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Confucian and Communitarian Responses to Liberal Democracy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2009
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As East Asian societies struggle with the implications of modenity, the degree to which their Confucian heritage can support institutions of liberal democracy has been much debated. Recently, several authors have argued that the nations of Confucian Asia are indeed modernizing, but in the direction of “illiberal democracy”, which they see as an approach to democratic practice that takes communitarian concerns like social solidarity and political virtue into greater account than other, more liberal democratic societies do. In line with that argument, this article makes an introductory comparison of classical Confucian and contemporary communitarian thought, criticizes the view of Confucianism as necessarily authoritarian and suggests that Confucian theory and practice provides a strong and in many ways unique communitarian response to liberalism, without fundamentally invalidating those humanistic principles basic to democratic reform.
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References
1 This article uses “classical Confucianism” to refer to those principles taught in the Lun Yu (the Analects, or selected sayings, of K'ung Fu Tzu or Confucius) and, to a lesser degree, in the Meng Tzu (the Mencius, a collection of sayings attributed to an early Confucian scholar of that name). Unless otherwise stated, all quotations from the Analects and the Mencius will be based on the translations of D.C. Lau; see The Analects and Mencius, ed. and trans. Lau, D. C. (London: Penguin Group, 1979 and 1970, respectively)Google Scholar. Confucian concepts and texts will be referred to in English by their common (if somewhat inaccurate) Wide-Giles transliterations.
It is admittedly difficult to isolate a single strain of Confucian thought which deserves the label “classical”. Over the centuries there have been numerous conflicting interpretations of Confucius's writings, and many rival schools of Confucian and Neo-Confucian thought. This article will attempt to stay close to the historical Confucius, turning to Mencius only when his comments are directly pertinent to subjects already brought up in the Analects. The use of Mencius, as opposed to other early interpreters of Confucius, is a reflection of his close association with Confucius's original writings through the centuries, during which the two works have been joined together in the Ssu Shu (the Four Books), long the basis of an orthodox Confucian education. For an introduction to the varieties of Confucianism and a defense of the historical importance of the Analects, see A Source Book in Chinese Philosophy, ed. and trans. Chan, Wing-tsit (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1963)Google Scholar, esp. chap. 2. Over the last thirty years many authors have contributed to a revival of the “classical” Confucian message; their work, which will often be referred to in this essay, has been significant enough that one Confucian scholar has suggested that we may be on the verge of new “epoch” of Confucian humanism. See Wei-ming, Tu, “Towards a Third Epoch of Confucian Humanism”, in Way, Learning, and Politics: Essnys on the Confucian Intellectual (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1993), pp. 141–59.Google Scholar
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21 Some approaches to value articulation and justification include Taylor, Charles, The Sources of the Self (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1989)Google Scholar, esp. Part 1, “Identity and the Good,” which makes a near-theological defense of “moral sources” in human thinking; Nussbaum, Martha C., “Human Functioning and Social Justice: In Defense of Aristotelian Essentialism,” Political Theory 20 (1992): 202–246CrossRefGoogle Scholar, which advocates a particular vision of human flourishing; and Walzer, Michael, Thick and Thin (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1994)Google Scholar, which looks for a historically informed “minimalism” as a basis for standards of judgment.
22 The notion of “tending” is taken from Wolin, Sheldon S., “Tending and Intending a Constitution” in The Presence of the Past (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University, 1989).Google Scholar
23 This is not to claim that the republics of the Western tradition are the most communitarian of all possible forms of democratic government, or that classical republicanism and contemporary communitarianism are one and the same. That being said however, one may productively note the similarity between this argument and the one made by David Held, who describes two forms of republican democracy: one, more “protective,” preserved religious and other aristocratic forms of authority; the other, more “developmental” emphasized the importance of collective activity. Held, , Models of Democracy, 2nd ed. (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1996), pp. 55, 61 and passim.Google Scholar
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26 The amount of literature on the moral philosophy of Confucianism is enormous. Some recent important works include Antonio S. Cua, “Reasonable Challenges and Preconditions of Adjudication,” and Alasdair Maclntyre, “Incommensurability, Truth, and the Conversation Between Confucians and Aristotelians about the Virtues,” both in Culture and Modernity; on a related subject, see Yearly, Lee H., Mencius and Aquinas (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1990)Google Scholar. Tu Wei-ming is probably the most influential and well-known writer on Confucian philosophy in the West; some of his most important essays are collected in Humanity and Self-Cultivation: Essays in Confucian Thought (Berkeley: Asian Humanities Press, 1979)Google Scholar and Way, Learning, and Politics.
27 The reference is to Hall, David L. and Ames, Rover T., Thinking Through Confucius (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1987)Google Scholar, an excellent and influential example of philosophical engagement with Confucian thought.
28 Ibid., p. 131.
29 Bell, , Towards Illiberal Democracy, p. 75.Google Scholar
30 A view summarized in Ames, Roger T., The Art of Rulership: A Study in Ancient Chinese Political Thought (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1994), pp. 115–20.Google Scholar
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32 These ceremonial sacrifices and other rituals of speech, action and social intercourse, as well as traditions in literature and genealogy, originated with the cult surrounding the Shang and early Chou emperors, but had spread by Confucius's time to all levels of Chinese society. The basic texts of these activities and traditions were called the Wu Ching (Five Classics) and included the Shu Ching (Book of History, or Documents), the Shih Ching (Book of Poetry, or Songs), the Li Chi (Record of Rites), the notorious I Ching (Book of Changes) and, perhaps most important, the Ch'un Ch'iu (Spring and Autumn Annals), a compilation often attributed to Confucius himself.
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43 Consider this coy comment, involving the tyrannical monarchs Chieh and Tchou: “King Husan asked, ‘Is regicide permissible?’ Mencius answered:” A man who mutilates benevolence is a mutilator, while one who cripples Tightness is a crippler. He who is both a mutilator and a crippler is an ‘outcast.’ 1 have indeed heard of the punishment of the ‘outcast Tchou,’ but I have not heard of any regicide” {Mencius 1/B/8).
44 See Maclntyre, After Virtue, esp. chap. 15. The notion that Confucianism suggests that individuals, through rituals which put them in an immanent relationship with t'ien, makes everyone an “author” of their own lives has been commented on in Hall and Ames, Thinking Through Confucius: ”In the interaction between the human being and t'ien, a person becomes an ‘authority’ in his deference to and embodiment of existing meaningsÛhe becomes an ‘author’ in his creative disposition” (p. 244).
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