Confucius
Confucius
Confucius (the Latinized version of his Chinese name, Kong Zi) was not a
religious leader per se, but more of a philosopher whose teachings on
personal and governmental
morality, justice, and sincerity deeply influenced Chinese, Korean,
Japanese and Vietnamese thought and life. His ideas eventually developed
into a system of philosophy known as Confucianism, which was introduced
to Europe by the Italian Jesuit Matteo Ricci in the sixteenth century,
and has since become popularized in the West. Since none of the man’s
writings survive.
His teachings being recounted by his students many
years after his death—scholars continue to debate whether there was a
real flesh-and-blood person named Confucius or if Confucianism isn’t
just a term for a collection of ancient teachings from multiple sources
all brought together under a single philosophical construct. In either
case, he was the first to express the well-known principle, “Do not do
to others what you do not want done to yourself”—an early version of the
Golden Rule—so whoever (or whatever) he was, he was onto something big.
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