Confucian
scholars have long debated essential human nature without reaching agreement as
to its fundamental characteristics. Most agree, however, that the purpose of
existence is to reach one's highest potential as a human being. Through a
rigorous process of self-cultivation that lasts a lifetime, one may eventually
become a "perfected person."
Rendering of
Lunyu (Analects) 1:3: Public Domain The dependence of Tian upon human agents to
put its will into practice helps account for Confucians' insistence on moral,
political, and social activism. The relentless quest for virtue begins with the
most basic human activities, such as mindful direction of one's sight, hearing,
speech, and action:
Do not look
at, do not listen to, do not speak of, do not do whatever is contrary to ritual
propriety (Lunyu 12:1).
In the Lunyu,
two types of persons are opposed to one another -- not in terms of basic
potential (for, in 17:2, Kongzi says all human beings are alike at birth), but
in terms of developed potential. These are the junzi (literally, "lord's
son" or "gentleman," but often translated as "profound
person") and the xiaoren ("small person"):
The profound person
understands what is moral. The small person understands what is profitable
(Lunyu 4:16).
The junzi is
the person who always manifests the quality of ren (co-humanity) in his person
and the displays the quality of yi (righteousness) in his actions (Lunyu 4:5).
A xiaoren, then, is merely a human being who has not learned to put reninto
practice; all human beings potentially may become junzi. The character forrenis
composed of two graphic elements, one representing a human being and the other
representing the number two. One may think of ren as meaning "how two
people should treat one another." Yet, while the Lunyu talks a great deal
about ren, it never uses the term renxing (human nature), which became a major
concern of the Confucian tradition beginning with the work of Mengzi, whose
interpretation of Kongzi's thought -- especially after the ascendancy of Zhu
Xi's brand of Confucianism in the 12th century C.E. -- became the basis of
Confucian orthodoxy.
Taiji (Great
Ultimate) cosmological diagram: Public Domain Mengzi is famous for claiming
that human nature (renxing) is good. For Mengzi, renxing (human nature) is
congenitally disposed toward ren, but requires cultivation through li (ritual)
as well as yoga-like disciplines related to one's qi (vital energy), and may be
stunted (although never destroyed) through neglect or negative environmental
influence. Mengzi's basic assertion is that "everyone has a heart-mind
which feels for others" (Mengzi 2A6). As evidence, he makes two appeals:
to experience and to reason. Appealing to experience, he says:
Supposing
people see a child fall into a well -- they all have a heart-mind that is
shocked and sympathetic. It is not for the sake of being on good terms with the
child's parents, and it is not for the sake of winning praise for neighbors and
friends, nor is it because they dislike the child's noisy cry (Mengzi 2A6).
Mengzi says
nothing about acting on this automatic affective-cognitive response to
suffering that he ascribes to the bystanders at the well. It is merely the
feeling that counts. Going further and
appealing to reason, Mengzi argues:
Judging by
this, without a heart-mind that sympathizes one is not human; without a
heart-mind aware of shame, one is not human; without a heart-mind that defers
to others, one is not human; and without a heart-mind that approves and
condemns, one is not human (Mengzi 2A6).
Thus, Mengzi
makes an assertion about human beings -- all have a heart-mind that feels for
others -- and qualifies his assertion with appeals to common experience and
logical argument. Mengzi goes further and identifies the four basic qualities
of the heart-mind (sympathy, shame, deference, judgment) not only as
distinguishing characteristics of human beings -- what makes a human being
really "human" -- but also as the "sprouts" (duan) of the
four cardinal virtues:
A heart-mind
that sympathizes is the sprout of co-humanity [ren]; a heart-mind that is aware
of shame is the sprout of rightness [yi]; a heart-mind that defers to others is
the sprout of ritual propriety [li]; a heart-mind that approves and condemns is
the sprout of wisdom [zhi].... If anyone having the four sprouts within himself
knows how to develop them to the full, it is like fire catching alight, or a
spring as it first bursts through. If able to develop them, he is able to
protect the entire world; if unable, he is unable to serve even his parents
(Mengzi 2A6).
For Mengzi,
what makes us human is our feelings of commiseration for others' suffering;
what makes us virtuous -- or, in Confucian terms, junzi -- is our development
of this inner potential. There is no sharp conflict between "nature"
and "nurture" in Mengzi's vision of humanity; biology and culture are
co-dependent upon one another in the development of the virtues. If our sprouts
are left untended, we can be no more than merely human -- feeling sorrow at the
suffering of another, but unable or unwilling to do anything about it. If we tend our sprouts assiduously -- through
education in the classical texts, formation by ritual propriety, fulfillment of
social norms, etc. -- we can not only avert the suffering of a few children in
some wells, but also bring about peace and justice in the entire world. This is
the basis of Mengzi' appeal to King Hui of Liang (r. 370-319 BCE):
[The king]
asked abruptly, "How shall the world be settled?"
"It will
be settled by unification," [Mengzi] answered.
"Who will
be able to unify it?"
"Someone
without a taste for killing will be able to unify it.... Has Your Majesty
noticed rice shoots? If there is drought during the seventh and eighth months,
the shoots wither, but if dense clouds gather in the sky and a torrent of rain
falls, the shoots suddenly revive. When that happens, who could stop it? ...
Should there be one without a taste for killing, the people will crane their
necks looking out for him. If that does happen, the people will go over to him
as water tends downwards, in a torrent -- who could stop it? (Mengzi 1A6)
Xunzi is
famous for opposing Mengzi's claim about the original goodness of humanity.
Whereas Mengzi claims that human beings are originally good but argues for the
necessity of self-cultivation, Xunzi claims that human beings are originally
bad but argues that they can be reformed, even perfected, through
self-cultivation. Also like Mengzi, Xunzi sees li as the key to the cultivation
of renxing. Although Xunzi condemns Mengzi' arguments in no uncertain terms,
the two thinkers share many assumptions, including one that links each to
Kongzi: the assumption that human beings can be transformed by participation in
traditional aesthetic, moral, and social disciplines.
Xunzi: Public
Domain Later thinkers such as Zhang Zai (1020-1077 C.E.), Zhu Xi, and Wang
Yangming, while distinct from one another, agree on the primacy of Kongzi as
the fountainhead of the Confucian tradition, share Mengzi's understanding of
human beings as innately good, and revere the Wujing and Sishu associated with
Kongzi as authoritative sources for standards of ritual, moral, and social
propriety. These thinkers also display a bent toward the cosmological and
metaphysical that distinguishes them from the Kongzi of the Lunyu, and betrays
the influence of Buddhism and Taoism -- two movements with little or no popular
following in Kongzi's or Mengzi's China -- on their thought. Zhang Zai's
interest in qi as the unifier of all things surely must have been stimulated by
Mengzi' theories, while Wang Yangming's search for li (cosmic principle) in the
heart-mind evokes Mengzi 6A7: "What do all heart-minds have in common? Li
[cosmic principle] and yi [righteousness]."
Questions:
1.
What was Confucius' view of human nature?
2.
What was Mengzi's view of human nature?
3.
What was Xunzi's view of human nature?
4.
Which early Confucian views of human nature were most influential on
later Confucian thought?
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