Discussing the Relationship between Father and Son, Ruler and Subjects in the <i>Xiaojing</i>: Based on the Dunhuang Manuscripts
It has long been accepted that the ancient Chinese ruler–subjects relationship was a metaphorical extension of the father–son relationship, where loyalty and family reverence were considered synonymous. The Confucian classic the <i>Xiaojing</i> is taken as a significant piece of evidence...
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Format: | Article |
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MDPI AG
2023-07-01
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Online Access: | https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/14/7/916 |
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author | Bisheng Chen |
author_facet | Bisheng Chen |
author_sort | Bisheng Chen |
collection | DOAJ |
description | It has long been accepted that the ancient Chinese ruler–subjects relationship was a metaphorical extension of the father–son relationship, where loyalty and family reverence were considered synonymous. The Confucian classic the <i>Xiaojing</i> is taken as a significant piece of evidence supporting this view. However, based on the annotated version of the <i>Xiaojing</i> discovered in Dunhuang, it is evident that during the Han Dynasty and the Six Dynasties period, Confucian scholars made clear distinctions between father–son relationships and ruler–subjects relationships. They also made a clear differentiation between the moral connotations of loyalty and family reverence. The father–son relationship is a bond of blood, while the ruler–subjects relationship is a bond of duty and appropriateness, meaning that the ethical requirements for the father–son relationship and ruler–subjects relationship are fundamentally different. Therefore, expressions such as “service to ruler with family reverence is loyalty” does not mean to unify loyalty and family reverence, but means that the governor should select people who have already cultivated the virtue of family reverence to become officials because they have learnt how to show respect in their family life. |
first_indexed | 2024-03-11T00:42:08Z |
format | Article |
id | doaj.art-847b2efee3574df1816ca1724424deb7 |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 2077-1444 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-03-11T00:42:08Z |
publishDate | 2023-07-01 |
publisher | MDPI AG |
record_format | Article |
series | Religions |
spelling | doaj.art-847b2efee3574df1816ca1724424deb72023-11-18T21:10:29ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442023-07-0114791610.3390/rel14070916Discussing the Relationship between Father and Son, Ruler and Subjects in the <i>Xiaojing</i>: Based on the Dunhuang ManuscriptsBisheng Chen0Department of Philosophy, Tsing Hua University, Beijing 100084, ChinaIt has long been accepted that the ancient Chinese ruler–subjects relationship was a metaphorical extension of the father–son relationship, where loyalty and family reverence were considered synonymous. The Confucian classic the <i>Xiaojing</i> is taken as a significant piece of evidence supporting this view. However, based on the annotated version of the <i>Xiaojing</i> discovered in Dunhuang, it is evident that during the Han Dynasty and the Six Dynasties period, Confucian scholars made clear distinctions between father–son relationships and ruler–subjects relationships. They also made a clear differentiation between the moral connotations of loyalty and family reverence. The father–son relationship is a bond of blood, while the ruler–subjects relationship is a bond of duty and appropriateness, meaning that the ethical requirements for the father–son relationship and ruler–subjects relationship are fundamentally different. Therefore, expressions such as “service to ruler with family reverence is loyalty” does not mean to unify loyalty and family reverence, but means that the governor should select people who have already cultivated the virtue of family reverence to become officials because they have learnt how to show respect in their family life.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/14/7/916the <i>Xiaojing</i>family reverenceloyalty |
spellingShingle | Bisheng Chen Discussing the Relationship between Father and Son, Ruler and Subjects in the <i>Xiaojing</i>: Based on the Dunhuang Manuscripts Religions the <i>Xiaojing</i> family reverence loyalty |
title | Discussing the Relationship between Father and Son, Ruler and Subjects in the <i>Xiaojing</i>: Based on the Dunhuang Manuscripts |
title_full | Discussing the Relationship between Father and Son, Ruler and Subjects in the <i>Xiaojing</i>: Based on the Dunhuang Manuscripts |
title_fullStr | Discussing the Relationship between Father and Son, Ruler and Subjects in the <i>Xiaojing</i>: Based on the Dunhuang Manuscripts |
title_full_unstemmed | Discussing the Relationship between Father and Son, Ruler and Subjects in the <i>Xiaojing</i>: Based on the Dunhuang Manuscripts |
title_short | Discussing the Relationship between Father and Son, Ruler and Subjects in the <i>Xiaojing</i>: Based on the Dunhuang Manuscripts |
title_sort | discussing the relationship between father and son ruler and subjects in the i xiaojing i based on the dunhuang manuscripts |
topic | the <i>Xiaojing</i> family reverence loyalty |
url | https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/14/7/916 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT bishengchen discussingtherelationshipbetweenfatherandsonrulerandsubjectsintheixiaojingibasedonthedunhuangmanuscripts |