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Analects Book 02

Analects Book II — Wei Chang (Government by Virtue)

N=1 per-book distillation. Source: Legge, Confucian Analects (Gutenberg #3330). Quote anchors are working text pending Phase 7 char-for-char verification. Methodology & tags: ../00-methodology.md. Citation: Analects 2:<chapter>.

Book's role

Book II opens the political doctrine of the Analects with two of its most famous images — the pole-star (2:1) and the shame-vs-evasion contrast between rule by virtue/ritual and rule by law/punishment (2:3). It then turns inward to Confucius's autobiographical arc of moral growth across decades (2:4), gives the texture of xiao as reverence (2:5–2:8), and closes with terse maxims on the junzi: catholic not partisan (2:14), learning united to thought (2:15), and the courage to do what one sees is right (2:24).

Atomic statements

B2-C1: Rule by virtue (de) holds its place and draws all others, as the pole-star draws the stars. (FOUNDATIONAL / GOVERN+HEAVEN)

  • Analects 2:1: "He who exercises government by means of his virtue may be compared to the north polar star, which keeps its place and all the stars turn towards it."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: de (moral force)

B2-C2: Law-and-punishment produces evasion without shame; virtue-and-ritual produces an inner sense of shame and self-correction. (FOUNDATIONAL / GOVERN+LI)

  • Analects 2:3: "If the people be led by laws, and uniformity sought to be given them by punishments, they will try to avoid the punishment, but have no sense of shame. If they be led by virtue, and uniformity sought to be given them by the rules of propriety, they will have the sense of shame, and moreover will become good."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

B2-C3: A life of moral growth in stages, culminating in freedom that never transgresses what is right. (EXHORTATION / SELF+HEAVEN)

  • Analects 2:4: "At fifteen, I had my mind bent on learning. At thirty, I stood firm. At forty, I had no doubts. At fifty, I knew the decrees of Heaven. At sixty, my ear was an obedient organ for the reception of truth. At seventy, I could follow what my heart desired, without transgressing what was right."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: tian ("decrees of Heaven" = the Mandate)

B2-C4: Filial piety is reverence, not mere material support — what distinguishes xiao from feeding a dog or horse. (OPERATIONAL / FAMILY)

  • Analects 2:7: "The filial piety of now-a-days means the support of one's parents. But dogs and horses likewise are able to do something in the way of support;— without reverence, what is there to distinguish the one support given from the other?"
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: xiao (filial reverence)

B2-C5: Learning without thought is wasted; thought without learning is perilous. (OPERATIONAL / LEARNING+SELF)

  • Analects 2:15: "Learning without thought is labour lost; thought without learning is perilous."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Step 4 — Clusters

Cluster Atomic statements Intent
Government by virtue B2-C1, B2-C2 The ruler's de and li draw, not coerce; shame, not evasion
Lifelong cultivation B2-C3 The Master's own arc — learning, standing, the Mandate, freedom
Texture of xiao B2-C4 Reverence is what makes filial support filial
Learning + thought B2-C5 Neither half suffices

Step 5 — Internal tensions

None genuine.

Step 6 — Synthesized book principles

B2-P1: Govern by moral force (de) and ritual, not by punishment

A ruler's own virtue draws the people as the pole-star draws the stars; lead by virtue and ritual and the people gain an inner sense of shame — lead by punishment and they merely evade.

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: GOVERN+LI · Covers: B2-C1, B2-C2 · Evidence: Analects 2:1, 2:3 · Untranslatable: de, li

B2-P2: Moral life is a lifelong arc culminating in free conformity to the right

Cultivation proceeds in decades — from the bending of the will to learn, through standing firm, freedom from doubt, knowing the Mandate of Heaven, and at last a freedom that never transgresses what is right.

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: SELF+HEAVEN · Covers: B2-C3 · Evidence: Analects 2:4 · Untranslatable: tian

B2-P3: Filial reverence and reflective learning are the inner shape of cultivation

Xiao is not mere material support but reverence; learning without thought is labour lost, and thought without learning perilous — the cultivated person joins both.

  • Tier: OPERATIONAL · Domain: FAMILY+LEARNING · Covers: B2-C4, B2-C5 · Evidence: Analects 2:7, 2:15 · Untranslatable: xiao

Step 7 — Traceability

Principle Atomic statements Passages
B2-P1 B2-C1, B2-C2 Analects 2:1, 2:3
B2-P2 B2-C3 Analects 2:4
B2-P3 B2-C4, B2-C5 Analects 2:7, 2:15

Step 8 — Quality

  • Coverage: the doctrinally heaviest passages of Book II (the pole-star, virtue-vs-punishment, the autobiographical stages, xiao as reverence, learning + thought) are captured.
  • Orphaned: 2:5–2:6, 2:8 (further xiao aphorisms), 2:9–2:10 (seeing motives), 2:11 (continually new learning), 2:12 ("not a utensil"), 2:13 (acts before speaks), 2:14 (catholic, not partisan), 2:17 (knowing what one knows), 2:18 (cautious speech and conduct), 2:19 (advance the upright), 2:21 (filiality as government), 2:22 (truthfulness as the cross-bar), 2:23 (dynastic continuity), 2:24 (to see what is right and not do it is cowardice) — recurrent themes restated elsewhere.
  • Principles: 3 (within range).
  • Traceability: 100%.

Step 9 — Validation

  • Standalone comprehension (frame-independent): B2-P1 (lead by example, not fear), B2-P2 (lifelong cultivation), and B2-P3 (filial reverence; learning + thought) all read as intelligible ethical claims to an outsider. The frame-specific warrant in B2-P1 — that de has a quasi-cosmic drawing power (the pole-star) — is flagged for the Atlas: the claim (lead by example) converges widely; the warrant (virtue's near-magical magnetism, the ruler as cosmic pivot) is distinctively Confucian.