Kristoffer
Member
Can someone be so kind explaining me the basic beliefs of confucianism?
- Is it considered a religion, whatsoever?
- Is it considered a religion, whatsoever?
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Confucius was a philosopher who was exclusively concerned with ethics and politics. His views, recorded by his followers, in the book usually called the Analects. They are expanded on by later writers, like Mencius. They involve belief in
1. the essential goodness and perfectability of human nature.
2. virtue-based ethics: the correct action is not something decreed by a god, or expedient under the circumstances, but what a virtuous person would do.
3. the necessity for politics to have a moral foundation.
4. the importance of the family as the basic for society.
5. the value of tradition in society.
6. the importance of religious worship, although he discouraged theological speculation.
The idea that "Confucianism" was a religion was introduced by the Jesuit missionaries. They tried to spilt off Chinese beliefs which they felt compatible with Christianity from the rest, to ingratiate themselves with the Chinese and still retain their Christianity.
The Chinese would call "Confucianism" by a term like rujiao "scholars' tradition". These who are interested in it worship the same gods as any other Chinese.