Three corners for one: Creativity and tradition in the analects
Publication Type
Book Chapter
Publication Date
2-2008
Abstract
Confucius (Master Kong or Kongzi) is China's first great teacher and the life's blood of what it means to be Chinese today. His spiritual outlook is very different from that of the Christian West or of other Eastern traditions such as Daoism or Buddhism. Confucius crafted a view of human beings that was basically optimistic and encouraging because it held that all humans could improve themselves and their conditions through diligent effort. He maintained that self-improvement by means of education should be open to everyone without discrimination. To be a superior person is something, not determined by birth or rank, that each individual should aim for. The writers of this book have all contributed to the blossoming new awareness and understanding of Master Kong, putting Confucius back on the radar screens both of academic philosophers and of thoughtful inquirers outside academia. Confucius Now gives us the best of today’s cutting-edge scholarship aimed at recovering the authentic voice of Confucius.
Discipline
Arts and Humanities
Research Areas
Humanities
Publication
Confucius Now: Contemporary Encounters with the Analects
Editor
David Jones
ISBN
9780812696103
Publisher
Open Court
City or Country
Chicago
Citation
TAN, Sor-hoon. (2008). Three corners for one: Creativity and tradition in the analects. In Confucius Now: Contemporary Encounters with the Analects (pp. ). Chicago: Open Court.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/2596