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Ancient China’s ISMs Confucianism Taoism

Ancient China’s ISMs

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Ancient China’s ISMs. Confucianism. Taoism. Reading Quiz. Which of these was not an ancient Chinese dynasty you read about? Shang, Qin, Han, Li The rulers of the Zhou dynasty were given their power through the: Order of Gods, Spirit of Zhou, Mandate of Heaven, or Great Wall Spirits - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ancient China’s ISMs

Ancient China’s ISMsConfucianism

Taoism

Page 2: Ancient China’s ISMs

Reading Quiz Which of these was not an ancient Chinese

dynasty you read about? Shang, Qin, Han, Li The rulers of the Zhou dynasty were given their

power through the: Order of Gods, Spirit of Zhou, Mandate of Heaven, or Great Wall Spirits

At the heart of the concept of family in China was the idea of: Golden Rule, Filial Piety, The Han Way

The Confucian Dao, or way, was marked by these two elements: Competition and hard work, peace and prosperity, duty and humanity

Confucius was known in China by the name: King Kong, Kongfuzi, Confusin’

Page 3: Ancient China’s ISMs

ConfucianismThe father of

ConfucianismConfucius:

Was born around 551 B.C.

Page 4: Ancient China’s ISMs

ConfucianismIn his early twenties he became a tutor

Confucius was undoubtedly one of the worlds best teachers

He always taught very informal, like a fellow learner with his students

He never thought of himself as a sage

Page 5: Ancient China’s ISMs

ConfucianismWith his death began his glorification

His teachings have touched almost every Chinese student for the past two thousand years.

Confucius believed that tradition was the key to peace, in this very unstable time.

He believed that tradition would show them the way back to a happy China.

Page 6: Ancient China’s ISMs

ConfucianismThe Golden Rule:The Confucian Dao (or

Way)Humanity

“Measure the feeling of others by one’s own.”

Page 7: Ancient China’s ISMs

Confucianism

China placed the scholar-bureaucrat at the top of its social scale, and its soldiers at the bottom.

Page 8: Ancient China’s ISMs

ConfucianismConfucius believed that with out human relationships, there would be no self.

There are Five Constant relationships in life:

Parent and ChildHusband and WifeElder Sibling and Junior SiblingElder Friend and Junior FriendRuler and Subject

Page 9: Ancient China’s ISMs

ConfucianismPeople have to warrant the respect and power that comes with their positions in life. Power and respect are not a given, they must be earned.

He believed that if everyone followed the five ideals, even just one person the effect would be wide spread. Through that person’s family, community, nation, and the world.

Page 10: Ancient China’s ISMs

ConfucianismChina configured the Confucianism religion, so that it would serve everyone.

If everyone works hard, then everyone prospers

With each passing year people listen more and more to their elders.

Page 11: Ancient China’s ISMs

Answer these questions from two points of view: A Buddhist following the Eightfold Path, and a follower of Confucianism…A student knows that they are failing a class. Students from each of these doctrines know they

will be in trouble when their parents find out. How do they handle this situation?

A student's friends smoke and are trying to get them to start. How do they handle this situation?

A student has just found $20 in the hall. What should they do?

A student's parents have just spent a lot of money on a new outfit. The student has been playing around and has gotten ink all over it. What should they tell their parents, or

should they?

A student really likes a new student in school, but all the other students are making fun of the new student's clothes. How should the first student act?

A student knows that an older brother or sister is cheating on tests. How should the student act?

A student sees an opportunity to take something they have really wanted, without being caught. How should that student act?

Page 12: Ancient China’s ISMs

TaoismThe father of Taoism

Lao Tzu:Was born around 640 B.C.No one is really sure about any dates or places.

Page 13: Ancient China’s ISMs

TaoismThe Tao Te Ching is in effect the Taoist

bible.

It centers around the concept of Tao. Or the “path”

Page 14: Ancient China’s ISMs

TaoismThere are three meanings of “Tao”

Tao- The way to ultimate reality. This Tao is way to vast for a person to comprehend or fathom.

Tao- The way of the universe. The norm, the rhythm, and the driving power in all of nature. Deals more with the spiritual side then the Physical side of things.

Page 15: Ancient China’s ISMs

TaoismThere are three meanings of “Tao”

Tao- The way of human life. It refers to the way that we mesh with the Tao of the universe.

Page 16: Ancient China’s ISMs

TaoismPhilosophical Taoism:

Is a reflective look at lifeRelatively unorganizedTeaches what you should understandYou work on improving yourselfSeeks power through knowledge

Page 17: Ancient China’s ISMs

TaoismPhilosophical Taoism:

Wu Wei- The perfect way to live life, and reduce conflict and friction

Combines supreme activity and supreme relaxation

The conscious mind has to get out of the way of its own light.For one to perfect the wu wei lifestyle.A lifestyle above excess and tension.

As in Buddhism

Page 18: Ancient China’s ISMs

TaoismThe Taoist believe in opposites, and

that things in nature have a way of working themselves out.

The Taoist believe that people should be spontaneous and life their lives by someone else’s thoughts.

Lao Tzu connects the human to what transcends it.

Unlike ConfucianismUnlike Confucianism