Confucianism · Source book
Analects Book 03
Analects Book III — Pa Yih (Ritual and Its Inner Substance)
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 3:<chapter>.
Book's role
Book III is the Analects' first sustained treatise on li — and its critique. It opens with the eight rows of pantomimes the Chi family had usurped (3:1), and turns immediately to the load-bearing thesis: without ren, what use is li or music? (3:3). In ceremonies, sparing over extravagant, deep grief over minute observance (3:4) — inner substance outweighs outward show. The book gives Confucius's awe before Heaven ("he who offends against Heaven has none to whom he can pray," 3:13), the inclusio of his closing complaint that high station without generosity, ceremony without reverence, and mourning without sorrow are not worth contemplating (3:26).
Atomic statements
B3-C1: Ritual and music are empty without humaneness; ren is what gives the forms their meaning. (FOUNDATIONAL / LI+REN)
- Analects 3:3: "If a man be without the virtues proper to humanity, what has he to do with the rites of propriety? If a man be without the virtues proper to humanity, what has he to do with music?"
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: li (ritual propriety), ren ("virtues proper to humanity")
B3-C2: In ritual, inner substance outweighs outward show — sparing over extravagant, real grief over correct observance. (OPERATIONAL / LI)
- Analects 3:4: "In festive ceremonies, it is better to be sparing than extravagant. In the ceremonies of mourning, it is better that there be deep sorrow than a minute attention to observances."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
B3-C3: To offend against Heaven leaves one with no recourse — tian is the final standard, not the household altar. (FOUNDATIONAL / HEAVEN)
- Analects 3:13: "He who offends against Heaven has none to whom he can pray."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: tian (Heaven as final moral standard)
B3-C4: High station without generosity, ceremony without reverence, mourning without sorrow — these are not worth contemplating. (FOUNDATIONAL / LI+REN)
- Analects 3:26: "High station filled without indulgent generosity; ceremonies performed without reverence; mourning conducted without sorrow;— wherewith should I contemplate such ways?"
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
Step 4 — Clusters
| Cluster | Atomic statements | Intent |
|---|---|---|
| Ritual filled by ren | B3-C1, B3-C2, B3-C4 | Forms are empty without inner virtue and feeling |
| Tian as final standard | B3-C3 | Heaven is the court before which there is no other appeal |
Step 5 — Internal tensions
None genuine. The book consistently subordinates form to inner content.
Step 6 — Synthesized book principles
B3-P1: Ritual is the vessel; humaneness is its content
Li civilizes conduct, but rites and music are empty without ren. Inner substance and real feeling outweigh outward show: sparing over extravagant in festive ceremonies, real grief over minute observance in mourning; high station, ceremony, and mourning are nothing without generosity, reverence, and sorrow.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: LI+REN · Covers: B3-C1, B3-C2, B3-C4 · Evidence: Analects 3:3, 3:4, 3:26 · Untranslatable: li, ren
B3-P2: Heaven is the final standard, beyond which there is no appeal
One who offends against Heaven has no other altar to which to turn — tian is the ultimate moral standard, not the local spirits.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: HEAVEN · Covers: B3-C3 · Evidence: Analects 3:13 · Untranslatable: tian
Step 7 — Traceability
| Principle | Atomic statements | Passages |
|---|---|---|
| B3-P1 | B3-C1, B3-C2, B3-C4 | Analects 3:3, 3:4, 3:26 |
| B3-P2 | B3-C3 | Analects 3:13 |
Step 8 — Quality
- Coverage: the load-bearing thesis of Book III (ritual filled by humaneness; tian as final standard) is fully captured by ≥1 atomic statement.
- Orphaned: 3:1–3:2 (the eight-row usurpation, the YUNG ode misuse), 3:5–3:11 (dynastic-ritual critiques, the great sacrifice), 3:14 (Chau's regulations), 3:15 (the temple — asking about everything as itself propriety), 3:17 (the inaugural sheep), 3:19 (prince/minister mutual rules), 3:20 (the Kwan Tsu — joy without licence), 3:22 (Kwan Chung's want of frugality), 3:24 (Heaven's bell with wooden tongue), 3:25 (Shao vs Wu in beauty and goodness). Many are historically situated critiques of dynastic ritual that re-instantiate the same B3-P1 thesis.
- Principles: 2 (within range).
- Traceability: 100%.
Step 9 — Validation
- Standalone comprehension (frame-independent): B3-P1 (form is hollow without inner content) reads as a recognizable ritual-critique to outsiders and is a convergence candidate (cf. prophetic critiques of empty sacrifice, Pauline contrasts of letter and spirit). B3-P2 (an unappeasable final standard) is intelligible, but its warrant — that the standard is tian, a silent moral order rather than a personal deity — is a distinctively Confucian shape that the Atlas will compare to theistic frames.