Analects of Confucius Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Analects (論語 Pinyin: Lúnyǔ), or Analects of Confucius, written in twenty chapters, is thought to be a composition of the late Spring and Autumn Period. It is undoubtedly the most influential text in East Asian intellectual history, collecting maxims and short discussions between Confucius and his disciples. Many of them take sense in an historically well-defined context.It is within this work that most of the basic framework regarding Confucian values such as humaneness (仁), righteousness (義), filial piety (孝), and propriety (禮) is uncovered.
The book opens on a sentence beginning with the word 'study', a constant injunction in the Analects:
- The Master said, To learn and at due times to repeat what one has learned, is that not after all a pleasure? That friends should come to one from afar, is this not after all delightful? To remain unsoured even though one's merits are unrecognized by others, is that not after all what is expected of a gentleman? (Analects I. 1., tr. A. Waley)
There are various theories regarding its compilation, but it is obvious that it is somewhat of a patchwork, assembled over a period of time, but the core of the book could be attributed to the second generation disciples.
These Analects, with the other Four Books, is part of the foundational texts of Confucianism.
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