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Title: Mengzi and Xunzi


1
Mengzi and Xunzi
2
Mencius
371-289 BCE second sage of Confucianism contemp
orary of Zhuangzi
  • ??

3
The Internal Confucian Debate on Human Nature
  • Mengzi / Meng-tzu humans as moral agents
  • Xunxi / Hsün-tzu human nature equated with
    self-interest
  •  

4
Early Chinese Views of Human Nature
  1. neither good nor evil (Gaozi)
  2. equal parts of good and evil (a Han theory)
  3. some persons good, some persons evil (Wang Chong)
  4. evil (Xunzi)
  5. good (Mencius)

5
Early Chinese Views of Human Nature
  1. neither good nor evil (Gaozi)
  2. equal parts of good and evil (a Han theory)
  3. some persons good, some persons evil (Wang Chong)
  4. evil (Xunzi)
  5. good (Mencius)

6
Gaozi
  • Gaozi said, Human nature is like swirling water.
    Open a passage to the east, and it flows east.
    Open a passage to the west, and it flows west.
    The basic indeterminacy of good and evil in human
    nature is just like the basic indeterminacy of
    east and west in the flow of water. (6.A.2)
  • Water flowing west


    Water flowing east
  • Does water flow east naturally? What is the
    analogy to human nature?

7
  • Mencius said, Water certainly has no particular
    tendency to flow east or west, but can the same
    be said of flowing up or down? The basic
    goodness of human nature is just like the
    downward flow of water. There is no more a human
    being utterly lacking in goodness than there is
    such a thing as water that does not flow
    downward.
  • VI.A.2

Does water flow down naturally? What is the
analogy to human nature?
Water flowing down
Water
flowing down
8
Can water flow up? What is the analogy to human
nature?
  • Now, with my hands or my feet I can splash water
    over my head by channeling it, I can direct it
    all the way to the top of a hill. But is this
    the basic nature of water? No. These results
    are due to external force. The fact that people
    can be made to do evil reflects the same
    violation of their basic nature. (6.A.2)

9
Human nature is good
  • Every person has the natural inclination to do
    good, and this natural inclination is ren
    (perfect co-humanity)
  • What I mean by saying it is good is that there
    is that in our nature which is spontaneously part
    of us and can become good. The fact that we can
    become bad is not a defect in our natural
    endowment. (6.A.6. Eno translation)
  • Quoting Mencius
  • To be human (?) is to be co-human (?)

10
  • Gaozi said Human nature is like a willow tree
    righteousness is like cups and bowls. To make
    human nature benevolent and righteous is like
    making a willow tree into cups and bowls.
    (6.A.1)
  • Human nature Willow tree
  • Benevolent Cups
  • Righteous Bowls

11
  • Human nature Willow tree
  • Benevolent Cups
  • Righteous Bowls
  • Mengzi said Can you make cups and bowls from
    willow wood by following its natural grain or is
    it only after you have hacked the willow wood
    that you can make a cup or bowl?
  • If you must hack the willow to make cups and
    bowls from it, must you hack people in order to
    make them humane and righteous?
  • Answer to the question For Gaozi .
    For Mengzi.
  • 6.A.1

12
Natural Goodness
  • Humans all have the heart of compassion ????.
  • Humans all have the heart of disdain for evil
    ????.
  • Humans all have the heart of respect ????.
  • Humans all have the heart of approval and
    disapproval ????. (6.A.6)

?? cè yin Compassion Concern
(Commiseration) ?? xiu è Disdain for evil --
Shame ?? gong jìng Respect Yielding
(Deference) ?? shì fei Approval and disapproval
-- Judgment
This is from ch. 6
13
This Heart defines human nature
  • Clearly, one who did not have the heart of
    concern would be inhuman. One who did not have
    the heart of shame for wrong-doing would be
    inhuman. One who did not have the heart which
    places others before oneself would be inhuman.
    And one who did not have the heart which
    distinguishes between right and wrong would be
    inhuman."
  • One who lacked a sense of dismay in such a case
    could simply not be a person. And I could further
    show that anyone who lacked the moral sense of
    shame could not be a person anyone who lacked a
    moral sense of deference could not be a person
    anyone who lacked a moral sense of right and
    wrong could not be a person. (Eno translation)
  • (2.A.6)

This is from ch. 2
14
What do people have in common?
  • ?????????
  • ???,???
  • ????????????
  • ???????,???????
  • Mencius (6.A.7 last paragraph)

15
  • ?????????
  • ???,???
  • ????????????
  • ???????,???????

16
  • ?????????
  • ???,???
  • ????????????
  • ???????,???????

17
  • ?????????
  • ???,???
  • ????????????
  • ???????,???????
  • Eno translates this last paragraph of 6.A.7

18
  • ?????????
  • ???,???
  • ????????????
  • ???????,???????

19
???????,???????
  • ??????,???????
  • Righteousness and virtue delight my heart just
    like meat delights my mouth!
  • ? yuè to please (like food, or music, or
    beauty)

chúhuàn ??????
20
The heart of goodness
  • Mencius said All persons have a heart which
    cannot bear to see the suffering of others. The
    Sage Kings had such a heart, and their
    governments did not permit the suffering of the
    people. In ruling the kingdom, if you manifest
    this heart to implement such a government, you
    can hold the world in the palm of your hand.
  • What I mean by saying that all persons have a
    heart which cannot bear to see the suffering of
    others is this
  • Anyone who suddenly came upon a toddler about to
    fall into a well would have a heart of alarm and
    concern. And we cannot say that this heart
    arises from wanting to be favored by the parents,
    or from seeking the praise of one's friends and
    community, or from hoping to avoid a reputation
    for callousness.
  • Clearly, one who did not have the heart of
    concern would be inhuman. One who did not have
    the heart of shame for wrong-doing would be
    inhuman. One who did not have the heart which
    places others before oneself would be inhuman.
    And one who did not have the heart which
    distinguishes between right and wrong would be
    inhuman.
  • II.A.6 The Sprouts of Virtue

21
feelings as moral inclinations (the four
sprouts)
  • 1. concern gives rise to jen/ren (co-humanity)
  • 2. shame gives rise to yi (righteousness)
  • 3. yielding gives rise to li (propriety)
  • 4. judgment gives rise to chih/zhi (wisdom)
  • Now the sense of dismay on anothers behalf is
    the seed of ren planted within us, the sense of
    shame is the seed of righteousness (yi), the
    sense of deference is the seed of li, and the
    sense of right and wrong is the seed of wisdom.
    Everyone possesses these four moral senses just
    as they possess their four limbs. (Eno
    translation)
  •  

2.A.6 repeated at 6.A.6
22
The Developmental Aspect
  • 1. concern gives rise to ren (co-humanity)
  • 2. shame gives rise to yi (righteousness)
  • 3. yielding gives rise to li (propriety)
  • 4. judgment gives rise to zhi (wisdom)
  •  

(Discussing evil kings with Gaozi) As for
their essence, they can become good. This is
what I mean by calling their natures good. As
for their not becoming good, this is not the
fault of their potential. (6.A.6)
23
feelings as moral inclinations (the four
sprouts)
  • The heart of concern is the sprout of ren
    (benevolence). The heart of shame is the sprout
    of yi (righteousness). The heart of yielding is
    the sprout of li (propriety). The heart of
    judgment is the sprout of zhi (wisdom).
  • Having these four sprouts is like having arms
    and legs. If you say that you cannot act upon
    them, you are discrediting yourself, just as if
    you say that a ruler cannot act upon them, you
    are discrediting his rule. Anyone who has these
    four sprouts within themselves knows how to
    develop them and perfect them they are like the
    initial spark of a fire, or the first waters of
    an open spring. If you can perfect them, you
    will be able to embrace the whole world with your
    virtue if you do not perfect them, you will not
    even be able to serve your own parents. (2.A.6)
  • the force of these senses will burst through us
    like a wildfire first catching or a spring first
    bubbling forth through the ground (Eno
    translation)

24
Things people (including sages) have in common
  • Mouths tastes
  • Ears pleasure in listening
  • Eyes standards of beauty
  • Concern
  • Shame
  • Yielding
  • Judgment
  • Goodness?

25
The meaning of xing (?)
  • ????????,??
  • ???????,??
  • (Zhuangzis swimmer ??)
  • Having been born on land I am at ease on land
    that was originally in me.
  • Having grown up in water, I am at ease in water
    that is my nature.

26
?
  • Xing is not a superordinate and univocal
    principle that inheres in all human beings at
    brith. While there is a givenness to xing as an
    inherent organizing structure that persons in
    general develop after conception, it also
    suggests the dynamic process of becoming human
    (p. 189)

27
Metaphors for ? in Mencius
  • Growing trees and animals
  • Ripening grain
  • Cultivating crops
  • Flowing water

Strictly speaking, a person is not a sort of
being, but first and foremost a doing or making,
and only derivatively and retrospectively,
something done (ibid., p. 190)
28
So, why are some people evil?
  • In years of plenty, most young men are lazy in
    years of poverty, most young men are cruel
    (6.A.7)
  • The trees of Ox Mountain were once beautiful.
    But because it bordered on a large state,
    hatchets and axes besieged it. Could it remain
    verdant?... (6.A.8)
  • Those who follow their greater part the heart
    become great humans. Those who follow their
    petty part the ears and eyes become petty
    humans (6.A.15)

29
Review
  • What do people have in common? Goodness?
  • If so, then why are some people evil?
  • Following Zhuangzis definition of xing (?)
    (human nature), what does Mengzi mean when he
    says that human nature is good?
  • What was Gaozis view, and how does Mengzis
    differ?

end
30
Xunzi
  • ??

31
  • 5. Against Physiognomy
  • 9. The Regulations of a True King
  • 17. Discourse on Heaven ??
  • 19. Discourse on Ritual" ??
  • 21. Undoing Fixation" ??
  • 23. Human Nature is Bad ??

32
??
  • 17. Discourse on Heaven

33
Strange Events
  • Marvel at them but do not fear them
  • Stars fall
  • Trees make strange sounds
  • The sun and moon are eclipsed
  • Wind and rain do not come at their proper time
  • Strange stars appear
  • Marvel at them and fear them as well
  • The plowing is poorly done and the crops suffer
  • The weeding is badly done and the harvest fails
  • The government is evil and loses the support of
    the people
  • The fields are neglected and the crops badly
    tended
  • Grain is being imported from abroad and sold at a
    high price
  • People are starving and die by the roadside
  • Government commands are unenlightened
  • Public works are undertaken at the wrong season
  • Agriculture is not properly attended to

such things occur once in a while with the
changes of Heaven and earth and the mutations of
yin and yang
portents such as these are born from
disorderthe reasons for their occurrence may be
found veryclose at hand
34
Prayer and Sacrifice
  • ???,???????,?????????????,????,???????,??????,???
    ????????,????????????,???????
  • One performs the rain sacrifice and it rains.
  • then one will have ill fortune.

35
  • ???,???????,?????????????,????,???????,??????,???
    ????????,????????????,???????
  • You pray for rain and it rains. The reason? I
    say No reason. Its as if you did not pray and
    it rained anyway.
  • The sun and the moon are eclipsed and you try to
    save them.
  • The sun beats down and you pray for rain.
  • You divine before making a big decision.
  • But nothing is accomplished from any of this
    they are performances (?).
  • Thats why a junzi sees them as performances,
    while the common people see them as acts of
    the gods. To seem them as human performances
    is fortunate to see them as divine acts is
    unfortunate.

36
  • ???,???????,?????????????,????,???????,??????,???
    ????????,????????????,???????
  • You pray for rain and it rains. The reason? I
    say No reason. Its as if you did not pray and
    it rained anyway.
  • The sun and the moon are eclipsed and you try to
    save them.
  • The sun beats down and you pray for rain.
  • You divine before making a big decision.
  • But nothing is accomplished from any of this
    they are performances (?).
  • Thats why a junzi sees them as performances,
    while the common people see them as acts of
    the gods. To seem them as human performances
    is fortunate to see them as divine acts is
    unfortunate.

37
  • ???,???????,?????????????,????,???????,??????,???
    ????????,????????????,???????
  • You pray for rain and it rains. The reason? I
    say No reason. Its as if you did not pray and
    it rained anyway.
  • The sun and the moon are eclipsed and you try to
    save them.
  • The sun beats down and you pray for rain.
  • You divine before making a big decision.
  • But nothing is accomplished from any of this
    they are performances (?).
  • Thats why a junzi sees them as performances,
    while the common people see them as acts of
    the gods. To seem them as human performances
    is fortunate to see them as divine acts is
    unfortunate.

38
  • ???,???????,?????????????,????,???????,??????,???
    ????????,????????????,???????
  • You pray for rain and it rains. The reason? I
    say No reason. Its as if you did not pray and
    it rained anyway.
  • The sun and the moon are eclipsed and you try to
    save them.
  • The sun beats down and you pray for rain.
  • You divine before making a big decision.
  • But nothing is accomplished from any of this
    they are performances (?).
  • Thats why a junzi sees them as performances,
    while the common people see them as acts of
    the gods. To seem them as human performances
    is fortunate to see them as divine acts is
    unfortunate.

39
Xunzis religious skepticism
  • Always when people see ghosts, it is at times
    when they are aroused and excited, and they make
    their judgments in moments when their faculties
    are confused and blinded
  • So what is the value and purpose of religious
    ritual?

40
  • ????
  • ????
  • ????
  • ??????
  • Heaven has its time
  • Earth has its material
  • Man has his governance
  • And thats calledforming a triad

41
?? ??
  • 19. Discourse on Ritual 23. Human
    Nature is Bad

42
Mengzi and Xunzi
  • Mencius feelings as moral inclinations (the
    four sprouts)
  • Xunzi Human Nature is Bad (ch. 23)
  • What is Xunzis line of argument in this essay?

43
Xunzis view of human nature
  • ?????
  • Man is born with desires
  • What does Xunzi include among these yu?

?
44
Xunzis view of human nature
  • ????,?????
  • ? human nature
  • ? artifice, ornament, intentional action,
    conscious action, deliberate effort

evil
good
??
45
??
  • By nature, people are selfish. Without
    teachers and standards of conduct, they see
    things only in terms of benefit to themselves.
    And if the age in which they live is chaotic,
    they acquire its chaotic practices.
  •  
  • Hutton Peoples nature is such that they are
    born with a fondness for profit.

? ? ? ? ? ?
46
  • ?????? The sage kings despised this chaos,
  • ??????? and so they established the rites to
    differentiate them according to class,
  • ????? to corral peoples desires,
  • ???? and provide to them their proper
    satisfaction.

47
The Regulations of a True King (ch. 9)
  • ?????,????????,??????

48
  • Similarly, since mans nature is evil, it must
    wait for the instructions of a teacher before it
    can become upright, and for the guidance of
    ritual principles before it can become orderly.
  • ?????
  • ??
  • ???
  • ???
  • ???
  • ???

49
  • Similarly, since mans nature is evil, it must
    wait for the instructions of a teacher before it
    can become upright, and for the guidance of
    ritual principles before it can become orderly.
  • ?????
  • ??
  • ???
  • ???
  • ???
  • ???

50
  • Similarly, since mans nature is evil, it must
    wait for the instructions of a teacher before it
    can become upright, and for the guidance of
    ritual principles before it can become orderly.
  • ?????
  • ??
  • ??? (fa)
  • ??? (zheng)
  • ???
  • ???

51
  • Similarly, since mans nature is evil, it must
    wait for the instructions of a teacher before it
    can become upright, and for the guidance of
    ritual principles before it can become orderly.
  • ?????
  • ??
  • ???
  • ???
  • ??? (li-yi)
  • ??? (zhi)

52
Rites!
  • Clothing
  • Deportment
  • Attitude
  • Implements
  • Offerings
  • Gestures
  • Similarly, since mans nature is evil, it must
    wait for the instructions of a teacher before it
    can become upright, and for the guidance of
    ritual principles before it can become orderly.

53
Becoming good
  • Warped wood
  • Blunt metal
  • Laid against a straightening board
  • Steamed
  • Forced into shape
  • Whetted on a grindstone
  • Sharpened

54
  • end

55
Differentiation
  • Water and fire possess qi, but they are
    inanimate.
  • Plants and trees are animate, but they lack
    consciousness.
  • Birds and beasts have consciousness, but they are
    amoral.
  • Persons have qi, animation, consciousness, and a
    sense of morality, and that is why we are the
    noblest beings in the world.
  • We are not as strong as oxen or as swift as
    horses, and yet they are used by us. Why?
    Because we form societies and they do not.
  • Why are we able to form societies? Because we
    differentiate among ourselves.
  • And how are we able to differentiate among
    ourselves? With morality.
  • If morality is the basis for social
    differentiation, there will be harmony
  • if there is harmony, there will be unity
  • if there is unity, there will be power
  • if there is power, there will be strength
  • if there is strength, there will be the ability
    to have dominion over all things.
  • That is why we live secure in palaces and houses.

56
queries
  • A Discussion of Rites
  • Human Nature is Evil
  1. What is the relationship between rites and
    desires? What is the effect of ritual upon
    desire?
  2. What is the relationship between rites and
    emotions (devotion, longing, depression,
    melancholy, grief, loyalty, faith, love,
    respect)?
  3. Do funeral rites affect the dead? What then is
    their purpose?
  1. What are the components of human nature?
  2. What are the consequences of the public
    expression of natural tendencies?
  3. What is goodness? How is it attained? What
    kinds of people are good, and why?
  4. What are the origins of the means by which
    goodness is attained?
  5. How are human nature and Heaven related?
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