Key Idea: The Analects asks a practical question, not an abstract one: how do you become a good human being, and how does that make a good society? Confucius answers with character — cultivated through relationships, ritual and example — rather than rules or force. You study the book in full. Master this text and you have a ready-made answer for Paper 2 — a 25-mark, open-book essay on this one book, where you sit the exam with a clean copy of the text beside you.
🧠 The four moves, one card each
Text 10.2 at a glance
- 10.2.1 · Ren — benevolence — The virtue at the heart of the book: a deep humaneness toward others. Its everyday guide is the 'silver rule' — do not impose on others what you would not want for yourself. Ren isn't handed to you; it is grown through effort and habit.
- 10.2.2 · Li — ritual and propriety — The proper forms — courtesy, ceremony, respectful conduct — that carry good character into action. Ritual shapes the person who practises it. Ren and li need each other: ritual without ren is hollow, ren without ritual is shapeless.
- 10.2.3 · The junzi and filial piety — The 'exemplary person' worth becoming — cultivated, sincere, at ease doing right. You spot a junzi by conduct, not birth. The family is the root of virtue: filial respect for parents is where humaneness is first learned.
- 10.2.4 · Government by virtue — A ruler should lead by moral example, not by law and punishment — a virtuous ruler draws good conduct from the people. The 'rectification of names' means everyone truly living up to their role. Character, not coercion, holds society together.
For Confucius, ethics is cultivation, not rule-following. You don't become good by obeying commands; you become good by growing ren through li inside your relationships until doing right feels natural. Grasp that goodness is a lifelong craft, and every part of the book falls into place.
✍️ Bring it together — a Paper 2 question
Evaluate Confucius' claim that a person becomes good chiefly through cultivating character in relationships, rather than by following moral rules. [25]
🔒 Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
📖 Using your text in the open-book exam
Using your text in the open-book exam
- Bring a CLEAN copy — IB rule: the copy of the Analects you take in must be un-annotated — no notes in the margins, no underlining, no highlighting. A marked-up copy can be refused, so revise from a separate set of notes and take a clean text into the room.
- Know the map — Memorise where the key sayings live — passages on ren, on li, on the junzi and filial piety, on government by virtue — so you can turn to a supporting line in seconds. Make your own separate study notes as you learn; you can't write in the exam copy.
- Quote to evidence, then EVALUATE — Open-book means you can cite a saying precisely to back a point — do it, but never just summarise. A short accurate reference then your own critical judgement earns marks; page after page of retelling does not.
- Plan then write — A quick argument map — position, support, objection, reply, verdict — beats flipping through pages mid-essay. Note the one or two sayings you'll quote, then write. Watch the clock: the book is a resource, not a script.
Important: Just summarising the Analects instead of evaluating it — or misusing the open text by copying out sayings. Listing 'ren, li, the junzi, government by virtue' with no judgement earns few marks. State the ethics accurately AND weigh whether character-cultivation really is a better route to goodness than rules — objection, reply, and a reasoned verdict.
✅ Check yourself
If you can answer these six, you have the spine of the whole text.
What is ren? Benevolence or humaneness — a genuine care for others, the central virtue of the Analects. Its everyday guide is not imposing on others what you would not want yourself.
What is li, and how does it relate to ren? Ritual and propriety — the proper forms of conduct that train and express ren. Li without ren is hollow; ren without li is shapeless. They need each other.
What is a junzi? The exemplary person worth becoming — cultivated and sincere, at ease doing right. Defined by conduct and character, not by birth or rank.
Why is the family the 'root of virtue'? Filial piety — respect and care for parents — is where humaneness is first learned; it then extends outward to others and to society.
What is government by virtue? A ruler leads by moral example, not law and punishment; a virtuous ruler draws good conduct from the people, holding society together through character.
What is the rectification of names? Everyone genuinely living up to their role — a ruler acting as a ruler should, a parent as a parent — so that words and reality match.
Exam Tips
- Paper 2 is a 25-mark essay on THIS text — an accurate account of the Analects' ethics plus your own evaluation, in balance.
- Lead with ren and li together; the junzi and government by virtue both grow out of that pairing.
- The strongest objection is the rules-vs-character debate — raise it, then use ren's power to correct li as Confucius' reply.
- Never just summarise: judge whether cultivating character really beats following rules, and end on a reasoned verdict.