The Analects of Confucius: A Philosophical Translation (Classics of Ancient China)

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Length
352 pages
Author
Confucius; Roger T. AmesHenry Rosemont Jr. (Translator)
Eras
Era of First Major Religions (1500 BC - 1 AD)
Types
Philosophy
The Analects of Confucius: A Philosophical Translation (Classics of Ancient China)
Synopsis
"There are more translations of Confucius' Analects than you can shake a stick at, but until now none have plumbed the depths of Confucius' thinking with such a keen sensitivity to philosophical and linguistic underpinnings. Following up on his groundbreaking work with David Hall in Thinking Through Confucius, Roger Ames has teamed up with Henry Rosemont to put theory into practice, portraying Confucius in light of his communitarian leanings. In a translation that comes off as surprisingly relaxed and colloquial, gone are the adherence to strict rules of propriety and righteous moralizing. Confucius has long been the victim of a certain unwitting Christianization, having been interpreted through the lens of Western philosophical assumptions. Ames and Rosemont scale away these assumptions, revealing a flexible and subtle thinker whose ideas of how to live well in a harmonious community have much to offer a fragmented society tied to reductive atomism and the exclusive exaltation of the individual."
RefTags
Released
1999
Location
East Asia
Setting
Written in 551-479 BC;