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AP®︎ World History
Neo-Confucianism and Zhu Xi
A discussion of how the relative influence of Confucianism, Taoism and Buddhism has changed from the Han through the Tang and Song dynasties. Overview of Neo-Confucians, including Zhu Xi..
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- He mentions the 100 schools of thoughts... were there even more schools of thoughts than the 4 mentioned here? Why is it called the 100 schools of thought?(10 votes)
- The rest faded I guess.(1 vote)
- I'm looking at the transcript, where does he mention Zhu Xi??(1 vote)
- Go to Minute 7 the transcript spells it "Juicy".(1 vote)
- were there schools or was there government being smart and thinking(1 vote)
- There was education, but to say that there were "schools" is a bit of a stretch.(1 vote)
- Why is Neo-Confucianism so important?(0 votes)
- Neo-Confucianism is of paramount importance due to its role as a transformative intellectual movement that not only revitalized Confucian thought but also influenced the entire social, political, and cultural fabric of East Asian societies. Emerging during the Song Dynasty in China, it provided a comprehensive moral and ethical framework that extended beyond governance and policy, emphasizing self-cultivation and the pursuit of virtue. This philosophical synthesis of Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism became the dominant ideology in China and spread to countries like Korea, Japan, and Vietnam. Its enduring legacy is seen in the continued relevance of its principles, classical texts, and ethical values in shaping East Asian cultures and societies, making it a cornerstone of East Asian intellectual and moral traditions.(1 vote)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] In previous videos, we've talked about some of
the major schools of thought that emerged at the end
of the Zhou Dynasty, especially as we start to enter
the warring states period, the famous hundred schools of thought. And most prominent amongst
them is Confucianism, started or based on the
teachings of Confucius, who lived around 2,500 years ago, and it was all about how does
a society live in harmony. Confucianism is based
in a lot of teachings that were already part of Chinese culture. And Confucius, one could
say, put them together, but put them together in a contextual way and made them more relevant. And you can see on this diagram, Confucianism was really
focused on the ethical, but Confucius himself tried
to apply some of his teachings into the more practical realm. Now, out of that hundred
schools of thought, you also have Taoism that we
talk about in other videos. Now, Taoism is really based on this idea of the Tao or the way and we could do many videos on Taoism, but it's this idea of letting go and you could even think of
it as going with the flow in a simplicity, a return to nature, freeing yourself from desires, and it was definitely more philosophical and more focused on the
spiritual than Confucianism. Now, in other videos,
we talk about Legalism, which was a key part of the Chin Dynasty, which was the first real imperial dynasty. China is named after the Chin Dynasty, but it was fairly harsh. It was really this idea that hey, human beings really
need strong leadership, sometimes harsh leadership, in order for society to actually work. Now, the school of thought
that we have here up the top, Buddhism is interesting
because it did not emerge from that hundred
schools of thought period that we get at the end
of the Zhou Dynastic. Buddhism emerges in India
at around the same time, roughly 2,500 years ago with
the teachings of Buddha, a Hindu prince who lived in
Northeast India, Southern Nepal, and his teachings are, in some ways, you can almost view as a reformation of Hinduism at the time, a return to the idea that
someone through meditation, through realization, can become one with, at least in Buddhism,
the emptiness, nirvana, can escape from clinging to
desires of this non-reality that we think we live in. Now, we've talked about in previous videos how the Chin Dynasty was really based on this Legalist philosophy, but the Han Dynasty is considered
the Golden Age of China. Now, under the Han Dynasty, Confucianism really took hold and became the dominant
philosophical structure of China and to some degree would stay that way. Now, at the end of the Han Dynasty, China goes into a chaotic
period for several hundred years until we get to the Sixth
Century when the Sui Dynasty is able to finally reunify
China for the most part. And in that interim, Confucianism starts to
give way, to some degree, to both Taoism and Buddhism, these things that are more
focused on the spiritual, areas where Confucianism
was not as interested. And what's interesting about Buddhism, even though it started in India, famously Ashoka in the Third Century BCE really becomes a patron of Buddhism and even sends missionaries
out to spread it and it comes to China via
Central Asia and Southeast Asia, it really takes on a
uniquely Chinese nature as it enters China. Really, it eventually evolves
into Mahayana Buddhism. And under the Tang Dynasty, which is considered one of the high points of Chinese civilization, Buddhism is really able to take hold, especially in the early Tang Dynasty. However, as we get into
the late Tang Dynasty, Buddhism starts to get some push back and even gets persecuted to some degree. People arguing that hey, Buddhism is a foreign belief system. In some ways, it's not concerned enough
with social cohesion. It's all about the
individual through meditation trying to separate
themselves from reality, becoming one with the emptiness. And so at around the same time, someone argue in reaction
to the strength of Buddhism. You have a movement known
as Neo-Confucianism, taking the central ideas of Confucius, but using some frameworks and terminology from Taoism and Buddhism, and there were many
Neo-Confucian philosophers that began to emerge in
the late Tang Dynasty, but it's really considered
the Song Dynasty where Neo-Confucianism really takes hold. And the most famous of the
Neo-Confucian philosophers sometimes ranked second
to Confucius himself in terms of influence on
Chinese philosophy is Zhu Xi. He lived from 1130 to 1200 and he's most known
for his, one could say, curation of Confucian texts. He famously curated the Four Books, Analects of Confucius, Mencius or The Mencius, by Mencius, Great Learning, Doctrine of the Mean, written by Confucian followers. This curation of Confucian thought shortly after Zhu Xi's life, it becomes the bedrock of
the Chinese education system and the civil service examinations as we go through the Yuan,
Ming, and Ching Dynasties, all the way to the early 20th Century. Now, he also wrote books
on tradition and rituals which are, in some ways, very Confucian because they're focused on the practical, they're focused on the family, they're focused on social cohesion. But he also dabbled in the more spiritual, wrote extensively about notions of Taiji which is really a Taoist
or even a pre-Taoist idea, thinking about what is
the fundamental nature of the universe and the Taiji
itself is the great ultimate, sometimes represented
by the Yin Yang symbol. Really, this is showing Taiji divided into this dualistic
nature between Yin and Yang, how at the center of each
or the extreme of each, they become the other. He writes about Qi, this
life force or energy. And once again, these are
ideas he takes from Taoism. But in Neo-Confucian thought, there's this idea of you
shouldn't just detach yourself from physical reality,
you should study it. There's an order, there's
a logic to the universe that could be understood. And because of the influence
of the Neo-Confucians, especially their focus on belief in an order and logic of the universe, it's no coincidence that the Song Dynasty saw some of the major
technological advancements not just of China, but of the world, advancements that really put China at the technological forefront. Remember, Europe at this
time is in the Middle Ages. The Middle East is under
the Golden Age of Islam, but it's really the Chinese who are pushing the envelope here. Let's get a flavor of
some of Zhu Xi's writing. Original mind is principle,
as derived from Tai Ji, in itself, unmoved, and perfectly good, while physical nature, on the other hand, is principle mixed with
material force, qi. It is the aroused state,
involving both good and evil. The two natures, however,
are always inter-fused, one the substance and the other, function. So once again, even
though he was Confucian, he was a Confucian philosopher, this is very Taoist in nature and even this notion of
talking about original mind is principle in itself,
unmoved, and perfectly good, this feels very Buddhist or
even Hindu in its thinking. Now, one could debate
whether it was to what degree it was influenced by Buddhism, it is a very central
idea that all of reality, all of sentience, is
emergent from this Atman, from this Brahman, from
this original mind, emerges from the emptiness. But what makes it Neo-Confucian
is beyond the metaphysical, beyond the philosophical,
they bring it down to reality. They bring it down to practical concerns. How does this affect how one governs? How does this affect how one should learn? How does this affect how one
should be in social harmony with those around them?