Confucianism · Source book
Analects Book 16
Analects Book XVI — Ke She (The Threefold Awe)
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../00-methodology.md. Citation:Analects 16:<chapter>.
Book's role
Book XVI is composed largely of numbered catalogues — three friendships, three enjoyments, three errors, three things to guard against, three awes, nine subjects of thoughtful consideration. Among these the threefold awe of Heaven, great men, and sages (16:8) is the doctrinally heaviest. The book opens with the long Chwan-yu episode (16:1), which contains the celebrated draw the distant by civil culture and virtue, not force, and the warning that the gravest danger is internal disorder, not external.
Atomic statements
B16-C1: The junzi stands in awe of three things: the ordinances of Heaven, great men, and the words of sages. (FOUNDATIONAL / HEAVEN+JUNZI)
- Analects 16:8: "There are three things of which the superior man stands in awe. He stands in awe of the ordinances of Heaven. He stands in awe of great men. He stands in awe of the words of sages."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: tian ("ordinances of Heaven")
B16-C2: A people is ordered by drawing the distant with civil culture and virtue, not by force; the gravest danger is internal disorder, not external. (OPERATIONAL / GOVERN+LI)
- Analects 16:1: "If remoter people are not submissive, all the influences of civil culture and virtue are to be cultivated to attract them… I am afraid that the sorrow of the Chi-sun family will… be found within the screen of their own court."
- Stance: assert · Importance: supporting
B16-C3: The junzi has nine subjects of thoughtful consideration — clear seeing, distinct hearing, benign countenance, respectful demeanor, sincere speech, reverent business, questioning what he doubts, anticipated consequences of anger, and yi in the face of gain. (OPERATIONAL / SELF+JUNZI)
- Analects 16:10: "In regard to the use of his eyes, he is anxious to see clearly. In regard to the use of his ears, he is anxious to hear distinctly. In regard to his countenance, he is anxious that it should be benign… When he sees gain to be got, he thinks of righteousness."
- Stance: assert · Importance: supporting · Untranslatable: yi (rightness) — the ninth and most weight-bearing
Step 4 — Clusters
| Cluster | Atomic statements | Intent |
|---|---|---|
| Awe of Heaven | B16-C1 | The junzi reveres Heaven, the great, the sages |
| Civil culture not force | B16-C2 | Draw the distant by virtue; the gravest danger is within |
| Nine consciousnesses | B16-C3 | Cultivation runs through every faculty |
Step 5 — Internal tensions
None genuine.
Step 6 — Synthesized book principles
B16-P1: The junzi lives in awe of Heaven, the great, and the sages
The cultivated person reveres the ordinances of tian, the great men of the past, and the words of the sages — the threefold awe orients the moral life.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: HEAVEN+JUNZI · Covers: B16-C1 · Evidence: Analects 16:8 · Untranslatable: tian
B16-P2: Cultivation runs through every faculty, and a people is drawn by virtue not force
The junzi attends to nine things — clear seeing, distinct hearing, benign countenance, respectful demeanor, sincere speech, reverent business, asking what he doubts, anticipated consequences of anger, and yi in the face of gain. Likewise, a ruler draws the distant by civil culture and virtue, never by force; the gravest danger is internal, not external.
- Tier:
OPERATIONAL· Domain: SELF+JUNZI+GOVERN · Covers: B16-C2, B16-C3 · Evidence: Analects 16:1, 16:10 · Untranslatable: yi
Step 7 — Traceability
| Principle | Atomic statements | Passages |
|---|---|---|
| B16-P1 | B16-C1 | Analects 16:8 |
| B16-P2 | B16-C2, B16-C3 | Analects 16:1, 16:10 |
Step 8 — Quality
- Coverage: the load-bearing catalogues of Book XVI (the threefold awe, the nine consciousnesses, civil-culture-not-force) are each captured.
- Orphaned: 16:2 (rituals/expeditions from the Son of Heaven), 16:4 (three advantageous and three injurious friendships), 16:5 (three advantageous and three injurious enjoyments), 16:6 (three errors before a man of virtue), 16:7 (three things to guard against — youth's lust, strength's quarrelsomeness, old age's covetousness), 16:9 (four classes of knowers), 16:11 (those who pursue good as if they could not reach it), 16:12 (Duke Ching's thousand teams vs Po-i and Shu-ch'i), 16:13 (Po-yu's two lessons from his father — the Odes and li).
- Principles: 2 (within range).
- Traceability: 100%.
Step 9 — Validation
- Standalone comprehension (frame-independent): B16-P1 (awe of Heaven, the great, the sages) is intelligible; the warrant for that awe — tian as the silent moral order (as developed in Book XVII) — diverges from theistic awe and from naturalistic indifference alike. B16-P2 (cultivation through every faculty; civil culture not force) reads as recognizably intelligible practical ethics and politics.