Eastern Zhou (771 - 256 BC)
Spring & Autumn Period (722 - 481 BC)
Warring States Period (403 - 221 BC)
After the capital was sacked by barbarians from the west, the Zhou moved east, thus neatly dividing the
Zhou dynasty into eastern and western periods. As might be expected, the power of the Zhou declined
somewhat. The so-called Spring & Autumn period, named after a book (The Spring and Autumn
Annals) that provides a history of period saw a proliferation of new ideas and philosophies. The three
most important, from a historical standpoint, were Daoism, Confucianism, and Legalism.
Daoism is a can be a very frustrating philosophy to study. It is based on study of the Dao, literally
translated, "the Way." For starters, the oldest great book of Daoism, the Dao de Jing, The Way and
Virtue, was allegedly written by a man named Lao-zi. However, we don't know 1) if Lao-zi was his
real name, 2) if Lao-zi ever actually existed, and 3) if the book is even the work of one author. Then
there are the texts themselves. The first line of the Dao de Jing can be translated as "The Way that can
be walked is not the enduring and unchanging Way." It can also be translated as "The Way that can be
known is not the true Way," as well as several other translations that, while all having the same general
paradoxical meaning, are all different. It is also full of other cryptic and paradoxical sayings, like "The
more the sage expends for others, the more does he possess of his own; the more he gives to others,
the more does he have himself." Daoists loved this kind of stuff; the story about the man dreaming he
was a butterfly, then waking up and wondering if he was a man or a butterfly dreaming about being a
man is classic Daoism. Daoism profoundly influenced the later development of Cha'an (also known as
Zen) Buddhism.
Confucius, who lived about five hundred years before Christ, basically believed that moral men make
good rulers and that virtue is one of the most important properties that an official can have. He also
believed that virtue can be attained by following the proper way of behaving, and thus placed a great
deal of stress on proper. Most of what is considered 'Confucianism' was actually written down by a
disciple named Mencius, who also believed that all men were basically good. Confucius also codified
the status of the ruler in Chinese political thought; the Emperor was the Son of Heaven (while Heaven in
a Western context is a place, Heaven in the Chinese context is a divine/natural force) and had the
Mandate of Heaven to rule.
Legalism derived from the teachings of another one of Confucius' disciples, a man named Xun-zi.
Xun-zi believed that, for the most part, man would look out for himself first and was therefore basically
evil (remember, this is more than two thousand years before Adam Smith argued that self-interest is
what makes markets work and is therefore good). Consequently, the Legalists designed a series of
draconian laws that would make a nation easier to control. The fundamental aim of both Confucianism
and Legalism was the re-unification of a then divided China, but they took difference approaches.
Confucianism depended on virtue and natural order; Legalism used a iron fist. Legalism has been called
"super-Machiavellian;" this is not unwarranted, as it called for the suppression of dissent by the burning
of books and burying dissidents alive (maltreatment of the opposition is nothing new in China; because
the system starts with the idea that the Emperor is the Son of Heaven and has the Mandate of Heaven
to rule, there is no such thing as legitimate dissent and thus no concept of "loyal opposition"). Legalism
advocated techniques such as maintaining an active secret police, encouraging neighbors to inform on
each other, and the creation of a general atmosphere of fear. In fact, many of the same tactics that the
Legalists approved of were later employed by Hitler, Stalin, and Mao.
The politics of the Warring States period were much the same as
those of the Spring & Autumn period; the major difference was that
while in the earlier period, armies were small and battles lasted
only a day, much like in pre-Napoleonic wars, the later period featured
what modern strategists would call "totalwar." Massive armies (half
a million per army was not an uncommon figure), long battles, sieges,
were all common features of the Warring States battlefield.
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