Pre-confucian China and
the Five Classics
From: http://www.wsu.edu/~dee/CHPHIL/CHPHIL.HTM
At the heart of Chinese
thought stand the five great classics, the traditional, time-honored
works
that define and originate Chinese culture and history. Chinese
history, as the Chinese narrate it, blazes into existence with
the great,
partly divine heroes who teach the early Chinese all the arts
of civilization: writing, law, architecture, art, and so on. These
blatantly mythical figures are followed by three great sage kings,
Yao, Shun,
and Yü; the latter stands as the foundation of the first
ruling dynasty in China, the Hsia. During the various cycles
of dynastic
change, from the Hsia to the Shang to the Chou, the Five Classics,
or the Confucian Classics (even though they are not written by
Confucius), were written down, or supposedly written down. These
Five Classics
constituted the program of learning for anyone in the upper classes,
the ruling classes, or the educated classes. The Classics not
only recorded early Chinese history infallibly, they also completely
contained all the ethics and wisdom of China. Out of early divination practices from the Shang Dynasty comes
the first classic, or what is traditionally considered the first
classic, the I ching , or The
Book of Changes . Divination utilized stalks of milfoil laid out on the ground;
the I ching is a manual on reading the various diagrams resulting from laying
out these stalks. The most important aspect of the work are the "wings," a
set of additional texts that explain the metaphysical aspects of these diagrams.
Although traditionally regarded as the work of Confucius, these wings were
probably written down in the Han period. The I ching throughout Chinese history
has been regarded as the fullest description of the metaphysical structure
and dynamics of the universe.
The second Classic is The Book of History ; or Shu ching , which
is a set of documents (speeches, laws, etc.) from the Hsia to the
Chou dynasties. In
China, this book is regarded as a relatively infallible collection of documents;
in the West, the book is considered mainly a collection from the middle or
late Chou period and so relatively unreliable as a source for the earlier
dynasties. Confucius, according to tradition, had a hand in this book as
well, assembling, editing, and commenting on the documents. The Book of History
has served throughout Chinese history as a repository of political wisdom,
as the source book of exemplary models of government.
The Classic traditionally ascribed the third position is the
Shih ching , the Book of Odes ; this book is a collection of three
hundred poems from the Chou dynasty. Confucius, again, is traditionally
regarded as the editor and compiler of the book.
Fourth comes the Ritual , which is actually several books on
philosophy, rituals, and even table manners. The most important
of these books is the Li chi , or The Book of Rites , which catalogs
the many rituals that make up ancient Chinese life.
Finally comes the Ch'un ch'iu , or The Spring and Autumn Annals
, a history of a single Chinese province from about 700 to 500
B.C. Confucius, again, lived in this province and supposedly assembled
these annals himself.
What were the salient features of early Chinese thought? First,
the Chinese believed that heaven, t'ien , governed the world in
its entirety, including
human affairs; in fact, heaven was especially and scrupulously attentive to
all things human, especially government. As a result of this interest, heaven
frequently intervened in governmental affairs: when a dynasty grew corrupt,
heaven intervened and overthrew that dynasty and replaced it with a new one.
This concept was called the "mandate of heaven," t'ien ming ; rulers
were put in place by heaven and could continue to rule as long as they did
so with justice and wisdom. When they ceased to rule in the best interests
of their subjects, the mandate of heaven required that they be overthrown by
someone else. Finally, the ancient Chinese believed that their ancestors continued
to live among them and so needed to be consulted, prayed to, appeased, and
placated.
Richard Hooker
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