How Did Confucius Influence Chinese Culture

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Where will America be in a few thousand years; will we retain our current culture or continue to grow, thrive, and adapt to our surroundings? While these are important questions for our country’s future, many of the answers can already be found in one of the oldest civilizations on the planet, China. Chinese culture has been formed and reformed many times throughout its expansive history, and with changes in rule and structure, there have also been changes in philosophy and culture. Confucius emerged as a prominent figure in Chinese philosophy and managed to grow in popularity through time with his famous teachings, including those in his Analects. The philosophies of Daoism emerged later through many writings including the prominent Daodejing, …show more content…

Firmly rooted in years of education, Confucius spent considerable time developing his set of values and principles. In his article entitled “Confucius and the Effortless Life of Virtue”, author Hagop Sarkissian adds to this by saying, “Confucius set his mind on a course of study or cultivation at the age of fifteen, and pursued such studies for a span of fifty-five years, and was thereby able to cultivate a state of being such that he could follow his immediate inclinations in all of life’s predicaments without transgressing social norms” (Sarkissian 1). Confucius’ extensive studies only added to the philosophy represented in the Analects. This includes the passage in which he writes, “At fifteen, I set my mind upon learning, At thirty, I took my stand. At forty, I had no doubts, At fifty, I knew the will of Heaven. At sixty, my ear was attuned. At seventy, I follow all the desires of my heart without breaking any rule” (2.4). Part of the theme given throughout the Analects is Confucius’ confidence in his ability as a teacher, which may be due to his long and comprehensive …show more content…

Although both philosophies demonstrate awareness of self, education, and interaction with one another, their goals for the future remain distinctly different, as their methods of carrying out those goals are opposite in nature. In studying both philosophies it only seems logical that the society in which China has created must be one of fluidity and constant understanding in order to possess traits of each philosophy. The virtues set forth by both philosophies have no doubt molded a society able to withstand much criticism, both internally and externally. In America’s future, filled with successes and failures, one can only hope that we are able to withstand as much in order to create a cultural legacy of our

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