From Ritual Culture to the Classical Confucian Conception of Yì
Yì 義 presents dual categories in classical Confucian conception. The first category is ethical-role duty originated from Zhou 周 ritual culture, which was a set of social norms defining ethical duties that fit each person’s role and status in the kinship group and society and regulating what was appr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Dao : a journal of comparative philosophy 2021-12, Vol.20 (4), p.531-547 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Yì
義 presents dual categories in classical Confucian conception. The first category is ethical-role duty originated from Zhou 周 ritual culture, which was a set of social norms defining ethical duties that fit each person’s role and status in the kinship group and society and regulating what was appropriate for a person’s behavior. The second category is moral conscience and rightness resulted from the internalization of social norms and ethical duties. From Confucius to Mencius, Xunzi 荀子, and others, while inheriting and elaborating
yì
’s ethical implication of role duty from Zhou ritual culture, they also gradually internalized
yì
to become the subject’s moral conscience of doing right things. During this process, classical Confucianism gradually formed an ethico-moral conception of
yì
as both role duty and moral rightness that abridged the dual categories of social norms for interpersonal relations and moral values for personal autonomy. |
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ISSN: | 1540-3009 1569-7274 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11712-021-09797-6 |