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Ren?
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All Flashcards in Topic 10.2
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10.2.18 cards
Ren?
Benevolence / humaneness — a settled, genuine care for others; the central virtue of the Analects.
Shu (reciprocity)?
'Do not do to others what you would not want done to yourself' — how you practise ren day to day.
How does ren relate to shu?
Ren is the caring character (the aim); shu is the practical test you use to live it out.
Self-cultivation?
The lifelong work of shaping your character toward goodness through small daily acts.
Is ren a feeling or an action?
Both — a caring character that shows in conduct, fusing inner attitude and outer action.
How does Confucius describe reaching ren?
Only late in life could he 'follow what my heart desired without overstepping what was right' — goodness had become effortless.
Why is ren the core of the Analects?
Everything else — ritual, roles, good government — is there to grow and express genuine care for others.
Is ren just 'being nice'?
No — it's a reliable character you can count on, even when caring costs you something.
10.2.28 cards
Li?
Ritual and propriety — the customs, manners and rites that shape good conduct, from ceremonies to everyday courtesy.
How does li cultivate virtue?
Practising the outward form trains the inner feeling — you become kind by repeatedly acting kind (the bow trains the heart).
Why does li need ren?
Ritual with no real care behind it is a hollow shell — 'what has a person without ren got to do with li?'
Why does ren need li?
Care that never shows in how you treat people is idle; li is how ren gets expressed and passed on.
Is li just stiff rule-following?
No — it's the shared forms through which respect and care become visible, a language of good conduct.
Ren and li together?
Ren is the inner care; li is the outer form. Form without feeling is hollow; feeling without form is idle.
The 'become good by acting good' idea?
Confucius often reverses feeling and form: repeated good conduct slowly shapes a genuinely good character.
Why does Confucius take manners so seriously?
Because repeated good conduct shapes character — small daily courtesies help make you the kind of person you become.
10.2.38 cards
The junzi?
The exemplary 'noble' person — Confucius' moral ideal, noble by cultivated character rather than by birth.
Confucius' rewrite of 'noble'?
Once junzi meant a nobleman by birth; Confucius makes it noble by character, so it's earned and open to anyone.
Junzi vs the 'small person'?
The junzi asks 'what is right?'; the small person asks 'what's in it for me?' — steady and fair vs grasping.
Xiao?
Filial piety — deep respect and care for one's parents and elders.
Why is xiao the 'root' of ren?
The family is where you first learn to care for someone other than yourself; that care then grows outward to everyone.
How does virtue grow outward for Confucius?
From family (xiao) → community → society: learn to love your family well and you've begun learning to love everyone.
Is the junzi ideal elitist?
No — Confucius takes nobility away from birth and hands it to effort; anyone who cultivates ren and li can become one.
What does the junzi care about most?
Doing what is right rather than looking good — hard on themselves, slow to blame others.
10.2.48 cards
Government by virtue?
Leading people by the ruler's own moral example rather than by law and punishment.
Why rule by virtue not force?
Rule by punishment gets obedience but no shame; rule by example builds a real sense of right — grass bends to the wind.
The rectification of names?
Making sure people truly live up to the roles their titles name — 'let the ruler be a ruler, the parent a parent'.
Is the rectification of names about rank or duty?
Duty — a 'ruler' who stops ruling well loses the name; the title is earned by living up to its responsibilities.
How do the topic's four ideas fit together?
Xiao (family) → ren (care) → li (custom) → junzi (exemplary leaders) → a harmonious society, from home to state.
The harmonious society?
A society held together by care, good custom and trust rather than fear and force — the whole vision working at once.
The gamble in government by virtue?
It assumes rulers become good and people follow good example — with little backup when a leader is bad (a key (b) evaluation point).
How is Paper 2 on the Analects structured?
Open-book, 1 hour: (a) explain a concept [10] and (b) evaluate a claim [15]; quote the text to support your points.
Topic 10.2 study notes
Full notes & explanations for The Analects — Confucius
Philosophy exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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