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  1. Jun 11, 2018 · Confucius. The Chinese teacher and philosopher Confucius (551-479 B.C.) was the founder of the humanistic school of philosophy known as the Ju or Confucianism, which taught the concepts of benevolence, ritual, and propriety. In the 6th century B.C. China had begun to disintegrate into a loose confederation of city-states.

  2. A statue of Confucius. Confucius was born in an era of philosophical creativity. The rulers and subjects of the various regions sought for knowledge and power in uncertain times. He tried to teach ancient truth in a time of political confusion and crisis as the Zhou Dynasty was falling from power. Dozens of regions of their empire transformed ...

  3. the name on his tomb. 3 Romanised as "Confucius." Confucius ( Kong Fuzi or K'ung-fu-tzu, lit. " Master Kong ") (traditionally September 28, 551 B.C.E. – 479 B.C.E.) is one of the world's foremost exemplary teachers, whose teachings and philosophy have deeply influenced East Asian life and thought.

  4. Analects. as the embodiment of Confucian ideas. The Lunyu ( Analects ), the most-revered sacred scripture in the Confucian tradition, was probably compiled by the succeeding generations of Confucius’s disciples. Based primarily on the Master’s sayings, preserved in both oral and written transmissions, it captures the Confucian spirit in ...

  5. Jul 7, 2020 · Après que Confucius ait quitté son poste à Lu, il voyagea à travers d'autres états, rivalisant avec les partisans des différentes écoles pour l'acceptation de sa vision sur les leurs. Baird commente: Confucius errait dans les états voisins en compagnie d'un petit groupe d'étudiants, à qui il continuait d'enseigner.

  6. Kong Qiu, known more commonly as Confucius, was born in 551 BC in the Lu state, in what is now known as Qufu in the Shandong Province of China. He was born into an era characterized by political strife and social chaos, commonly referred to as the Spring and Autumn period of the Zhou Dynasty.

  7. A stone statue of Confucius. Around 100BC, the Han Dynasty declared Confucianism to be China’s official state philosophy. During the Tang Dynasty, however, it lost its official sanction. Over the last two millennia, Confucianism has remained the dominant orthodoxy in Chinese society. Fast forward to the early 1900s.

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