Advanced Search  
      Opinion>You Nuo
             
     

    Relating Confucianism to everyday real life
    You Nuo China Daily  Updated: 2005-12-12 05:24

    Relating Confucianism to everyday real life

    The most effective way to let a tradition die is to make it boring and forgettable in everyday life. And this is the state of Confucianism today when it is taught with no connection to history, and people's real lives, nor with the modern ways of education.

    If the recent, much celebrated revival of the "study of national classics" in China is only meant to make some students learn by heart quotations from Confucius and inspire little free debate both among the students and between students and teachers it will no doubt be a boring game.

    If someone is really going to save Confucianism from being forgotten, he or she must try to save it from the old way of teaching and managing. He or she must encourage free debate and creative thinking, and change the focus of learning from reciting the book to relating to real life meaning real people's real actions.

    Nowadays, when columnists talk about Chinese classical teachings, or in their term, the national classics, they have a tendency to talk only about Confucianism. No doubt, Confucianism is an important part of Chinese tradition. But its emphasis on humanism, expressed as being right and benevolent, was accepted by most other schools of thought through the free debate of 2,200 years ago. It was a time remembered as "one hundred flowers blossoming and one hundred schools of thought contending."

    Lao Tzu incorporated the idea of benevolence into his teaching of Taoism. Motzu, another leading scholar of that time, also raised no objection to its core value. Many reformists, like Guan Zhong, imported the idea into their plans for government restructuring. Even those writing about the art of war, most noticeably Sun Tzu, took the idea as a basic requirement for government war planners and generals.

    Obviously, it was not just through classroom teaching, much less reciting the master's sayings, but through debating and comparing notes with many other scholars, that Confucius' moral proposition earned common respect and became a shared discourse.

    After that happened, the Confucian proposition was no longer a product of Confucius himself and his students, but a product of the entire culture. So it is fair to say that free debate was the making of Confucianism.

    Therefore, it is not really an appropriate thing to do, neither for being true to history nor for understanding its importance, for people to narrow down their teaching about Confucius to just a couple of small collections of the master's quotations. Without letting students gain insight into how Confucianism grew in appeal in the time of "one hundred schools of thought contending" is like printing the Bible without including Genesis.

    Following the same logic, it was not just because Confucius' quotations were recited in schools that its moral proposition was passed on for generations. It was primarily because so many people acted in the way that they thought right and benevolent, and provided themselves as examples of their moral beliefs.

    Those heroines and heroes contributed much more significantly to the nation's cultural tradition than those who just furnished footnotes to the Confucian classics. They were the ones who made the master's moral proposition a living tradition, and showing, by what they did and even died for, what the right government and the right person were supposed to be like. The ivory-tower scholars' footnotes actually contained many biases and distortions.

    In modern times, when ivory-tower scholars are still teaching the moral tradition by reciting, people elsewhere are generating numerous fresh examples of that tradition being upheld with good reward, and trampled over with bitter consequences.

    Of the good examples are reporters who exposed a disaster and raised the alarm for residents of the affected region, and of the bad ones are the proprietors of coal mines and their government collaborators who were brought to criminal trials for not protecting workers' lives.

    What is the value of a seminar in moral studies without applauding the good examples and condemning the bad ones? And what is the use of an attempt to revive a good tradition without recharging it, so to speak, with new debates and new actions?

    Alexis de Tocqueville once told Americans about China, where people, "in following the track of their forefathers, had forgot the reasons by which the latter had been guided." Hence "the source of human knowledge was all but dry; and though the stream still ran on, it could neither swell its waters nor alter its course."

    Those words were written 170 years ago to describe how ivory-tower scholars were doing a disservice to Confucianism. Still making no change to it is boring indeed.

    Email: younuo@chinadaily.com.cn

    (China Daily 12/12/2005 page4)

     
      Story Tools  
       
    Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.
    Advertisement
             

    | Home | News | Business | Living in China | Forum | E-Papers |Weather |

    |About Us | Contact Us | Site Map | Jobs |
    Copyright 2005 Chinadaily.com.cn All rights reserved. Registered Number: 20100000002731
    亚洲AV无码一区二区三区国产| 最近中文字幕免费大全| 区三区激情福利综合中文字幕在线一区 | 久久久久久av无码免费看大片| 无码区日韩特区永久免费系列| 久99久无码精品视频免费播放| 中文字幕AV中文字无码亚| 人妻丝袜中文无码av影音先锋专区 | 亚洲中文字幕不卡无码| 国产午夜无码视频在线观看| 日韩AV片无码一区二区三区不卡| 天堂…中文在线最新版在线| 国产精品无码久久综合网| 亚洲国产精品无码久久| 日韩亚洲欧美中文高清在线| 亚洲精品无码鲁网中文电影| 日产无码1区2区在线观看| 久久久久亚洲AV片无码下载蜜桃| 一本加勒比HEZYO无码资源网| 狠狠精品久久久无码中文字幕| 中文字幕在线亚洲精品| 国产成人无码精品一区在线观看| 亚洲AV无码精品色午夜果冻不卡| 无码人妻精品中文字幕免费东京热| 在线综合+亚洲+欧美中文字幕| 亚洲免费日韩无码系列| 国产成人无码免费看片软件 | 日韩精品一区二三区中文 | 精品国产a∨无码一区二区三区| 国产网红主播无码精品| 伊人蕉久中文字幕无码专区| (愛妃視頻)国产无码中文字幕| 中中文字幕亚洲无线码| 日韩亚洲变态另类中文| 亚洲中文字幕日本无线码| 中文字幕国产精品| 色吊丝中文字幕| 超清无码无卡中文字幕| 无码毛片一区二区三区中文字幕| 亚洲国产91精品无码专区| 中文字幕一精品亚洲无线一区|