Ancient script rewrites history:
'This is
like the discovery of the
By Andrea Shen
FAS Communications
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Bamboo strips discovered in a tomb dating back to
the fourth centruy B.C. |
Near a river in
The tomb was just slightly larger than the coffin and stone sarcophagus
within. Scattered on the floor were bamboo strips, wide as a pencil, and up to
twice as long. On closer scrutiny, scholars realized they had found something
remarkable.
"This is like the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls," says Tu
Weiming, director of the Harvard Yenching Institute (HYI), who has played a key
role in the preservation of, accessibility to, and research on the Guodian
materials since 1996.
The 800 bamboo strips bear roughly 10,000 Chinese characters;
approximately one-tenth of those characters comprise part of the oldest extant
version of the Tao Te Ching (also known as Daodejing), a foundational text by
the Taoist philosopher Laozi, who lived in the sixth century B.C. and is
generally considered the teacher of Confucius. The remaining nine-tenths of the
writings appear to be written by Confucian disciples, including Confucius'
grandson Zisi, in the first generation after Confucius' death. (Confucius lived
from 551 to 479 B.C.) These texts amplify scholars' understanding of how the
Confucian philosophical tradition evolved between Confucius' time and that of
Mencius, a key Confucian thinker who lived in the third century B.C.
"With the discovery of these texts, I think you can say that the
history of Confucianism itself will have to be rewritten," says Tu. "And
by implication, the history of ancient Chinese philosophy in general will have
to be reconfigured."
Shortly after their rediscovery, the 2,000-year-old strips were immersed
in solvents to restore the faded writing. "They became so brilliant, as if
the characters were written yesterday," said Tu. The length of the strips,
their content, and special markings, like bands on a
bird leg, helped scholars sequence the strips.
With scholars such as Sarah Allen, a sinologist at
Image of the human heart
What do the bamboo strips tell us?
These texts radically alter scholars' understanding of not just the
principles of, and relationship between, Taoism and Confucianism, two major
streams of Chinese thought; they affect our understanding of Chinese philology,
and reopen debate on the historical identities of Confucius and Laozi.
Taoism was previously considered a critique of Confucianism, says Tu.
With the discovery of the Guodian texts, the two schools can now be seen as
more complementary than formerly imagined.
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Professor Tu
Weiming of the Yenching Institute (left) and visiting Chinese scholar Guo Yi
discuss the Guodian manuscripts discovered in |
"From the Confucian point of view, human beings are sociological
animals," says Tu. "They are psychological, political, poetic -
meaning aesthetic - but also metaphysical." Confucians advocate
"engagement in the world, social service, critique of the political order,
and the idea of personal self-cultivation as the basis for social
transformation." Taoists, in contrast, "would like to reject the
sociological, political aspects of the human, focusing on the 'natural way,'
following nature, against any kind of human, artificial intervention in the
natural process." Taoists refer to the "way of heaven" as a
guide for human behavior.
The Guodian version of the Tao Te Ching reveals far more tolerant views
toward Confucian ideology than previously seen. Moreover, the Confucian texts
in the Guodian cache reveal a more complex worldview than traditionally
understood.
For years scholars believed that Confucians were little concerned with
human emotions. But in the Guodian texts, the element "xin," - a
pictographic image of the human heart - appears over and over again as part of
several Chinese characters. It's a startling display, both philologically, in
terms of understanding the evolution of Chinese characters, and philosophically.
"These texts conclusively show that emotions or feelings as we understand
them today were major philosophical concerns," Tu says. The Guodian texts
offer detailed descriptions of a range of human emotions. They also extensively
explore the relation between heart, mind, and human nature; between the inner
self and the outer world; and whether human nature is good or evil - a
cumulative emphasis on the inner dimensions of man that most scholars formerly
believed came much later in Chinese intellectual history.
A cosmic shift
Simultaneously, Confucian views on man's relation to the polity require
reinterpretation in the wake of the Guodian discovery. These early writings
reveal a "spirit of protest," in Tu's words, a definition of a loyal
minister, for instance, as he who consistently criticizes his emperor. This
priority on the people's agenda, with the ruler's views secondary to their
concerns, has long been ascribed to the thinker Mencius; now scholars see much
earlier roots, in Zisi, for this notion of government.
Indeed, a powerful school of thought in modern
The genealogy of Chinese intellectual thought is now undergoing revision
and Taoist and Confucian texts are being reinterpreted. And because Taoism and
Confucianism are very much "living traditions" in
Some of the Taoist Guodian texts offer a whole new cosmology - a view of
the creation of the universe with elements not even mentioned in later versions
of the Tao Te Ching: the creation of water, the existence of four seasons, the
birth of heaven and earth after other events have taken place. The bamboo slips
themselves are having a similar effect on the Chinese intellectual universe.
Brave new world.
Contact Andrea Shen at andrea_shen@harvard.edu