Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Shen Dao

 
Wikipedia: Shen Dao

Shen Dao (Chinese: 慎到pinyin: Shèn Dào; Wade-Giles: Shen Tao, ca. 395–315 BCE) was an itinerant Chinese philosopher from Zhao who also served at the Jixia academy in Qi. He is usually referred to as Shenzi 慎子.

His own original 42 essays have been lost, and only 7 are still extant, and he is known largely through short references and the writings of others, notably Han Fei and Zhuang Zi. A critical reconstruction of the lost book of Shenzi was made by Paul Thompson, and published in 1979 as The Shen Tzu Fragments.

In 2007 the Shanghai Museum published a collection of texts written on bamboo slips from the State of Chu dating to the Warring States Period, including six bamboo slips with sayings of Shenzi.[1] These are the only known examples of the text of Shenzi that are contemporaneous with its composition.

The most noteworthy aspect of Shen Dao's philosophy is the fact that it represented a synthesis of Taoist and Legalist thought. While these two schools may seem quite opposed to each other in some regards, they both share a view of nature as a fundamentally amoral force, and by extension, reality as an arena without set moral imperative – a stance that differentiates both schools from Confucianism.

In Confucianism, power is legitimized through superior moral character and wisdom. According to Shen Dao, authority arises and is sustained due to the nature of actual circumstances, rather than in accordance with an abstract set of moral values. Things simply flow based on the natural course of The Way (the Tao), and do not arrange themselves so as to conform to an ethical system. Through this idea, it is possible to see a bridge between the mystical simplicity of Taoism and the cynical realism of Legalism.

References

This article contains Chinese text. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Chinese characters.

External links


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Shen Dao" Read more