Natureza humana e perfectibilidade moral
A tradição debate se a natureza humana tende ao bem, precisa de reforma ou ambas as coisas em níveis distintos.
O que é: O tema da natureza humana ocupa lugar central em debates confucionistas clássicos e posteriores.
Como a tradição entende: Mêncio sustenta que a natureza humana possui inclinações morais básicas que devem ser cultivadas; Xunzi argumenta que desejos desordenados exigem disciplina, educação e rito. Mesmo com diferenças, ambas as linhas valorizam formação moral e transformação humana.
Base textual e contexto: Mêncio, Xunzi e tradições neoconfucionistas retomam o tema de modos distintos.
Debates e variações: Esta é uma das divergências internas mais importantes da tradição e ajuda a explicar diferentes pedagogias, políticas e antropologias morais.
Supportive
Mencius 2A:6
The image of spontaneous compassion supports humanity's potential goodness.
Reference: Mencius 2A:6.
Content: The example of the child at the edge of the well illustrates an initial impulse of compassion.
Use in debate: It is decisive for the thesis that human nature contains moral beginnings.
Mencius 6A
Mencius develops moral inclinations and their formation.
Reference: Mencius 6A.
Content: The text discusses moral sprouts, cultivation, and ethical responsibility.
Use in debate: It helps articulate yi, ren, and human nature in a formative key.
Mencius 6A:6
Mencius insists that human goodness can be cultivated and expanded.
Reference: Mencius 6A:6.
Content: The text reaffirms the possibility of developing moral dispositions already present in human nature.
Use in debate: It is frequently cited in contrast with Xunzi.
Contrary
Xunzi, Human Nature Is Bad
Xunzi argues that human nature tends toward disorder without formation.
Reference: Xunzi, chapter Human Nature Is Bad.
Content: The author argues that raw desires and inclinations need education and ritual to generate moral order.
Use in debate: It is one of the foundational sources of the internal disagreement over human nature.
Neutral
Wang Yangming on knowledge and action
Wang Yangming emphasizes the unity between moral knowledge and action.
Reference: Teachings of Wang Yangming.
Content: The author maintains that authentic moral knowledge must be realized in concrete action and inner investigation.
Use in debate: The source shows an important late turn in the tradition regarding self-cultivation and mind.
Zhu Xi on principle and cultivation
Neo-Confucianism articulates principle, study, and moral discipline.
Reference: Commentaries and teachings of Zhu Xi.
Content: The author systematizes the reading of the classics, the investigation of things, and moral cultivation in a more metaphysical key.
Use in debate: It is relevant for the continuity and later reworking of the tradition.