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High value given to learning and to devotion to family (including ancestors)
Answer for the clue "High value given to learning and to devotion to family (including ancestors) ", 12 letters:
confucianism
Alternative clues for the word confucianism
Word definitions for confucianism in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Confucianism \Con*fu"cian*ism\, n. The political morality taught by Confucius and his disciples, which forms the basis of the Chinese jurisprudence and education. It can hardly be called a religion, as it does not inculcate the worship of any god. --S. ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Confucianism , also known as Ruism , is a system of philosophical and "ethical-sociopolitical teachings" sometimes described as a religion . Confucianism developed during the Spring and Autumn Period from the teachings of the Chinese philosopher Confucius ...
Usage examples of confucianism.
The best authorities seem to think that though Confucianism is in one sense agnosticism, it does not directly contradict the old theism, precisely because it has become a rather vague theism.
Confucianism naturally imbued Japanese scholars with a greater or lesser degree of enthusiasm for the civilization of China: some became outright Sinophiles, and although other Confucian scholars of the early Tokugawa period, including Hayashi Razan, had gone beyond their study of Chinese philosophy to investigate Shinto and the Japanese tradition, Yamaga Soko was the first thinker of stature to claim the superiority of Japanese culture and ethical values over those of China.
During the early and middle seventh century the Japanese appear to have experimented with various ideas, drawn from Confucianism and Buddhism as well as Shinto, to justify imperial rule.
Sung China were much impressed by the general availability of printed books on a great variety of subjects, including history, Buddhism, Confucianism, literature, medicine, and geography, and carried them in ever greater numbers back to Japan.
In addition to exegetical studies on Buddhism and Confucianism, they compiled dictionaries, encyclopedias, and other reference-type materials that provided the groundwork for nearly all subsequent scholarly activity in premodern Japan.
Not until the Tokugawa period did they come to study Confucianism with any great zeal.
The Neo-Confucianists in China had started out to do the very same thing and had ended in producing intellectual syntheses that were far removed from the down-to-earth humanism of Confucianism and the sages of early China.
The Ancient Studies scholars of Tokugawa Japan also differed widely in their interpretations of what constituted the original teachings of Confucianism and how they should be applied to the conditions of their own country and age.
Of samurai origin, Soko earned a reputation as a brilliant scholar, delving into such varied subjects as Shinto, Buddhism, and Japanese poetry, as well as Confucianism, which he studied in Edo under Hayashi Razan.
We have observed this trend, for example, in the School of Ancient Studies of Confucianism and the Neo-Shintoist School of National Learning.
As far as he can tell, the enemy is not the emperor or the economic system or Confucianism or any abstract ideology.
When we come to Confucianism at the end of the list, we come to something in a totally different world of thought.
The New Confucianism was rooted only shallowly in the infertile soil of their natures.
Zoroastrianism lies partly in its introduction of abstract concepts as gods, and partly in its other features, some of which find echoes in Buddhism and Confucianism, and some of which appear to have helped form Judaism, and therefore Christianity and Islam.
Taoist religion is in many ways the opposite of Confucianism, though it still shares many similarities with Aristotle and the Buddha.