About This Book
A methodical Confucian commentary that explicates the origin and nature of moral principle as Heaven's mandate and its embodiment in human nature; it defines core concepts—following nature as the Way, cultivating virtues as teaching, and the twin ideals of balance and harmony—then prescribes vigilant inner cultivation, guarding against concealed desires, and aligning feeling with right measure. Through close readings of canonical passages and illustrative examples from exemplary rulers and disciples, it traces how individual self-cultivation extends outward into family, ritual, and governance, arguing that sustained sincerity, constant self-examination, and the unity of knowledge and action enact the Way in private and public life.
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