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Mencius (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition)
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Mencius (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition)
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The Mencius (Chinese: ; Mandarin Pinyin: Mengzi; Jyutping: maang6
zi2), commonly called the Mengzi, is a collection of anecdotes and
conversations of the Confucian thinker and philosopher Mencius. The
work dates from the second half of the 4th Century BC. It was
ranked as a Confucian classic and its status was elevated in Song
Dynasty. Zhu Xi, the scholar generally credited with the founding
of Neo-Confucianism, included the Mengzi as one of the Four Books,
and it became one of the canonical texts of Neo-Confucianism.
Throughout Chinese history there have been several different
theories regarding the authorship of the Mengzi. The famed Han
Dynasty historian Sima Qian believed that Mencius himself wrote the
book with the participation of his students Wan Zhang and Gongsun
Chou. Zhu Xi, Zhao Qi, and Qing Dynasty Confucian scholar Jiao Xun
believed that Mencius wrote the book himself without any
participation from other scholars. Tang Dynasty writers Han Yu and
Su Shi, as well as 12th century scholar Chao Gongwu, believed that
Wan Zhang and Gongsun Chou wrote the book after Mencius' death from
their own records and memories. Like all Chinese classics, the
Mengzi has been annotated many times throughout history, but those
of Zhao Qi, Zhu Xi, and Jiao Xun are considered the most
authoritative. The Mengzi did not initially enjoy a preeminent
position among the great works of Classical Chinese. In the Book of
Han's list of notable books and classics, the Mengzi is listed only
among the miscellaneous minor works. Emperor Wen of Han officially
listed the Mengzi, along with the Analects, the Classic of Filial
Piety, and the Erya, among the "Teachings and Records of Master
Scholars", giving it Imperial approval. During the Five Dynasties
and Ten Kingdoms Period, Emperor Meng Chang of Later Shu included
the Mengzi in his project of engraving Chinese classics upon stone
stele, which likely marks its earliest entrance into the category
of true Chinese classics. During the reign of Emperor Xiaozong of
Song, Zhu Xi declared the official addition of "The Four Books"
(traditional Chinese: ) - the Mengzi, the Analects, the Great
Learning, and the Doctrine of the Mean - as Chinese classics all
students should learn. By the Ming Dynasty and Qing Dynasty, the
Mengzi was part of the material tested on the Imperial
examinations.
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