  26. ^ World Religions: Eastern Traditions. Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby (2nd ed.). Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press. 2002. pp. 326, 393, 401. ISBN 0-19-541521-3. OCLC 46661540.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  27. ^ a b c Zaleski, Carol (2023-05-12). "Heaven". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2023-05-15.
  28. ^ Pearson, Patricia O'Connell; Holdren, John (May 2021). World History: Our Human Story. Versailles, Kentucky: Sheridan Kentucky. p. 98. ISBN 978-1-60153-123-0.
  29. ^ Tucker, Mary Evelyn (1998). "Confucianism and Ecology: Potential and Limits". The Forum on Religion and Ecology at Yale. Yale University. Retrieved 2023-04-29.
  30. ^ Guangwei, He; Hualing, Tong; Wenzhen, Yang; Zhenguo, Chang; Zeru, Li; Ruicheng, Dong; Weijan, Gong, eds. (1999). Spectacular China. Translated by Wusun, Lin; Zhongping, Wu. Cologne: Könemann. p. 42. ISBN 9783829010771.
  31. ^ Analects 7.23
  32. ^ Confucius & Legge (1893), p.214, VIII, xix
  33. ^ Confucius & Legge (1893), p.193, VI, xxviii
  34. ^ Confucius & Legge (1893), pp. 220-221, IX, xi
  35. ^ Confucius & Legge (1893), p.146, book II, chapter iv
  36. ^ Confucius & Legge (1893), 288-9, XIV, xxxv
  37. ^ Confucius & Legge (1893), 217-8, 9.5 and 7.12
  38. ^ Dubs (1960), pp. 163–172
  39. ^ Mozi & Mei (1929), p. 145
  40. ^ a b Liu, Shu-Chiu (2006-12-11). "Three early Chinese models". Asia-Pacific Forum on Science, Learning, and Teaching. Historical models and science instruction: A cross-cultural analysis based on students’ views. Education University of Hong Kong.
  41. ^ Carrasco et al. 1999, p. 473.
  42. ^ Helle, Horst J. (2017). "CHAPTER 7 Daoism: China's Native Religion". JSTOR. Brill. pp. 75–76. Retrieved 2023-06-07.
  43. ^ Carrasco et al. 1999, p. 691.
  44. ^ Dell, Christopher (2012). Mythology: The Complete Guide to our Imagined Worlds. New York: Thames & Hudson. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-500-51615-7.
  45. ^ Wilson, Andrew, ed. (1995). World Scripture: A Comparative Anthology of Sacred Texts (1st paperback ed.). St. Paul, Minnesota: Paragon House Publishers. pp. 467–468. ISBN 978-1-55778-723-1.
  46. ^ a b c d Minford, John (2018). Tao Te Ching: The Essential Translation of the Ancient Chinese Book of the Tao. New York: Viking Press. pp. ix–x. ISBN 978-0-670-02498-8.
  47. ^ Hua, Sara Lynn (2016-06-28). "Difference Between A Chinese Dragon and A Western Dragon". TutorABC Chinese China Expats & Culture Blog. Retrieved 2023-05-18.
  48. ^ a b Stevenson, Jay (2000). The Complete Idiot's Guide to Eastern Philosophy. Indianapolis: Alpha Books. p. 170. ISBN 9780028638201.
  49. ^ Feng (1952), p. 31
  50. ^ Szostak, Rick (2020-10-22). Making Sense of World History. London: Routledge. p. 321. doi:10.4324/9781003013518. ISBN 9781003013518.
  51. ^ Creel (1970), p. 493
  52. ^ Creel (1970), pp. 494–5
  53. ^ Creel (1970), pp. 464–75
  54. ^ Legge (1865), pp. 173–5
  55. ^ Creel (1970), pp. 501–6
  56. ^ Müller (1870)[pages needed]
  57. ^ "Searching for the Ineffable: Classical Theism and Eastern Thought about God". Classical Theism: New Essays on the Metaphysics of God. Edited by Jonathan Fuqua and Robert C. Koons. Routledge. 2023-02-10. ISBN 978-1-000-83688-2. OCLC 1353836889.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)

Sources Edit

  • Baxter, William H. (1992). A Handbook of Old Chinese Phonology. Mouton de Gruyter.
  • Baxter, William; Sagart, Lauren (2011). (pdf). Archived from the original on 27 September 2013.
  • Baxter, William; Sagart, Lauren (2014). Old Chinese: A New Reconstruction (PDF). Oxford University Press. pp. 113–114. Supplemental materials available at their webpage.
  • Carrasco, David; Warmind, Morten; Hawley, John Stratton; Reynolds, Frank; Giarardot, Norman; Neusner, Jacob; Pelikan, Jaroslav; Campo, Juan; Penner, Hans; et al. (Authors) (1999). Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of World Religions. Edited by Wendy Doniger. United States: Merriam-Webster. ISBN 9780877790440.
  • Chang, Ruth H. (2000). "Understanding Di and Tian: Deity and Heaven From Shang to Tang". Sino-Platonic Papers. 108: 1–54.
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  • Dubs, Homer H. (1960). "Theism and Naturalism in Ancient Chinese Philosophy". Philosophy East and West. 9 (3–4): 163–172. doi:10.2307/1397096. JSTOR 1397096.
  • Feng, Yu-Lan (1952). A History of Chinese Philosophy, Vol. I. The Period of the Philosophers. Translated by Bodde, Derk. Princeton University Press.
  • Karlgren, Bernhard (1922). "The reconstruction of Ancient Chinese". T'oung Pao. 21: 1–42. doi:10.1163/156853222X00015.
  • The Chinese Classics, Vol. III, The Shoo King. Translated by Legge, James. Oxford University Press. 1865 – via Internet Archive.
  • Confucius (1893). The Chinese Classics, Vol. I, The Confucian Analects, the Great Learning, and the Doctrine of the Mean. Translated by Legge, James. Oxford University Press – via Internet Archive.
  • Mozi (1929). The Ethical and Political Works of Motse. Translated by Mei, Y. P. London: Probsthain.
  • Müller, Friedrich Max (1870). Lectures on the Science of Religion. New York, C. Scribner and company.
  • Pulleyblank, Edwin G. (1991). A Lexicon of Reconstructed Pronunciation in Early Middle Chinese, Late Middle Chinese and Early Mandarin. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press. ISBN 978-0-7748-0366-3.
  • Schuessler, Axel (2007). ABC Etymological Dictionary of Old Chinese. University of Hawaii Press.
  • Zhengzhang, Shangfang 鄭張尚芳 (2003). 上古音系 [Ancient Phonology]. Shanghai Education Press.
  • Zhou, Fagao 周法高 (1972). "Shanggu Hanyu he Han-Zangyu" 上古漢語和漢藏語 [Ancient Chinese and Sino-Tibetan Languages]. Journal of the Institute of Chinese Studies of the Chinese University of Hong Kong (in Chinese). 5: 159–244.

External links Edit

  • Oracle, Bronze, and Seal characters for 天, Richard Sears

tian, other, uses, disambiguation, tiān, oldest, chinese, terms, heaven, concept, chinese, mythology, philosophy, religion, during, shang, dynasty, 17th, 11th, century, chinese, referred, their, supreme, shàngdì, 上帝, lord, high, lord, during, following, zhou, . For other uses see Tian disambiguation Tian 天 is one of the oldest Chinese terms for heaven and a key concept in Chinese mythology philosophy and religion During the Shang dynasty 17th 11th century BCE the Chinese referred to their supreme god as Shangdi 上帝 Lord on High or Di 帝 Lord 1 During the following Zhou dynasty Tian became synonymous with this figure Before the 20th century worship of Tian was an orthodox state religion of China further explanation needed TianChinese Bronze script character for tian Chinese nameChinese天Literal meaningheaven s TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyintianWade Gilest ien1IPA ti ɛn WuRomanizationthi T1 GanRomanizationtien1Yue CantoneseJyutpingtin1Southern MinHokkien POJthiⁿMiddle ChineseMiddle ChinesetʰenOld ChineseZhengzhang qʰl iːn Vietnamese nameVietnamese alphabetthienChữ Han天Korean nameHangul천Hanja天TranscriptionsRevised RomanizationcheonJapanese nameKanji天KanaてんTranscriptionsRomanizationtenIn Taoism and Confucianism Tian the celestial aspect of the cosmos often translated as Heaven is mentioned in relationship to its complementary aspect of Di 地 often translated as Earth 2 3 They are thought to maintain the two poles of the Three Realms 三界 of reality with the middle realm occupied by Humanity 人 ren and the lower world occupied by demons 魔 mo and ghosts the damned 鬼 guǐ 4 Tian was variously thought as a supreme power reigning over lesser gods and human beings 5 6 that brought order and calm or catastrophe and punishment 7 a god 8 9 destiny 9 7 an impersonal natural force that controlled various events 5 9 a holy world or afterlife containing other worlds or afterlives 10 11 or one or more of these 5 Contents 1 Characters 2 Pronunciation and etymology 3 Compounds 4 Chinese interpretations 4 1 Confucianism 4 1 1 Confucius 4 2 Mozi 4 3 Schools of cosmology 4 4 Buddhism 4 5 Taoism 4 6 Chinese folk religion 4 7 Yiguandao 5 Japanese interpretations 6 Meanings 7 Interpretation by Western Sinologists 8 See also 8 1 Tian related terms 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 10 External linksCharacters Edit nbsp Chinese Seal script for tian 天 heaven nbsp Chinese Oracle script for tian 天 heaven The modern Chinese character 天 and early seal script both combine da 大 great large and yi 一 one but some of the original characters in Shang oracle bone script and Zhōu bronzeware script anthropomorphically portray a large head on a great person The ancient oracle and bronze ideograms for da 大 depict a stick figure person with arms stretched out denoting great large The oracle and bronze characters for tian 天 emphasize the cranium of this great person either with a square or round head or head marked with one or two lines Schuessler notes the bronze graphs for tian showing a person with a round head resemble those for ding 丁 4th Celestial stem and suggests The anthropomorphic graph may or may not indicate that the original meaning was deity rather than sky 12 Two variant Chinese characters for tian 天 heaven are 二人 written with 二 er two and 人 ren human and the Daoist coinage 靝 13 with 青 qing blue and 氣 qi i e blue sky Pronunciation and etymology EditThe Modern Standard Chinese pronunciation of 天 sky heaven heavenly deity god is tian tʰi ɛn in level first tone The character is read as Cantonese tin1 Taiwanese thiN1 or thian1 Vietnamese thien Korean cheon or ch ŏn 천 and Japanese ten in On yomi borrowed Chinese reading and ama bound ame free or sora in Kun yomi native Japanese reading needs IPA Tian 天 reconstructions in Middle Chinese c 6th 10th centuries CE include t ien 14 t iɛn 15 tʰɛn gt tʰian 16 and then 17 Reconstructions in Old Chinese c 6th 3rd centuries BCE include t ien 14 t en 18 hlin 19 thin 20 and l ˤin 21 For the etymology of tian Schuessler links it with the Mongolian word tengri sky heaven heavenly deity or the Tibeto Burman words taleŋ Adi and tǎ lyaŋ Lepcha both meaning sky 12 He also suggests a likely connection between Chinese tian 天 dian 巔 summit mountaintop and dian 顛 summit top of the head forehead which have cognates such as Zemeic Naga tiŋ sky 22 However other reconstructions of 天 s OC pronunciation qʰl iːn 23 or l ˤi n 24 reconstructed a voiceless lateral onset either a cluster or a single consonant respectively Baxter amp Sagart pointed to attested dialectal differences in Eastern Han Chinese the use of 天 as a phonetic component in phono semantic compound Chinese characters and the choice of 天 to transcribe foreign syllables all of which prompted them to conclude that around 200 CE 天 s onset had two pronunciations coronal tʰ amp dorsal x both of which likely originated from an earlier voiceless lateral l ˤ 25 Compounds EditTian is one of the components in hundreds of Chinese compounds Some significant ones include Tianming 天命 Mandate of Heaven divine mandate God s will fate destiny one s lifespan Tianwen simplified Chinese 天问 traditional Chinese 天問 pinyin Tianwen the Heavenly Questions section of the Chǔ Ci Tianzĭ 天子 Son of Heaven an honorific designation for the Emperor Chinese sovereign Tianzǐ accounts for 28 of the 140 tian occurrences in the Shi Jing above Tianxia 天下 lit all under heaven the world earth China Tiandi 天地 lit heaven and earth the world the universe Xingtian 刑天 An early mythological hero who fought against Heaven despite being decapitated Tianfang 天房 lit House of Heaven A Chinese name for the Kaaba from Bayt Allah Arabic ب ي ت ٱلل ه lit House of God Chinese interpretations EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Lord Heaven and Jade Emperor were terms for a supreme deity in Confucianism and Taoism who was an anthropromorphized Tian 26 and some conceptions of it thought of the names as synonymous Tian was viewed as the dwelling place of God gods other superhuman beings and the state of being of the saved 27 9 It was also viewed as the guardian of both the moral laws of mankind and the physical laws of nature and is synonymous with the divine will 9 In Chinese culture heaven tends to be synonymous with order containing the blueprints for creation the mandate by which earthly rulers govern and the standards by which to measure beauty goodness and truth 27 Zhou dynasty nobles made the worship of heaven a major part of their political philosophy and viewed it as many gods who embodied order and kingship as well as the mandate of heaven 28 Confucianism Edit Confucianism has a religious side with a deep reverence for Heaven and Earth Di whose powers regulate the flow of nature and influence human events 3 Yin and yang are also thought to be integral to this relationship and permeate both as well as humans and man made constructs 3 This cosmos and its principles is something that t he ways of man should conform to or else frustration will result 3 Many Confucianists both historically and in current times use the I Ching to divine events through the changes of Tian and other natural forces 3 Historical and current Confucianists were are often environmentalists 29 out of their respect for Heaven and the other aspects of nature and the Principle that comes from their unity and more generally harmony as a whole which is the basis for a sincere mind 3 The Emperor of China as Tianzi was formerly vital to Confucianism 7 Mount Tai is seen as a sacred place in Confucianism and was traditionally the most revered place where Chinese emperors offered sacrifices to heaven and earth 30 Confucius Edit The concept of Heaven Tian 天 is pervasive in Confucianism Confucius had a deep trust in Heaven and believed that Heaven overruled human efforts He also believed that he was carrying out the will of Heaven and that Heaven would not allow its servant Confucius to be killed until his work was done 31 Many attributes of Heaven were delineated in his Analects Confucius honored Heaven as the supreme source of goodness The Master said Great indeed was Yao as a sovereign How majestic was he It is only Heaven that is grand and only Yao corresponded to it How vast was his virtue The people could find no name for it How majestic was he in the works which he accomplished How glorious in the elegant regulations which he instituted 32 Confucius felt himself personally dependent upon Heaven Wherein I have done improperly may Heaven reject me may Heaven reject me 33 Confucius believed that Heaven cannot be deceived The Master being very ill Zi Lu wished the disciples to act as ministers to him During a remission of his illness he said Long has the conduct of You been deceitful By pretending to have ministers when I have them not whom should I impose upon Should I impose upon Heaven Moreover than that I should die in the hands of ministers is it not better that I should die in the hands of you my disciples And though I may not get a great burial shall I die upon the road 34 Confucius believed that Heaven gives people tasks to perform to teach them of virtues and morality The Master said At fifteen I had my mind bent on learning At thirty I stood firm At forty I had no doubts At fifty I knew the decrees of Heaven At sixty my ear was an obedient organ for the reception of truth At seventy I could follow what my heart desired without transgressing what was right 35 He believed that Heaven knew what he was doing and approved of him even though none of the rulers on earth might want him as a guide The Master said Alas there is no one that knows me Zi Gong said What do you mean by thus saying that no one knows you The Master replied I do not murmur against Heaven I do not grumble against men My studies lie low and my penetration rises high But there is Heaven that knows me 36 Perhaps the most remarkable saying recorded twice is one in which Confucius expresses complete trust in the overruling providence of Heaven The Master was put in fear in Kuang He said After the death of King Wen was not the cause of truth lodged here in me If Heaven had wished to let this cause of truth perish then I a future mortal should not have got such a relation to that cause While Heaven does not let the cause of truth perish what can the people of Kuang do to me 37 Mozi Edit For Mozi Heaven is the divine ruler just as the Son of Heaven is the earthly ruler Mozi believed that spirits and minor demons exist or at least rituals should be performed as if they did for social reasons but their function is to carry out the will of Heaven watching for evil doers and punishing them Mozi taught that Heaven loves all people equally and that each person should similarly love all human beings without distinguishing between his own relatives and those of others 38 Mozi criticized the Confucians of his own time for not following the teachings of Confucius In Mozi s Will of Heaven 天志 he writes Moreover I know Heaven loves men dearly not without reason Heaven ordered the sun the moon and the stars to enlighten and guide them Heaven ordained the four seasons Spring Autumn Winter and Summer to regulate them Heaven sent down snow frost rain and dew to grow the five grains and flax and silk that so the people could use and enjoy them Heaven established the hills and rivers ravines and valleys and arranged many things to minister to man s good or bring him evil He appointed the dukes and lords to reward the virtuous and punish the wicked and to gather metal and wood birds and beasts and to engage in cultivating the five grains and flax and silk to provide for the people s food and clothing This has been so from antiquity to the present 39 Schools of cosmology Edit Further information Chinese astronomy Cosmology There are three major schools on the structure of tian further explanation needed Most other hypothesis were developed from them Gaitian shuo 蓋天說 Canopy Heavens hypothesis originated from the text Zhoubi Suanjing The earth is covered by a material tian Huntian shuo 渾天說 Egg like hypothesis The earth surrounded by a tian sphere rotating over it The celestial bodies are attached to the tian sphere See Zhang Heng Astronomy and mathematics Chinese creation myth Xuanye shuo 宣夜說 Firmament hypothesis The tian is an infinite space The celestial bodies were light matters floating on it moved by Qi A summary by Ji Meng 郗萌 is in the astronomical chapters of the Book of Jin Tian schools influenced popular conception of the universe and earth until the 17th century when they were replaced by cosmological science imported from Europe 40 Sometimes the sky is divided into Jiutian 九天 the nine sky divisions the middle sky and the eight directions Buddhism Edit The Tian are the heaven worlds and pure lands in Buddhist cosmology Some devas are also called Tian Taoism Edit The number of vertical heaven layers in Taoism is different A common belief in Taoism is that there were 36 Tian arranged on six levels that have different deities 7 The highest heaven is the Great Web which was sometimes said to be where Yuanshi Tianzun lived 7 After death some Taoists were thought to explore heavenly realms and or become Taoist immortals 10 41 These immortals could be good or evil 42 and there were sometimes rivalries between them Some heavens in Taoism were thought to be evil as in Shangqing Daoism 43 although Tian was mostly thought of as a force for good 44 Heaven is sometimes seen as synonymous with the Dao or a natural energy that can be accessed by living in accordance with the Dao 27 A Tao realm inconceivable and incomprehensible by normal humans and even Confucius and Confucianists 45 was sometimes called the Heavens 46 Higher spiritual versions of Daoists such as Laozi were thought to exist in there when they were alive and absorb the purest Yin and Yang 46 as well as xian who were reborn into it after their human selves spirits were sent there These spiritual versions were thought to be abstract beings that can manifest in that world as mythical beings such as xian dragons who eat yin and yang energy and ride clouds and their qi 46 Chinese folk religion Edit Some tian in Chinese folk religion were thought to be many different or a hierarchy of multiple sphere like 40 realms that contained morally ambiguous creatures and spirits such as huli jing 11 and fire breathing dragons 47 The Tao realm was thought to exist by many ancient folk religion practitioners 46 Yiguandao Edit In Yiguandao Tian is divided into three vertical worlds Li Tian 理天 heaven of truth Qi Tian 氣天 heaven of spirit and Xiang Tian 象天 heaven of matter Japanese interpretations EditIn some cases the heavens in Shinto were thought to be a hierarchy of multiple sphere like realms that contained kami such as fox spirits 11 Myths about the kami were told of their doings on Earth and in heaven 48 Heaven was thought to be a clean and orderly place for nature gods in Shinto 48 Meanings EditThe semantics of tian developed diachronically The Hanyu dazidian an historical dictionary of Chinese characters lists 17 meanings of tian 天 translated below Human forehead head cranium 人的額部 腦袋 Anciently to tattoo brand the forehead as a kind of punishment 古代一種在額頭上刺字的刑罰 The heavens the sky the firmament 天空 Celestial bodies celestial phenomena meteorological phenomena 天體 天象 Nature natural A general reference to objective inevitability beyond human will 自然 泛指不以人意志為轉移的客觀必然性 Natural innate instinctive inborn 自然的 天性的 Natural character quality of a person or thing natural instinct inborn nature disposition 人或物的自然形質 天性 A reference to a particular sky space 特指某一空間 Season seasons Like winter the three hot 10 day periods following the summer solstice 時令 季節 如 冬天 三伏天 Weather climate 天氣 氣候 Day time of one day and night or especially the time from sunrise to sunset Like today yesterday busy all day go fishing for three days and dry the nets for two a xiehouyu simile for unable to finish anything 一晝夜的時間 或專指日出到日落的時間 如 今天 昨天 忙了一天 三天打魚 兩天曬網 God heaven celestial spirit of the natural world 天神 上帝 自然界的主宰者 Heaven heavenly a superstitious person s reference to the gods Buddhas or immortals or to the worlds where they live Like go to heaven die heavenly troops and heavenly generals invincible army heavenly goddesses scatter blossoms a Vimalakirti Sutra reference to Buddha s arrival 迷信的人指神佛仙人或他們生活的那個世界 如 歸天 天兵天將 天女散花 Anciently the king monarch sovereign also referring to elders in human relationships 古代指君王 也指人倫中的尊者 Object upon which one depends or relies 所依存或依靠的對象 Dialect A measure of land shang about 15 acres 方言 垧 A family name surname 姓 The Chinese philosopher Feng Youlan differentiates five different meanings of tian in early Chinese writings 1 A material or physical T ien or sky that is the T ien often spoken of in apposition to earth as in the common phrase which refers to the physical universe as Heaven and Earth T ien Ti 天地 2 A ruling or presiding T ien that is one such as is meant in the phrase Imperial Heaven Supreme Emperor Huang T ien Shang Ti in which anthropomorphic T ien and Ti are signified 3 A fatalistic T ien equivalent to the concept of Fate ming 命 a term applied to all those events in human life over which man himself has no control This is the T ien Mencius refers to when he says As to the accomplishment of a great deed that is with T ien Mencius Ib 14 4 A naturalistic T ien that is one equivalent to the English word Nature This is the sort of T ien described in the Discussion on T ien in the Hsun Tzǔ ch 17 5 An ethical T ien that is one having a moral principle and which is the highest primordial principle of the universe This is the sort of T ien which the Chung Yung Doctrine of the Mean refers to in its opening sentence when it says What T ien confers on man is called his nature 49 The Oxford English Dictionary enters the English loanword t ien also tayn tyen tien and tian Chinese thought Heaven the Deity The earliest recorded usages for these spelling variants are 1613 Tayn 1710 Tien 1747 Tyen and 1878 T ien In early Chinese writings tian was thought to be a subservient location that a higher deity owned 50 and Shangdi was thought by some to be this being Interpretation by Western Sinologists EditThe sinologist Herrlee Creel who wrote a comprehensive study called The Origin of the Deity T ien gives this overview For three thousand years it has been believed that from time immemorial all Chinese revered T ien 天 Heaven as the highest deity and that this same deity was also known as Shangdi Ti 帝 or Shang Ti 上帝 But the new materials that have become available in the present century and especially the Shang inscriptions make it evident that this was not the case It appears rather that T ien is not named at all in the Shang inscriptions which instead refer with great frequency to Ti or Shang Ti T ien appears only with the Chou and was apparently a Chou deity After the conquest the Chou considered T ien to be identical with the Shang deity Ti or Shang Ti much as the Romans identified the Greek Zeus with their Jupiter 51 Creel refers to the historical shift in ancient Chinese names for god from Shang oracles that frequently used di and shangdi and rarely used tian to Zhou bronzes and texts that used tian more frequently than its synonym shangdi First Creel analyzes all the tian and di occurrences meaning god gods in Western Zhou era Chinese classic texts and bronze inscriptions The Yi Jing Classic of Changes has 2 tian and 1 di the Shi Jing Classic of Poetry has 140 tian and 43 di or shangdi and the authentic portions of the Shu Jing Classic of Documents have 116 tian and 25 di or shangdi His corpus of authenticated Western Zhou bronzes mention tian 91 times and di or shangdi only 4 times Second Creel contrasts the disparity between 175 occurrences of di or shangdi on Shang era oracle inscriptions with at least 26 occurrences of tian Upon examining these 26 oracle scripts that scholars like Guo Moruo have identified as tian 天 heaven god 52 he rules out 8 cases in fragments where the contextual meaning is unclear Of the remaining 18 Creel interprets 11 cases as graphic variants for da great large big e g tian i shang 天邑商 for da i shang 大邑商 great settlement Shang 3 as a place name and 4 cases of oracles recording sacrifices yu tian 于天 to at Tian which could mean to Heaven God or at a place called Tian 53 The Shu Jing chapter Tang Shi 湯誓 Tang s Speech illustrates how early Zhou texts used tian heaven god in contexts with shangdi god According to tradition Tang of Shang assembled his subjects to overthrow King Jie of Xia the infamous last ruler of the Xia Dynasty but they were reluctant to attack The king said Come ye multitudes of the people listen all to my words It is not I the little child a humble name used by kings who dare to undertake what may seem to be a rebellious enterprise but for the many crimes of the sovereign of Hsia Xia Heaven has given the charge to destroy him Now ye multitudes you are saying Our prince does not compassionate us but is calling us away from our husbandry to attack and punish the ruler of Hsia I have indeed heard these words of you all but the sovereign of Hsia is an offender and as I fear God shangdi I dare not but punish him Now you are saying What are the crimes of Hsia to us The king of Hsia does nothing but exhaust the strength of his people and exercise oppression in the cities of Hsia His people have all become idle in his service and will not assist him They are saying When will this sun expire We will all perish with thee Such is the course of the sovereign of Hsia and now I must go and punish him Assist I pray you me the one man to carry out the punishment appointed by Heaven tian I will greatly reward you On no account disbelieve me I will not eat my words If you do not obey the words which I have spoken to you I will put your children with you to death you shall find no forgiveness 54 Having established that Tian was not a deity of the Shang people Creel proposes a hypothesis for how it originated Both the Shang and Zhou peoples pictographically represented da 大 as a large or great man The Zhou subsequently added a head on him to denote tian 天 meaning king kings cf wang 王 king ruler which had oracle graphs picturing a line under a great person and bronze graphs that added the top line From kings tian was semantically extended to mean dead kings ancestral kings who controlled fate providence and ultimately a single omnipotent deity Tian Heaven In addition tian named both the heavens where ancestral kings and gods supposedly lived and the visible sky 55 Another possibility is that Tian may be related to Tengri and there was possibly a loan word from a prehistoric Central Asian language that contributed to the creation of the word 56 Kelly James Clark argued that Confucius himself saw Tian as an anthropomorphic god that Clark hypothetically refers to as Heavenly Supreme Emperor although most other scholars on Confucianism disagree with this view 57 See also EditAmenominakanushi 天御中主 the Japanese concept of God as the ultimate creator Haneullim the Sky God of Cheondoism Hongjun Laozu Names of God in China Shangdi Shen Taiyi Tianzun Tengri the Turkic Mongolic sky GodTian related terms Edit Tianxia All under Heaven Tian Chao Dynasty of Heaven Tian Kehan Khan of Heaven Tian Ming Mandate of Heaven Tian Zi Son of Heaven Tiandihui Heaven and Earth Society Tiandiism Heavenly Deity religion Tianzhu Chinese Rites controversy References EditCitations Edit Stefon Matt 2010 02 03 Shangdi Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2023 05 01 Woodhead Linda Partridge Christopher Kawanami Hiroko 2016 Religions in the Modern World Third ed New York NY Routledge pp 147 148 ISBN 978 0 415 85881 6 a b c d e f Wilson Andrew ed 1995 World Scripture A Comparative Anthology of Sacred Texts 1st paperback ed St Paul Minnesota Paragon House Publishers p 19 ISBN 978 1 55778 723 1 Woolf Greg 2007 Ancient civilizations the illustrated guide to belief mythology and art Barnes amp Noble p 212 ISBN 978 1 4351 0121 0 a b c tian Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2023 04 28 Harari Yuval Noah 2015 Sapiens A Brief History of Humankind Translated by Harari Yuval Noah Purcell John Watzman Haim London Penguin Random House UK p 219 ISBN 978 0 09 959008 8 OCLC 910498369 a b c d e Storm Rachel 2011 Sudell Helen ed Myths amp Legends of India Egypt China amp Japan 2nd ed Wigston Leicestershire Lorenz Books p 233 World Religions Eastern Traditions Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby 2nd ed Don Mills Ontario Oxford University Press 2002 p 424 ISBN 0 19 541521 3 OCLC 46661540 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c d e Carrasco et al 1999 p 1096 a b xian Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2023 04 29 a b c Carlson Kathie Flanagin Michael N Martin Kathleen Martin Mary E Mendelsohn John Rodgers Priscilla Young Ronnberg Ami Salman Sherry Wesley Deborah A et al Authors 2010 Arm Karen Ueda Kako Thulin Anne Langerak Allison Kiley Timothy Gus Wolff Mary eds The Book of Symbols Reflections on Archetypal Images Koln Taschen p 280 ISBN 978 3 8365 1448 4 a b Schuessler 2007 p 495 Carrasco et al 1999 p 1068 a b Karlgren 1922 pages needed Zhou 1972 pages needed Pulleyblank 1991 pages needed Baxter 1992 pages needed Baxter amp Sagart 2014 pages needed Zhou 1972 pages needed Baxter 1992 pages needed Schuessler 2007 pages needed Baxter amp Sagart 2014 pages needed Schuessler 2007 p 211 6312 NEIA t s iŋ celestial sky weath provisional at Sino Tibetan Etymological Dictionary and Thesaurus Zhengzhang 2003 Baxter amp Sagart 2011 p 110 Baxter amp Sagart 2014 pp 113 114 World Religions Eastern Traditions Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby 2nd ed Don Mills Ontario Oxford University Press 2002 pp 326 393 401 ISBN 0 19 541521 3 OCLC 46661540 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c Zaleski Carol 2023 05 12 Heaven Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2023 05 15 Pearson Patricia O Connell Holdren John May 2021 World History Our Human Story Versailles Kentucky Sheridan Kentucky p 98 ISBN 978 1 60153 123 0 Tucker Mary Evelyn 1998 Confucianism and Ecology Potential and Limits The Forum on Religion and Ecology at Yale Yale University Retrieved 2023 04 29 Guangwei He Hualing Tong Wenzhen Yang Zhenguo Chang Zeru Li Ruicheng Dong Weijan Gong eds 1999 Spectacular China Translated by Wusun Lin Zhongping Wu Cologne Konemann p 42 ISBN 9783829010771 Analects 7 23 Confucius amp Legge 1893 p 214 VIII xix Confucius amp Legge 1893 p 193 VI xxviii Confucius amp Legge 1893 pp 220 221 IX xi Confucius amp Legge 1893 p 146 book II chapter iv Confucius amp Legge 1893 288 9 XIV xxxv Confucius amp Legge 1893 217 8 9 5 and 7 12 Dubs 1960 pp 163 172 Mozi amp Mei 1929 p 145 a b Liu Shu Chiu 2006 12 11 Three early Chinese models Asia Pacific Forum on Science Learning and Teaching Historical models and science instruction A cross cultural analysis based on students views Education University of Hong Kong Carrasco et al 1999 p 473 Helle Horst J 2017 CHAPTER 7 Daoism China s Native Religion JSTOR Brill pp 75 76 Retrieved 2023 06 07 Carrasco et al 1999 p 691 Dell Christopher 2012 Mythology The Complete Guide to our Imagined Worlds New York Thames amp Hudson p 38 ISBN 978 0 500 51615 7 Wilson Andrew ed 1995 World Scripture A Comparative Anthology of Sacred Texts 1st paperback ed St Paul Minnesota Paragon House Publishers pp 467 468 ISBN 978 1 55778 723 1 a b c d Minford John 2018 Tao Te Ching The Essential Translation of the Ancient Chinese Book of the Tao New York Viking Press pp ix x ISBN 978 0 670 02498 8 Hua Sara Lynn 2016 06 28 Difference Between A Chinese Dragon and A Western Dragon TutorABC Chinese China Expats amp Culture Blog Retrieved 2023 05 18 a b Stevenson Jay 2000 The Complete Idiot s Guide to Eastern Philosophy Indianapolis Alpha Books p 170 ISBN 9780028638201 Feng 1952 p 31 Szostak Rick 2020 10 22 Making Sense of World History London Routledge p 321 doi 10 4324 9781003013518 ISBN 9781003013518 Creel 1970 p 493 Creel 1970 pp 494 5 Creel 1970 pp 464 75 Legge 1865 pp 173 5 Creel 1970 pp 501 6 Muller 1870 pages needed Searching for the Ineffable Classical Theism and Eastern Thought about God Classical Theism New Essays on the Metaphysics of God Edited by Jonathan Fuqua and Robert C Koons Routledge 2023 02 10 ISBN 978 1 000 83688 2 OCLC 1353836889 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Sources Edit Baxter William H 1992 A Handbook of Old Chinese Phonology Mouton de Gruyter Baxter William Sagart Lauren 2011 Baxter Sagart Old Chinese Reconstruction pdf Archived from the original on 27 September 2013 Baxter William Sagart Lauren 2014 Old Chinese A New Reconstruction PDF Oxford University Press pp 113 114 Supplemental materials available at their webpage Carrasco David Warmind Morten Hawley John Stratton Reynolds Frank Giarardot Norman Neusner Jacob Pelikan Jaroslav Campo Juan Penner Hans et al Authors 1999 Merriam Webster s Encyclopedia of World Religions Edited by Wendy Doniger United States Merriam Webster ISBN 9780877790440 Chang Ruth H 2000 Understanding Di and Tian Deity and Heaven From Shang to Tang Sino Platonic Papers 108 1 54 Creel Herrlee G 1970 The Origins of Statecraft in China The University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 12043 0 Dubs Homer H 1960 Theism and Naturalism in Ancient Chinese Philosophy Philosophy East and West 9 3 4 163 172 doi 10 2307 1397096 JSTOR 1397096 Feng Yu Lan 1952 A History of Chinese Philosophy Vol I The Period of the Philosophers Translated by Bodde Derk Princeton University Press Karlgren Bernhard 1922 The reconstruction of Ancient Chinese T oung Pao 21 1 42 doi 10 1163 156853222X00015 The Chinese Classics Vol III The Shoo King Translated by Legge James Oxford University Press 1865 via Internet Archive Confucius 1893 The Chinese Classics Vol I The Confucian Analects the Great Learning and the Doctrine of the Mean Translated by Legge James Oxford University Press via Internet Archive Mozi 1929 The Ethical and Political Works of Motse Translated by Mei Y P London Probsthain Muller Friedrich Max 1870 Lectures on the Science of Religion New York C Scribner and company Pulleyblank Edwin G 1991 A Lexicon of Reconstructed Pronunciation in Early Middle Chinese Late Middle Chinese and Early Mandarin Vancouver BC UBC Press ISBN 978 0 7748 0366 3 Schuessler Axel 2007 ABC Etymological Dictionary of Old Chinese University of Hawaii Press Zhengzhang Shangfang 鄭張尚芳 2003 上古音系 Ancient Phonology Shanghai Education Press Zhou Fagao 周法高 1972 Shanggu Hanyu he Han Zangyu 上古漢語和漢藏語 Ancient Chinese and Sino Tibetan Languages Journal of the Institute of Chinese Studies of the Chinese University of Hong Kong in Chinese 5 159 244 External links Edit nbsp Look up 天 in Wiktionary the free dictionary Oracle Bronze and Seal characters for 天 Richard Sears Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tian amp oldid 1179375891, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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