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The Analects of Confucius: A Philosophical Translation (Classics of Ancient China) - Roger T. Ames, Henry Rosemont
The Analects of Confucius: A Philosophical Translation (Classics of Ancient China)
by: (author) (author)
3.00 10
One of the central books of Chinese literature and Chines thought, memorized and studied for many centuries.
One of the central books of Chinese literature and Chines thought, memorized and studied for many centuries.
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Format: paperback
ISBN: 9780345434074 (0345434072)
ASIN: 345434072
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Pages no: 352
Edition language: English
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Community Reviews
Anfenwick
Anfenwick rated it
4.0 Confucius, the Analects: The Path of the Sage--Selections Annotated & Explained (Skylight Illuminations)
After trying to read Confucius 'raw' I realized I needed a little help and orientation. This hit the spot and I now feel much more able to tackle the Analects for my own purposes. What I found most helpful?1) The little bit of context in the introduction about Confucius' aims, his career, and how th...
Lisa (Harmony)
Lisa (Harmony) rated it
3.0 The Analects (Penguin Classics)
Along with Taoism and Buddhism, Confucianism is called one of the "three great teachings" or "three great religions" of China, and has had an enormous influence not just on China but the entire Far East. This was on Good Reading's list of "100 Significant Books" and there's no question this is one o...
Philosophical Musings of a Book Nerd
Philosophical Musings of a Book Nerd rated it
4.0 The political sayings of a Chinese master
While I have credited the writing of this work to Confucius, it was not actually written by him but rather by his disciples. Thus Confucius joins Socrates and Jesus Christ in having an enormous influence upon the world without actually writing anything down (though this is not correct, as I further ...
simmo
simmo rated it
3.0 The Analects (Penguin Classics)
This was hard work in places! The Analects themselves probably could do with studying in detail and interpreting rather than just reading for interest – they are a bit, well, philosophical. Fortunately Lau gives us the gist of the Analects in the introduction. The basic upshot of Confucius is the ‘G...
paigeawesome
paigeawesome rated it
I gave this book 3 stars even though my feelings toward it fit better with the 2 star rating: "it was okay." I guess I don't really have a context for some of the rituals he would refer to, but there were plenty of footnotes throughout to help people like me out. It was really repetitive, a lot of i...
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