EASTERN PHILOSOPHY - Confucius

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  • čas přidán 5. 06. 2024
  • This great Chinese philosopher believed in everything we ignore nowadays: tradition, institution, obedience and order. That’s why he matters.
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Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @alextang7462
    @alextang7462 Před 8 lety +2416

    Actually the video is a bit misleading. For example , filial piety is more about mutual respect and both cooperation. Confucius once said, 父慈子孝, which literally means father kind and sons respect. If the father is not kind enough its not a responsibility for the son to respect. Confucius also listed down how should a father behave. For example, 養不教,父之過, which means if a father only feed a child but not educate him, its the father's fault. Therefore , Confucius's idea is more about a interpersonal relationship, how the people in society should behave to achieve a Utopia.

    • @washedtoohot
      @washedtoohot Před 8 lety +149

      I agree with everything except your last line. I don't think he preached Utopia, just a way to achieve a better society.

    • @shirleyz.4506
      @shirleyz.4506 Před 7 lety +179

      Alex Tang totally agree, to add to your point of 父慈子孝 (father kind, son respect), Confucius also said 君仁臣忠, meaning a ruler must have benevolence then his subject will be loyal. Confucian philosophy is about interpersonal relationship and each person plays his own role, but Chinese emperors intentionally put much emphasizes on the son and subject's duty and lightens the duty of the father and ruler for the sake of their ruling, thus creating the illusion that Confucian philosophy is serving the ruling class and Confucius is preaching one sided duty, which is not true

    • @alextang7462
      @alextang7462 Před 7 lety +13

      So true and the first emperor doing this is the emperor wu of han

    • @denniskusuma7301
      @denniskusuma7301 Před 6 lety +34

      this should be pinned to avoid the confusion regarding the message of this video.

    • @ysun10
      @ysun10 Před 6 lety +9

      Kidding me? Three Character Classic was not written by Confucius...

  • @xuimod
    @xuimod Před 3 lety +292

    I love how this video says 'modern world' when they really mean Western world.
    Confucianism is alive and well in modern Asia. Its at the core of East Asian culture.

    • @kaixiang5390
      @kaixiang5390 Před 2 lety +49

      Most westerners cannot distinguish modernity from their own philosophy

    • @potatonun6970
      @potatonun6970 Před 2 lety +9

      So is the misogyny….

    • @alvinlin8140
      @alvinlin8140 Před rokem

      No it’s not alive in China. He wouldn’t have supported abortion and definitely wouldn’t have supported state sanction/forced baby killing

  • @Music-mi5gg
    @Music-mi5gg Před 8 lety +1707

    I covered for my mom when she stole a sheep one time. Now I'm serving 6 years in prison.

    • @willd0g
      @willd0g Před 7 lety +32

      Move this comment to the TOP NOW!

    • @grandslam1998
      @grandslam1998 Před 7 lety +62

      You are a good man then. The sheep she stole fed four people and stopped them from starving to death.

    • @vivienly5722
      @vivienly5722 Před 7 lety +33

      You must be in Russia then

    • @lolohlinoh8137
      @lolohlinoh8137 Před 7 lety +59

      i dont know why westerner always misunderstood about this. Then i found out that there are not much translate literature about Confucius views on 愚孝, (filial piety). Once Confucius has a student name Chen Sheng. One day, he was farming and accidentally hurt a crop. His father was so angry and used a big stick to beat him. He didnt run away and let his father beat him up. After the beating, he asked his father "Are you hurt?". Everybody in the country praise for his action. However, Confucius was so angry and called him not to met him anymore. Others asked him why he angry he answer: "Have you heard before the story of Yao? His father want to use big stick to beat him he run away, his father wanted to work, he worked with him, his father's want to kill him he disapeared. Now, Cheng Sheng let his father beat him up, as a people of nation, you let another people committed crime isn't that wrong?"

    • @lolohlinoh8137
      @lolohlinoh8137 Před 7 lety +8

      愚孝 is simple minded filial piety, i write wrong sorry.

  • @surajrshetty
    @surajrshetty Před 7 lety +235

    When you have old people around you , you are constantly reminded what is eventually going to happen to you. Some of them have great pearls of wisdom to offer if you listen them earnestly.

    • @rdr2v1nce7
      @rdr2v1nce7 Před 2 lety +8

      The others have already forgotten how to eat hard food

  • @Luboman411
    @Luboman411 Před 8 lety +228

    The narrator didn't mention that Confucius also heavily emphasized that the ruler also has grave responsibilities toward his subjects. Rulers were just as constricted in their actions as their subjects--they were to be paragons of morality and just behavior. Implicit in this is the notion that if the ruler acts in ways unjust or improper toward his/her subjects, the subjects have grounds then to overthrow the ruler and replace him/her with someone more just and moral. This notion of keeping the ruler accountable ("the Mandate of Heaven" in the olden days) is still deeply embedded in East Asian political philosophy and tradition. It's part of the reason why the Chinese Communist Party is so afraid of opening up its political system, and of any whiff of sedition or rebellious behavior towards the Party.

    • @devendersehrawat2947
      @devendersehrawat2947 Před 8 lety +2

      +Luboman411 Tis ruler, slave thing has to go , do not agree with Confucius at all.

    • @benopoly0000
      @benopoly0000 Před 2 lety

      Damn son

    • @yangli6112
      @yangli6112 Před 2 lety +3

      I have to point out that the emphasis of moderate ruling is derived from Mencius,a spiritual follower of Confucius,but not Confucius himself.

    • @grogdizzy5814
      @grogdizzy5814 Před 2 lety +2

      There's a big difference between "ruler and slave" and "leader and follower". Most of the world adheres the latter. There will always be leaders and followers no matter what philosophy the world implements.

    • @jaaksavat7916
      @jaaksavat7916 Před 2 lety

      No storming of the Bastille, no French revolution, no democracy

  • @iamcool456123
    @iamcool456123 Před 8 lety +877

    Im so Confuscius.

  • @KillerFaceification
    @KillerFaceification Před 8 lety +25

    I love how these videos aren't dismissive, but they show how ideas can balance each other out.

  • @peroz1000
    @peroz1000 Před 8 lety +900

    Why is Alain speaking so fast in this video?

    • @fionajohnston5206
      @fionajohnston5206 Před 8 lety +37

      peroz1000 I agree, it is a lot to grasp at this pace and the volume of his voice could be higher, puts my ear drums through a bit of strain.

    • @brentsido8822
      @brentsido8822 Před 8 lety +26

      +peroz1000 perhaps the speech is fine but the ear and it's mind is slow? :-) I joke of course.

    • @StephanySantiagoM
      @StephanySantiagoM Před 8 lety +21

      +peroz1000 I agree. My native language is spanish, so I took my time to understand.

    • @DLBurggraf
      @DLBurggraf Před 8 lety +10

      +peroz1000
      He is proving he can read fast...

    • @MikhailKalashnikovMiG
      @MikhailKalashnikovMiG Před 8 lety +4

      It's funny because this was exactly what I was about to comment. I lost track of what he was saying multiple times and had to pause and rewind the video several times to absorb what he was saying. And I'm a native English speaker too..

  • @chrisLVgreen
    @chrisLVgreen Před 8 lety +14

    have to say it is true that Confucius talked about "you should not travel far away if your parents are still alive", but many people (even Chinese people) ignored that there is a following sentence saying "if you have to travel far away, explain reasons to you parents and make arrangements for them during your leave". "filial piety" is not only about obedience but also reciprocity. To be honest Confucianism is not all about Confucius' thoughts, it is a developing system which is much more flexible and adaptive than you thought, making it can be situated from periods to periods.

  • @kazisiddiqui6435
    @kazisiddiqui6435 Před 7 lety +213

    Westerners who criticize Confucianism for being obsessed with rites don't seem to realize just how humane and idealistic Confucian scholars were. For example, did you know that Confucianism proper saw social rites as a COMPLETE ALTERNATIVE to criminal punishment? Confucians didn't believe in punishing criminals AT ALL. Instead, they believed in using rituals to create a harmonious society. That's right, individuals in this society would have the values of benevolence and humanity so deeply ingrained in them through ritual practices that criminal punishment would be rendered unnecessary! Those classic Chinese methods of torture came from the pessimistic philosophy known as Legalism which idealistic Confucian scholars despised.

    • @Ro500501502
      @Ro500501502 Před 7 lety +9

      you don't get it, rituals are what makes families and nations more connected and more stable.

    • @thehouseofusher8926
      @thehouseofusher8926 Před 7 lety +8

      Kazi Siddiqui not locking people who are genuine threats to society is stupid not benevolent

    • @kosakos1999
      @kosakos1999 Před 6 lety +10

      Confucianism focuses a lot on education. However, it is a bit unrealistic. This is where the realist Legalism comes in. Now, Confucianism and Legalism are the two main philosophical branch of East Asian philosophy, with some of both mixed the everyday lives of Chinese, Koreans, Japanese, Vietnamese and Singaporeans.

    • @MustafaKulle
      @MustafaKulle Před 5 lety

      Any sources?

    • @sumlungsumlung3926
      @sumlungsumlung3926 Před 5 lety +2

      if Confucianism had worked then there wouldn't be so many cases of princes killing their father for the throne and war wouldn't have had happened, the whole thing is bullshit and too idealistic

  • @Mal1234567
    @Mal1234567 Před 9 lety +414

    This video portrays a modern Western interpretation of Cunfucian thought which does it no justice.

    • @JozefLewitzky
      @JozefLewitzky Před 9 lety +95

      Alain de Botton The video seems bang-on with some of the more startling of Confucius' thoughts to the western ear, but doesn't do justice to the thoughts he has that are quite in line with western values.
      Confucius believed in propriety, tradition and obeying one's elders, absolutely true; But he also believed deeply in humaneness and extending the golden rule through one's love for their family to loving the whole state. By learning deeply, the Confucian cultivates the virtues that are quite similar to Aristotle's idea of the virtues and the good life (in some regards).

    • @mirovitch2000
      @mirovitch2000 Před 9 lety +13

      Alain you left out Vedic Philosophy from Eastern philosophy. Some of the early Vedic philosophy, specifically Upanishad is startlingly similar to some of Heiddeger and Schopenhauer philosophy. It also deals with modern scientific frontier of consciousness, ego and free will. Of course you have to ignore the rest of the mythical mambo jumbo:) Hope to see a video on this.

    • @Lalox16x
      @Lalox16x Před 8 lety

      I couldn't agree with you even more.

    • @blin2195
      @blin2195 Před 8 lety +22

      +Mysteries From Beyond This is my personal observation as a Taiwanese youth for my generation's consensus: Many of the current 18~26 yold generations find Confucianism unnecessary and injurious, it ideology is not taught but it is never the less present in practice but exist mostly in forms of abuse; People are always told to do and not question authorities why, non-submission is seemed as immoral and invites societal shaming, non-conformity and skipping archaic traditions is seem as blasphemous and childish as one has not the maturity to learn the right way.
      In truth, these are not these 5 constant virtues are rarely criterion of praise, rather in absence they are the criterion of guilt and shame.

    • @1995yuda
      @1995yuda Před 8 lety +1

      B Lin Fascinating comment,thank you for sharing. Very well spoken,although a bit harsh,in my taste.

  • @ennuied
    @ennuied Před 8 lety +104

    Confucius was idealistic and scholarly type. Lao Tzu being wiser did not thought highly of his aspirations.
    Alas we love dead people, because like pets, the dead will not talk back at us.

    • @Muhammad_Faisal_1979
      @Muhammad_Faisal_1979 Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/JRDynsBVHNI/video.html

    • @jwu1950
      @jwu1950 Před 2 lety +1

      Lao Tzu was a hippy. Confucius was known as the teacher who taught what he himself did not believe is possible. Confucius regarded Lao Tzu as the "dragon". Lao Tzu was a philosopher. Confucius was a funeral director. Lao Tzu was way over his head. !00 years after, the fifth generation of his students, Mencius, finally made Confucianism into an establish philosophy. May the love and the peace of Jesus be with us.

    • @air.internet5808
      @air.internet5808 Před rokem

      @@jwu1950 ahh you just want to hear what you want to hear. selfishness isn't?

    • @jwu1950
      @jwu1950 Před rokem +1

      @@air.internet5808 Like what ? Who on earth is not selfish ? Even Jesus loved himself first before he loved God and everyone else. If you can't take care of yourself, you can't take care of anyone else.
      May the love and the peace of Jesus be with us.

  • @richardbaroff4911
    @richardbaroff4911 Před 4 lety +27

    The very fact that Confucius' ideas are so antagonistic to the 21st century zeitgeist are precisely why they are so valuable.

  • @takitezy7
    @takitezy7 Před 5 lety +50

    Confucius say: "Squirrel run up woman's leg, will find no nuts"

  • @orionmelton3226
    @orionmelton3226 Před 7 lety +53

    I love learning things about different cultures.

  • @marcrogue5268
    @marcrogue5268 Před 8 lety +282

    I think what Confucius would've wanted is whether you agree with him or not we can all respect each other and live together as one.

    • @leteveryoneknow
      @leteveryoneknow Před 8 lety +6

      +Marc Rogue I agree with you about the idea of mutual respect. However, Confucius seems to have put veneration along with obedience.

    • @Shinkajo
      @Shinkajo Před 7 lety +4

      nah

    • @themilkyway1371
      @themilkyway1371 Před 6 lety

      Yes, 子曰:「攻乎異端,斯害也己。」

    • @Muhammad_Faisal_1979
      @Muhammad_Faisal_1979 Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/JRDynsBVHNI/video.html

    • @trandkiet
      @trandkiet Před 3 lety +1

      @@leteveryoneknow "obedience" IS the key word!!!! Of course, Communist wants "obedience"

  • @jono77
    @jono77 Před 9 lety +329

    I'm chinese and I suspect a couple of the virtues got lost in translation here... Ritual propriety should really be politeness and manners, righteousness should be loyalty. I'm not a confucian scholar though, but I do know those words.

    • @willferrous8677
      @willferrous8677 Před 9 lety +26

      Loyalty is 忠 which if we are frank it's likely part of the 5 virtues.
      禮 is in fact elegantly translated, it is not mere politeness nor manners, but much more. however, those are certainly a part of ritual propriety.
      basically you are categorically misunderstanding the words here
      You do not take a word, or character, at its face value, not in western philosophy and not in eastern ones either, else Nietzsche, Sartre , Hegel, Mill, Kant, Hume and many many more will likely be turning in their respective graves every time someone tried to sound smart and fail with terms these philosophers frequently or famously used, such as Ubermensch, Bad faith, Sublation, Utility, Duty, and Sense

    • @calvinsaxon5822
      @calvinsaxon5822 Před 5 lety

      Go back and study all the meanings and connontations of 礼 in the classical Chinese language and specifically in Confucius, not exactly the same as the way the word is used today.

    • @user-se7gy6fm6o
      @user-se7gy6fm6o Před 5 lety +1

      请问怎么安装油管网页翻译,看不懂啊

    • @chandsuhail6624
      @chandsuhail6624 Před 5 lety +2

      Well Islam is the only religion that has satisfactory to all questioners

    • @chandsuhail6624
      @chandsuhail6624 Před 5 lety +1

      Well Islam is the only religion that has satisfactory to all questioners

  • @AnimeEverydayYT
    @AnimeEverydayYT Před 9 lety +281

    Did the audio seem sped up for anyone else?
    Interesting video regardless :)

  • @willferrous8677
    @willferrous8677 Před 9 lety +27

    While i still don't like Confucius' style of thought, this video has taught me much more than -- and this may sound silly and cliched -- my (Chinese) school ever did to teach me about Confucius, and it has devoted, or really, wasted, much time trying to teach it to really really young kids... in the Chinese equivalent of Latin...
    If nothing else this video gave me closure, at least now i understand some of Confucius's ideas, and in fact is sympathetic towards some of them, I thank you for that, School of life!

  • @helioliskfire5954
    @helioliskfire5954 Před 2 lety +6

    The teaching about the sheep and ceremony. It reminds me of the one time I had bought my classmates some refreshment as a way to apologize for some wrong I had done. There was almost a sense of ritual to my apology. But one of them commented to me, expressing his disapproval. For him we should have just prepared refreshments as it would have been much cheaper. I would have quoted this saying from Confucius but I only got to read the Analects yesterday.

  • @FlorenceFox
    @FlorenceFox Před 8 lety +342

    Of all the most famous Eastern Philosophers, Confucius is the one I'm least fond of. He had some good ideas, but I can't agree with the idea that a parent is worthy of respect simply by virtue of being a parent. Certainly, if your parents were good to you, if they sacrificed for you, took care of you, loved you and put you before themselves, you should most certainly be thankful, you should certainly respect them for it, and be kind to them because of it. But that respect should come from their actions, not simply by virtue of being your parent.
    Conversely, there are horrible, neglectful, abusive, and cruel parents, who are worthy of no respect or special treatment. In particularly horrid cases, it may even be best to cut them out of your life as entirely as you can.
    My mother, to be clear, lays somewhere in the middle, as I suspect most do. She sacrificed a lot for me, and I try to be respectful of that, and I do love her. On the other hand, she has many flaws, and we disagree on some very fundamental matters of philosophy, and I find it hard to be genuinely... 'respectful' of her in the way traditional Confucian teachings would dictate.
    That said, I tend to find there's at least a little wisdom of value in most of the famous philosopher's of history. I'm of the mind that true wisdom comes from learning from as many sources as you can and learning to weed out the useless from the insightful.
    ... and dear god, all of that made me sound like a pretentious Philosophy 101 student, didn't it?

    • @CypherDVoid
      @CypherDVoid Před 8 lety +61

      +Florence MacKenna I think it pays to remember that any philosopher is, at the end of the day, just one person with their one opinion, and you shouldn't necessarily follow absolutely everything they say to the letter.
      That being said, I do understand the logic of Confucian filial piety. For starters, Confucius seems to have taken the optimistic idea of 'parenthood', which is to assume that (most) parents generally care for their children, it's just that they don't always know the best way to be a parent. Why we should respect our parents isn't so much because "they're our parents therefore respect", but because our parents are probably trying much harder for us than we realise and we should show appreciation for these things.
      For example, children are breastfed by their mothers long before they can even remember anything. The mother could have easily just left the child to starve to death and went off to drink at a bar or something, but instead she takes the time to feed you because you are her child and it's the right thing to do. All these things build up over the course of a person's life, and many things we get from our parents are things we'll never be able to repay in full, which is why we have to revere our parents.
      My opinion comes mostly from being from a fairly old-fashioned (although not 100% old fashioned... my mother regularly says Confucius is a hypocritical ***hole) so to me the idea that the child reveres the parent is the number one requirement of a sustainable society (as opposed to a group of self-centred individuals).
      Feel free to ignore/disagree. Just my two cents.

    • @FlorenceFox
      @FlorenceFox Před 8 lety +20

      I only disagree with the notion that its a given that your parents are deserving of respect. There are some truly awful parents out there.
      If your parent neglected or abused you, I see no reason you should feel obligated to respect them.
      I'd say my own parents are a complicated case. My dad has done absolutely nothing to be worthy of respect from me. He and my mom split up not long after I was born and he's avoided paying child support as much as possible. In general, he's done as little as possible to help in my raising. On the other hand, I've always got the impression that he does love me, and during the rare times I did spend with him, he tended to get along very well, to the point my mom would often comment I was more like him than I was her.
      My mom, as I said in my previous comment, has sacrificed a lot for me, and I certainly respect that and I try to repay her for that. On the other hand, she has something of a messiah complex. She thinks the world revolves around her and displays some degree of narcissism. I know she loves me, and she's done more for me than I could ever repay, but her faults can become hard to deal with sometimes.

    • @leteveryoneknow
      @leteveryoneknow Před 8 lety +5

      +Florence MacKenna "She think the world revolves around her..."
      That is true for most women I know. However, I have seen very few women who do not show such trait or merely a very mild version of it and I find them angelic.

    • @nibras5503
      @nibras5503 Před 8 lety +18

      +Florence MacKenna well...eastern ideals are fairly different, afterall. Our views on women and parents are underwhelmed by the west

    • @70swords
      @70swords Před 8 lety +6

      +Florence MacKenna He also promoted huge amounts of sexist and classist values. He is the one who started the trend of discarding little girls because they are "of less vales than boys". He was a piece of shit who created a bad philosophy that still stains China to this day. I strongly dislike Confucius.

  • @zegoogez6283
    @zegoogez6283 Před 9 lety +4

    Finally another philosophy video, the other stuff was fine but this is what really attracted me to the channel

  • @JappaSkunk
    @JappaSkunk Před 7 lety +2

    Love it, this is pure art, thank you so much !

  • @MercilusPro
    @MercilusPro Před 4 lety +1

    This is a great video and excellently made. Thank you!!!

  • @ZettXXII
    @ZettXXII Před 8 lety +5

    Thank you very much for all the eastern philosophy videos! :-)
    Can you make a video about *Sun Tzu*?
    He was a high-ranking military general and a philosopher, best known for his book "The Art of War". It's partly a guide on practical warfare, but also one that tries to avoid conflict as effectively as possible.
    "To fight and conquer in all our battles is not supreme excellence; supreme excellence consists in breaking the enemy's resistance without fighting." - Sun Tzu
    I think the core concept of the book is that there will always be war between humans and Sun Tzu tries to figure out how it should be dealt with.
    (You probably know all about this, but I wanted to give other viewers a hint on what they can expect, if you choose to cover this topic.)

  • @mariekerguelen3816
    @mariekerguelen3816 Před 2 lety +4

    It may look strange, but the more familiar I get with the teachings of Confucius, the more helpful for my life I find them. It appears that this many-centuries-old Asian philosophy has very much in common with my personal values. Most of all I sympathize with the ideas about the importance of education and knowledge cultivation, that take an important place in the doctrine of Confucianism.
    Somewhat similar ideas were expressed by the philosophers of the European Enlightenment, who also glorified the human reason and stated the significance of knowledge. Of course, in general there are more differences than similarities between Modern Age Western philosophy and Confucianism - especially when it comes to the matters of social order. But I think that the future belongs to those who will be able to unite these traditions, taking the best from both.

  • @amritabarua9688
    @amritabarua9688 Před 8 lety +1

    I love this. I found it very informative. Thank you.

  • @varunemani
    @varunemani Před 8 lety +2

    U know as good as the messages of Confusious are, I find the use of real pictures and Jpegs are far impressive in Mographix videos than boring and complex vector graphics. GREAT JOB AS ALWAYS!

  • @Gabriel-lm7jw
    @Gabriel-lm7jw Před 6 lety +18

    Confucius is more of a political advisor like Machiavelli in the west. He's more focused on form whereas Lao Tzu and Taoists focuses more on function. Admittedly Confucianism has and continues to serve a valuable role in maintaining order and stability in Far East Asian societies.

    • @weepingprophet411
      @weepingprophet411 Před 4 lety

      taoism is BS

    • @jwu1950
      @jwu1950 Před 2 lety +1

      Lao Tzu was a hippy. Confucius was a funeral director. Study Mencius to understand why no one in their lifetime bought their ideas. Confucius is the curse of China that led China into the century of humiliation by the more technologically advanced western powers. Now, the tide has changed.
      May the love and the peace of Jesus be with us.

    • @jwu1950
      @jwu1950 Před 2 lety

      @@weepingprophet411 That's just because you are stupid. May the love and the peace of Jesus be with us.

    • @jwu1950
      @jwu1950 Před 2 lety

      @lol I named. I wasn't named. See how stupid you are ?
      May the love and the peace of Jesus be with us.

    • @kaixiang5390
      @kaixiang5390 Před 2 lety

      Confucius was more like Plato and Socrates. Machiavelli wanted power; Confucius just wanted people to live good lives

  • @shrub5794
    @shrub5794 Před 6 lety +23

    Cunfucious says you can all hold these fortune cookies!!!!
    Who gets the reference

    • @goldenlion2439
      @goldenlion2439 Před 4 lety

      golden rule yall are rookies.

    • @Muhammad_Faisal_1979
      @Muhammad_Faisal_1979 Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/JRDynsBVHNI/video.html

    • @kiryuchan1920
      @kiryuchan1920 Před 3 lety

      Fortune cookies aren't chinese

    • @HillVillageDragon
      @HillVillageDragon Před 3 lety

      shrub
      🎵 This type of arrogance
      Is sure to be expected
      From men who speak of wisdom
      With no clue of what respect is ...🎵

  • @jlupus8804
    @jlupus8804 Před 3 lety +2

    Respect:
    Ceremony
    Parents
    Honorable people
    Cultivated knowledge over creativity (benevolence, ritual propriety, righteousness, wisdom, integrity)

  • @krowkovtuber
    @krowkovtuber Před 5 lety

    i’ve never seen this man so emotional.

  • @JonSnowIII
    @JonSnowIII Před 8 lety +81

    A true leader would never accept being honored by a bow; He would know that his acts were a service, not just to others, but to all. And if someone should bow to him-- he would walk up to them, take their hand and lift them up.
    This is a true leader in my opinion--
    Someone not expecting the honor of a bow, but the reward itself of walking-up-right fellow beings who lead fulfilling lives.

    • @JonSnowIII
      @JonSnowIII Před 8 lety

      +JonSnowIII But what I'm talking about is more or less a perfect, altruistic wholesome human being.
      Thus it borders on fantasy, really.

    • @LORD66623
      @LORD66623 Před 8 lety +6

      +JonSnowIII The problem is that no one will follow such a leader, because most will see such actions as weakness and insecurity

    • @JonSnowIII
      @JonSnowIII Před 8 lety +1

      LORDER I didn't realize you were a spokesperson for Earth ; )
      It's actually the exact opposite.
      But, it depends on how you look at it, I suppose.

    • @LORD66623
      @LORD66623 Před 8 lety +9

      There is a reason why Stalin and Mao died from an old age while Lincoln, Martin Luther King and Gandhi died by other people's hands

    • @JonSnowIII
      @JonSnowIII Před 8 lety +2

      LORDER Yes. And they were good leaders. My words still stand. A true leader isn't a leader who imprison the people to the point where the leaders are untouchable...
      Also, you said "no one will follow".
      No one followed Lincoln, MLK and Gandhi?
      No leader in the world will have Every single human on their side. But there's a grey zone here-- a middle between No "follower", and have the alliance of every living being on this planet...

  • @iamhandk
    @iamhandk Před 7 lety +157

    Why is Alain talking so fast? Is this normal speed? Lol

  • @elgracko
    @elgracko Před 9 lety

    Like Dylan says, '...and I'll know my song well before I start singing.'
    Beautiful videos. Where have these been my whole life? :}

  • @DrLauraRPalmer
    @DrLauraRPalmer Před 2 lety

    His Shine Haveth No Chill ...Brilliant!
    👏👏👏🤩

  • @miko-nt8rt
    @miko-nt8rt Před 3 lety +6

    HE'S TALKING SO QUICK I CAN'T ANSWER PROPERLY FOR SCHOOL LIKE THIS D:

  • @nobodyaskedbut
    @nobodyaskedbut Před 3 lety +4

    Everything in life and human existence can be determined by the "Golden Rule". This one thought is the basis of ideal human life.

  • @dipro001
    @dipro001 Před 6 lety +1

    3:25, yeah, I have so much respect for that women now in 2018. Good going with the example selection, The School of Life. Please edit that bit. Thanks.

  • @RandomRealtalk
    @RandomRealtalk Před 4 měsíci

    Confucius is a great teacher. His teachings is a good reminder for me. 😊

  • @IslaDrummond
    @IslaDrummond Před 6 lety +19

    I really appreciate the easy to take in information provided by these videos. I do think you push us towards your own conlusions too much rather than inviting us to reflect. Maybe Confucius is right, maybe he's wrong; I'm under no obligation to immediatly reframe all my moral and social values just because this ancient chinese philosopher strongly opposes what I've always believed. I'll think about his beliefs in the context of my life, but he might be the one who couldn't see past his own socio-cultural context, rather than me.

  • @lacagnasaiyan2055
    @lacagnasaiyan2055 Před 2 lety +9

    1:09 ceremony is important
    2:00 we should treat our parents with reverence
    2:55 we should be obedient to honorable people
    3:45 cultivate knowledge can be more important than creativity

    • @peachpink123
      @peachpink123 Před rokem

      This keeps people in their box. Perfect to control the population. They stay in their box. Ha. Minions..

  • @khizerabbas1155
    @khizerabbas1155 Před 2 lety

    Video is great, thank you for letting us know about confucious.

  • @yonathanasefaw9001
    @yonathanasefaw9001 Před 3 lety

    I love philosophy alot! Thanks school of life for the upload!

  • @user-cd1ym9gt4h
    @user-cd1ym9gt4h Před 5 lety +9

    The most important point of Confucius was his desire to restore the social life of the zhou dynasty in the 10th century BC

    • @jwu1950
      @jwu1950 Před 2 lety

      Exactly. He is stupid. Confucius is the curse of China. He led the Chinese into the century of humiliation by the technologically more advanced western powers. Now the tide has reversed.
      May the love and the peace of Jesus be with us.

  • @socksumi
    @socksumi Před 5 lety +6

    We in the west only get to hear about the lofy, warm and fuzzy parts of Confucianism. When you get into it in more depth it's really quite a harsh and authoritarian system to live under.

  • @ughh8099
    @ughh8099 Před 7 lety +1

    I have so much respect for that man.

  • @Bielenn
    @Bielenn Před 9 lety

    Great stuff. More philosophy movies please!

  • @Kastelot
    @Kastelot Před 6 lety +13

    Great job putting Aung San Suu Kyi as an example for why Confucius was wrong lol.

    • @nenanatuajt
      @nenanatuajt Před 4 lety +2

      Aung San Suu Kyi is a Buddhist!

  • @Dragons_Armory
    @Dragons_Armory Před 7 lety +7

    Alain, ostensibly a humanist, failed to mention that the greatest quality an individual could have~ i.e. “人“ Ren, or Human-hearted ness is what he saw as the greatest virtue for all men.
    ~ i.e, politeness, love of art, keen understanding of language, respect, compassion, respect and care of our parents, and other “human” social interactions is exactly what makes us a cut above the animals and served as paragons of "being human."

  • @horricule451
    @horricule451 Před 6 lety +1

    So basically, change nothing, worship authority, and don't be yourself.
    What a great mind!

    • @jasonm0175
      @jasonm0175 Před 5 lety

      Not really. This video just doesn't really do the subject enough justice.

  • @tommydebo5
    @tommydebo5 Před 7 lety

    These are you best videos, you should make more

  • @Wind1991whooosshhh
    @Wind1991whooosshhh Před 9 lety +5

    I feel like there are a lot of similarities between this and Epicurus philosophy.
    Great minds think alike =)

  • @dzikrinasaira3475
    @dzikrinasaira3475 Před 4 lety +14

    I feel like the commen section here is showong that *people 's lack of tolerance for other culture*
    Guys, maybe Eastern culture is different from your culture (western). But it doesnt mean that yours is much much superior and therefore the eastern culture is totally wrong.
    Dont u know that Confucius said such thing at 2000 years ago?? Maybe u think he is very old-fashioned to modern culture nowadays. But who knows that perhaps his statement was very relevant to the situation back then 2000 years ago.

    • @HeyungWonKang
      @HeyungWonKang Před 4 lety +1

      agree. the way amont human is almost same today as well 2500 years ago.
      i think Confucious is the best teacher of the man kind i belivee, that's why i am study it and uploading in my youtube of the key highlisht in original text with english as well. Hope all of the world are knowing it and try to do following his coaching for human life wisdom.

  • @nikkiaragon07
    @nikkiaragon07 Před 8 lety +1

    Thank you for this

  • @kimberlys.7097
    @kimberlys.7097 Před 8 lety

    Thank you! This really helps!

  • @John5mith
    @John5mith Před 9 lety +6

    I say these because I am Chinese myself, Confucianism was a good idea and ideology in Imperial and ancient China, very successful that made China almost had no enemy in east Asia history, but obviously outdated in modern society(at least 80% are outdated), but the basic ideology still exist, like Christianity in developed west. Confucianism's idea to make a society stable is to persuade everyone to be modest and conservative, it made China very successful Empires during 2000 yrs history, with huge population and landmass, but the society was too stable and conservative, it can't make change, that's why there are more failures during China's revolution periods, only Mao ever "succeeded to destroy the tradition and Confucianism", but Confucianism is still alive, with its basic ideology in China and e.Asia.

    • @thesuperproify
      @thesuperproify Před 8 lety

      +John 5mith Im a fan of confusianism, and I'm studying it now.
      i think confucianism can also be adapted to modern society , it actually gives us the wisdom and ethics on how to live our life

  • @bunce888
    @bunce888 Před 5 lety +5

    I Think Confucius most famous teaching is "the man who goes to sleep with itchy bum, wakes up with smelly finger"

  • @rayc3103
    @rayc3103 Před 6 lety +1

    I agree with his philosophies on family culture to an extent.

  • @dandare1001
    @dandare1001 Před rokem +1

    That was a bit short, but it's a good primer for learning about Confucius. Thanks, Alain.

  • @benquinney2
    @benquinney2 Před 7 lety +8

    That's the silver rule

  • @caboose2163
    @caboose2163 Před 7 lety +6

    I've reached enlightenment and I didn't have to spend years alone in solitude in a cave in the Tibetan alps. I discovered who I am as an individual. My only regret is my philosophy is much like Plato's yet my communication skills are much more like that of Confucius; making it hard for me to relate to my youthful peers who are misguided by the expectations of society instead of following the personal convictions of their hearts and minds. To achieve inner peace, you must search yourself for the inner you. Once you find that, you will be confident and not come across to others as arrogant. Loving not deceptive in matters of the heart. Nurturing and not manipulative in your interactions with others.
    Though rely not only on the inner self, trust in God, and He will build you to even higher heights once you find out who you are, then and only then can He use you mightily. The question comes down to this, how can we have faith in God, if we can't even trust ourselves. Or rather, how can God have faith in us, if we can't even trust in Him?

    • @jwu1950
      @jwu1950 Před 2 lety

      You sounded very much like a superstitious person. Tell me, who are you ? Who is God ?
      May the love and the peace of Jesus be with us.

  • @Calicido
    @Calicido Před 9 lety +1

    Keep the Eastern Philosophers coming!!

  • @user-ii3pl9wk8y
    @user-ii3pl9wk8y Před 5 lety

    He is more respected because of his thoughts on teaching:
    1 everyone has the rights to be educated regardless of who they are;
    2 teach every individuals in different ways according to their "Material".
    .........
    That is what make him so important in Chinese culture even today.

  • @for_frodo91
    @for_frodo91 Před 9 lety +4

    I don't think it's of any use to say that we ought to be grateful, loving or whatever. I can't make myself feel anything I don't already feel. And we're told time and time again how we ought to feel and how to behave..
    Zen philosophy seems to be the only logical way to go about living this life.

    • @bighands69
      @bighands69 Před 8 lety

      +Ivan Božić
      Confusianism is a social way of life. It is not a means of providing answers for everything.

  • @JarradStrain
    @JarradStrain Před 9 lety +22

    I'm loving the eastern religion vids, but disagree that we should sacrifice an animal just because it was part of a ritual. It is great to contemplate different ideologies, but blindly follow tradition is something I am glad modern society tends not to value (even if it sometimes practices outdated acts)

    • @willferrous8677
      @willferrous8677 Před 9 lety +11

      it's not the specific case that matters, rather the general idea. you are missing the point of the video by 100 Chinese miles

    • @JarradStrain
      @JarradStrain Před 9 lety +6

      Will, I am happy to be corrected in my understanding but I took the sheep analogy as an example of ritual propriety, giving up something tangible and present in the name of maintaining pre-existing routine. Perhaps the work and contemplation of forebears has lessons for us, but I find that blindly following old methods out of respect for honorable people or parents is dangerous. Healthy scepticism can be practised while still being respectful.
      This may simply be a difference in values? Else let me know where you think I am off in my understanding.

    • @willferrous8677
      @willferrous8677 Před 9 lety +8

      Jarrad Strain
      the fundamental issue of your understanding is that you equate *ritual* with *routine*
      as you seen in the examples shown in the video, rituals are anything but routine, routine implies they are mundane, irrelevant, a necessary evil and if possible should be avoided. But ritual here means that it involves something important, and are the additional actions meant to signify the aforementioned importance.
      This isn't about *blindly following* anything, that's what you are missing out on.

    • @JarradStrain
      @JarradStrain Před 9 lety

      That is an interesting point of view. Generally Ritual & Routine are synonyms (per my thesaurus), however in this context you suggest the point of differences is ritual are important, while routines are not? I see them both as repeated actions or words based on set of instructions. Wouldn't their importance be in the eye of the beholder? The morning coffee may be routine in appearance but a ritual to the individual?

    • @willferrous8677
      @willferrous8677 Před 9 lety +3

      Jarrad Strain
      quite! and that's why it's not the specific that matters!
      It's also importand to note that, it's not just about individuals. When a ritual are performed by a group of people, the importance and the understanding of said importance is shared. This is an incredibly powerful thing to have!

  • @gilfgm
    @gilfgm Před 7 lety +1

    Europe is not bad taste in music! D= lol XD But anyways... simply love this channel and I am constantly spreading its good word among people!! Thank you Alain and team!!!!

  • @HeyungWonKang
    @HeyungWonKang Před 4 lety

    i think Confucious is the best teacher of the man kind i belivee, that's why i am study it and uploading in my youtube of the key highlisht in original text with english as well. Hope all of the world are knowing it and try to do following his coaching for human life wisdom.

  • @jackzhou4813
    @jackzhou4813 Před 3 lety +3

    The video tape completely misunderstood the Confucian moral values of interpersonal relations. In the ancient times when only monarchs ruled, Confucius opposed ignorance. He encourages people to refute and prove unreasonable behavior. This applies to the entire social system (including the relationship between the monarch and his subjects, and between father and son)

    • @jwu1950
      @jwu1950 Před 2 lety

      Exactly. No wonder he was unemployed, and ran around like a stray dog.
      May the love and the peace of Jesus be with us.

  • @zoeh1964
    @zoeh1964 Před 2 lety +5

    How far have we fallen in a few thousand years. From Confucius to Cardi B...

  • @squilliamniggason6683
    @squilliamniggason6683 Před 8 lety

    Interesting video loved it

  • @marloyorkrodriguez9975
    @marloyorkrodriguez9975 Před 3 lety +1

    Confucius said big t1ts, no 4ss will fill your heart, big 4ss with, no t1ts will fill your mind.

  • @fidellerosa
    @fidellerosa Před 8 lety +3

    So Confucius has made my family stunted, money-hungry and passive-aggressive.
    YAY groupthink!
    As the firstborn, I MUST provide for my parents' retirement, or I will be harshly judged as heartless and ungrateful.
    Even if I can't even afford to have kids of my own.

    • @xMooshy
      @xMooshy Před 7 lety +2

      +Kevin
      You do not understand. It is not ungratefulness. As an adult, it is trying to branch out as an individual without seeking the constant approval of your parents. It is attempting to succeed by your own will, your own motivation and inspirations. If you succeed on your own without constant step by step spoon fed commands from your parents, it shouldn't be your responsibility to support them forever. If you choose to support them when they are in dire need, then of course, any humane person would if they had the capacity to do so. These "selfish" western values, as you call them, promote innovation, creativity, imagination and self-confidence. The regressive Confucius teachings only promote conformity, obedience, pressure by family and society to be perfect, anxiety in an over-whelming competitive society, and lack of personal freedom. Idk what you are talking about: heartless and ungrateful children? I see the majority of western raised children giving back to their parents and staying in the parent's lives, as long as the parents were supportive and loving, not in an authoritarian way, to the kid.

    • @shirleyz.4506
      @shirleyz.4506 Před 7 lety +2

      xMooshy you don't understand Confucius teaching about filial piety. It is a huge misconception that filial piety equals obedience. Confucius never said one should follow whatever your parents tell you to do. Confucian filial piety has two key elements A. Take good care of parents, both physically and emotionally, B. bring honour to your parents, family, and ancestors. If parents do things that may dishonour the family and ancestors, a good son need to point it out and convince them not to do it. Confucius believed being kind to family is the most basic human nature, and a good son is usually also a good person in general because he would not do any evil that would dishonour his parents and ancestors. Influenced by his philosophy, there's an old tradition in China to judge one's morality by looking at how he treats his parents

  • @GoatZilla
    @GoatZilla Před 7 lety +4

    1:58 "Rituals help make our intentions clear" lol. Or they help cover up intentions. You decide.

    • @user-is3yn7xr4c
      @user-is3yn7xr4c Před 3 lety

      The former is Eastern. The latter is western.

    • @GoatZilla
      @GoatZilla Před 3 lety

      @@user-is3yn7xr4c Citation needed.

  • @user-md9hp5mi4e
    @user-md9hp5mi4e Před 2 lety

    Thank you for information .

  • @areejalsham6662
    @areejalsham6662 Před 5 lety +2

    I agree with the parents obedience and it is not old fashion AT ALL.
    They spent their lives raising, and now when we get older we leave them ?!! NO i am not leaving them They are the air I breath and the mercy and the happiness I have in my life. The one who leaves them has no emotion no sense of appreciation the people who spent their lives caring about him and his own good. Imagine yourself raising kids and doing everything possible you can do for them and after all that they just walk away not caring about you, how harsh and not merciful. By the time people are becoming more close to robots than to humans, is that what we call it modern?!

  • @ug3n
    @ug3n Před 9 lety +4

    the cityscape at 5:21 looks like singapore. LOL

    • @mrnarason
      @mrnarason Před 9 lety

      which there are a lot of ethic chinese there

    • @lordangelic
      @lordangelic Před 9 lety

      Lee Kuan Yew was a thorough confucian, so in fact Singapore was in fact pretty much modeled on confucian ideals.

    • @vapidwords
      @vapidwords Před 9 lety

      lordangelic "confucian", ahahaha you must be kidding me. Confucius decried merchants, trade, finance, economic individualism, and so forth; all of the things that lee kuan yew and contemporary singapore have become world-famous for.
      lee kuan yew bastardized and selectively chose bits and pieces out of Confucianism, mostly aspects related to culture and social order, to provide a semblance of social stability in the inherently chaotic capitalistic market-economy of singapore. this by no means can be considered "Confucianism", however, and it is absurd and offensive that contemporary singapore is attempting to sully the name of Confucianism with their market capitalist liberal nonsense.
      also, if you paid attention to some of those singaporean "confucius scholars" (they're all a massive joke, to be honest), they are highly selective and mostly praise the unorthodox works of the heretic Wang Yangming. he was a late Ming Dynasty scholar-official that attempted to impart more of an individualistic element (taken from chan buddhism and daoism) into the orthodox Cheng-Zhu school of Neo-Confucianism dominant during the time of the Ming Dynasty.
      considering (Neo)Confucianism's antagonism and hostility towards buddhism and daoism (for being superstitious religions focused too much on the individual, rather than on the collective whole of society/civilization), Wang Yangming was heretical towards many of the established Confucian ideals established throughout the centuries in dynastic China. unfortunately, his legacy has been carried on into the modern-day by some of the more capitalistic, individualistic, and/or buddhist-leaning societies of East Asia (e.g., japan, taiwan, singapore.)

  • @MilaT2103
    @MilaT2103 Před 8 lety +3

    I came from ERB Eastern Philosophers vs Western Philosophers

  • @henrymartin6486
    @henrymartin6486 Před 6 lety +1

    Confucius had class. His philosophy is one of having class, manners, and knowing how to behave without obeying blindly or condoning abuse, but to conduct ourselves with moderation and decency. Too many “leaders,” millionaires and billionaires with no class unfortunately

  • @skash4u
    @skash4u Před 8 lety

    It would be great if you could show one frame with all the points in it before signing of, or maybe even writing it in the description. This would help as a reminder, by taking screenshots for example.

  • @Theodora111Theo
    @Theodora111Theo Před 8 lety +3

    "about good behaviour, and sheep"

  • @kaspakingx3413
    @kaspakingx3413 Před 4 lety +3

    That's crazy for an Asian like me, I didn't even know we're using Confucian teaching in our everyday life. The philosophy definitely spread out all over Asia.

  • @fkasqar8484
    @fkasqar8484 Před 7 lety

    His philosophies start out prudent and rational however he then takes them to an inordinate level of belief.

  • @alexwells5974
    @alexwells5974 Před 4 lety

    Confucius' ideas are needed now more than ever.

  • @user-qf9ux7mh6d
    @user-qf9ux7mh6d Před 8 lety +11

    To anyone who thinks Confucianism is good, try living for a year in Singapore.

    • @50ShadesOfEndo
      @50ShadesOfEndo Před 8 lety +2

      Or China?

    • @Ghostatmidnight
      @Ghostatmidnight Před 8 lety +11

      +黎安沛 Man... you have no idea. Do you know where Confucianism has most successfully flourished and survived to this day in its most *distorted* and *horrid* way possible? Come visit South Korea.

    • @MustafaKulle
      @MustafaKulle Před 5 lety +1

      I would love to live in Singapore, believe me.

    • @gustofzephyr947
      @gustofzephyr947 Před 4 lety

      lol most people would love to live in Singapore.

  • @josephward5436
    @josephward5436 Před 6 lety +34

    3:23 Anyone actually want to glorify Aung San Suu Kyi these days?? Lol.

  • @juliusvandijk449
    @juliusvandijk449 Před 3 lety

    had to play this at 0.75 speed, lovely content never the less!

  • @isabelaelenachitan3948

    In all the world we FORGHET this values. If we accept the Information, we teach or remember this values we Will bring to Earth a better life! 💜 Thanks!

  • @12345saoma
    @12345saoma Před 8 lety +6

    "and sheep." xD

  • @ghostlegion8340
    @ghostlegion8340 Před 6 lety +3

    U should respect ur parents no matter how bad they are,,,, it can be possible that u don't agree with them ,,,, but the way u treat them represents ur character not there,,,, That's atleast wht I think 😃

  • @naynay1674
    @naynay1674 Před 7 lety +1

    I totally agree, what he say in this video

  • @matthewmann8969
    @matthewmann8969 Před 7 lety

    Confusius and his religion or spirituality that people practice has a lot of key points in it's writings it has some things in common with Taoism and Shintoism and even Buddhist teachings.

  • @John5mith
    @John5mith Před 9 lety +43

    Generally a Confucian society is more stable, because everyone is conservative, no one break the rules, this kind of society is bad when it needs to change itself.
    But ironically , this kind of society may survive longer than other society when invasions or disasters come. China is an example, every foreign invasion brought more nationalism and conservative ideas.

    • @speedforce7467
      @speedforce7467 Před 7 lety +1

      creativity is important :)

    • @Ro500501502
      @Ro500501502 Před 7 lety

      Speed Force you don't develop it, you just have it at times

    • @eosapienrancher4045
      @eosapienrancher4045 Před 7 lety +6

      Conservatism/traditionalism is great if your goal is merely a stable society that can outlast any threat. It is in essence the exaltation of survival above all else, including truth and justice. Conservatism, in particular secular conservatism, is a kind of repressed nihilism that cannot face itself honestly and so must pretend survival is an end unto itself.

    • @Ro500501502
      @Ro500501502 Před 7 lety +4

      no it isn't. Its to make society stronger and function better with more growth in the economy.

    • @basilofgoodwishes4138
      @basilofgoodwishes4138 Před 6 lety +3

      Ro500501502 no it ends often in a disaster, hence why China is one of the worst countries in terms of politics

  • @victorhunt5788
    @victorhunt5788 Před 8 lety +30

    Not sure that Confucius would approve of such an hysterical & incorrect delivery of his philosophy.

    • @tensevo
      @tensevo Před 4 lety +7

      I am always dubiuous of westerners who are really "into" eastern philosophy. It just seems like a whole lot of trendy virtue signalling.

    • @dantemarudesu3371
      @dantemarudesu3371 Před 4 lety +2

      @@tensevo we're human, lol anything what we do it will can be good , maybe, or bad .. and more. it's seems like you say "i hate you"

    • @stephanvillavicencio5679
      @stephanvillavicencio5679 Před 3 lety

      @victorhunt: im trying to learn. what is (or isn't) correct? i did some reasearch online using Wikipedia. it seem like there is some history that is "not 100% known for sure." Wikipedia has alot of references to Jesuit, English, and American researcher spanning centuries. do you recommend any professors, books, or articles?

    • @Magnulus76
      @Magnulus76 Před 3 lety

      @@tensevo Botton does alot of reinterpretation to try to make things relevant to very different cultures.

  • @slurpy1829
    @slurpy1829 Před 5 lety +1

    To perform rituals, then, is to take part in a communal act to promote mutual understanding.
    Confucius redefined the word ritual by saying it is a communal act to promote mutual understanding. I think that he is saying that mutual understanding is the goal of the ritual and it is achieved through a communal act.
    An example of a mutual understanding is to be kind to one another. This is the understanding that needs to be mutually shared with everyone in a group or culture. The goal is to get across the understanding and moral that we need to be kind to one another. Okay so now we need a communal act that will lead to this mutual understanding. This is what creates the ritual that Confucius is talking about.
    An act to get across this understanding is what is needed. An example could be giving rice to the poor. By giving rice to the poor we tell the children that we do this because it is a way of life to be kind to one another. Then proceed to give the rice. So we have the communal act which is giving rice to the poor and we have the mutual understanding which is to be kind to one another. Now we have a true ritual going by Confucius’ definition.

    • @jwu1950
      @jwu1950 Před 2 lety

      Don't fart in a crowded elevator is not a ritual, but an act of deliberation. But sometimes even sages can't hold their farts long enough. Cover your mouth when you cough is a ritual. It helps to stop the spread of COVID.
      May the love and the peace of Jesus be with us.

  • @boomika9987
    @boomika9987 Před 2 lety

    Great. All content I consume has been tampered with.

  • @lolalee5118
    @lolalee5118 Před 8 lety +5

    Hey!!! (2:42) Phil Collins is awesome.

  • @druidmcgee7978
    @druidmcgee7978 Před 6 lety +13

    3:22 I assume this video was made before the genocide right? Because Aung San Suu Kyi doesn't really deserve that much reverence right now.

  • @johanngaiusisinwingazuluah2116

    You can all hold these fortune cookies! - Confucius

  • @michaelsieberhagen4991
    @michaelsieberhagen4991 Před 7 lety +1

    I never realised how interesting eastern philosophy could be until I saw your videos. Thanks for always making it interesting School of Life