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Great Thinkers
China's period
of slave society disintegrated during the Spring and Autumn Period, sometime
after 700 BC. Progress in productivity brought about drastic changes in
social life and politics. Different classes with different schools of
thought were unprecedentedly active, giving rise to a situation of ``many
schools of thought contending with each other," and promoting science
and culture. The major schools were those of the Confucianists, Moists
Taoists Legalists, military strategists, Logicians, and Political Strategists.
Among them, the works and doctrines of such famous thinkers and military
strategists as Lao Zi, Sun Zi and Sun Wu are still widely circulated in
the world today.
Lao Zi, founder of Taoism, lived during the Spring and Autumn Period.
Whether he was the true author of the book Dao De Jing (The Book of Virtue)
has long been in dispute. However, the majority of scholars tend to believe
that the book reflects his thinking. Lao Zi used the concept of the "Dao"
(Way) to explain all changes in the universe, and put forward dialectical
ideas such as "Dao gives rise to one, one gives rise to two, two
gives rise to three and three gives rise to all other things", "All
things under Heaven came from something which in turn came from nothing"
and "Good fortune lies within bad, bad fortune lurks within good".
In aesthetics, he advocated the concepts of "Great sound is rarely
heard" and "Great images have no forms". The theory of
Lao Zi exerted a great impact on the development of philosophy in China,
and later scholars made use of his thinking in various ways. The Dao De
Jing has been translated into many languages. Apart from its philosophical
views, the moral principles standing for universal love as expressed in
the following words "To honor others' aged people as we honor our
own; and to be kind to others' young as we are to our own" are often
quoted with approval by people today.
Confucius (551-479 BC) toured various states during the Spring and Autumn
Period advocating his ideas on right conduct, in order to shore up aristocratic
rule. Later he devoted his energy to teaching by opening schools and enrolling
some 3,000 students. Among them, seventy-two were noted scholars who helped
compile ancient books and put his teachings into the book titled The Analects.
For 2,000 years, Confucianism was the dominating force in the feudal society
of China, exerting a significant impact on the stability and moral principles
of society. Having spread to East and Southeast Asia, his thinking became
an important guiding ideology in many countries, making Confucius a world-level
thinker.
Sun Wu was an outstanding military strategist in the late years of the
Spring and Autumn Period, and helped Ge Lu, king of the State of Wu, to
realize his ambitions. His book, The Art of War, is the earliest writing
on military strategies in the world. Some of the strategies and tactics
in the book are still used in military affairs and even enterprise management,
commercial competition and sports competition today. The book spread to
other Asian countries, and further on to distant Europe as early as the
Tang Dynasty (618-907). It is said that Napoleon read The Art of War during
his campaigns and Emperor William II of Germany once expressed regret
that he had not read the book 20 years earlier.
Now this book has been translated into a dozen languages.Wang Chong, who
lived in the early years of the Eastern Han Dynasty (25-220) was an outstanding
materialist thinker in Chinese history. His Discourses Weighed in the
Balance is an ancient philosophical work that illuminates plain materialist
thinking. In the book, he discusses the materialist concept of nature,
refutes the idea of ghosts and elaborates on "the response between
Heaven and man."
During the Ming Dynasty, new idealist theories, such as what was advocated
by Wang Shouren, emerged. At the same time, progressive thinkers with
democratic characteristics were also produced, Li Zhi (1527-1602) being
one of the most outstanding representatives in this regard. He was opposed
to the deification of Confucius, arguing that it was unnecessary to consult
Confucius on everything and that Confucian theory should not be adopted
as the only criteria for judging right and wrong. He refuted the feudal
class system, opposed feudal rites and propagated equality between men
and women. His theories aroused official alarm, and consequently Li Zhi
was persecuted to death.
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