The beginning of ethics: confucius and socrates

Author: Yu, Jiyuan

Source: Asian Philosophy, Volume 15, Number 2, July 2005 , pp. 173-189(17)

Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group

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Abstract:

The paper is an effort to better understand, through a comparison, how Confucius and Socrates initate their ethical inquiries that have laid down, respectively, the foundations of Chinese and Western ethics. Since both Confucius and Socrates claim to have a divine mission to undertake their investigations, the paper focuses on the issue about how religion and rational philosophy are related when ethics begins. It shows that both have serious religious belief, yet each has secular rational grounds for doing what he is doing. Finally, each philosopher has a different view about how human beings are related to the divine being, and the difference determines their different approaches to ethics.

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1080/09552360500165304

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