Confucianism · Source book
Analects Book 04
Analects Book IV — Le Jin (Abiding in Humaneness)
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 4:<chapter>.
Book's role
Book IV is the densest cluster of short junzi/ren aphorisms in the Analects. It opens on abiding in humaneness (4:1–4:6), gives the urgent "in the morning, hear the right way…" (4:8), then the load-bearing all-pervading unity of the Master's doctrine — Tsang's gloss as zhong* + *shu (4:15) — and the canonical rightness-vs-gain contrast (4:16). It closes with filial remonstrance with reverence (4:18) and aphorisms on speech, virtue, and friendship.
Atomic statements
B4-C1: Humaneness is a settled abiding; without virtue, neither poverty nor enjoyment can be endured for long. (FOUNDATIONAL / REN+SELF)
- Analects 4:2, 4:5: "Those who are without virtue cannot abide long either in a condition of poverty and hardship, or in a condition of enjoyment. The virtuous rest in virtue; the wise desire virtue." / "The superior man does not, even for the space of a single meal, act contrary to virtue. In moments of haste, he cleaves to it. In seasons of danger, he cleaves to it."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: ren ("virtue"); Legge's "the virtuous rest in virtue" = the ren person abides in ren
B4-C2: To hear the right way ("the Way") is itself the consummation of a life — "in the morning, hear it; in the evening, die without regret." (EXHORTATION / SELF+HEAVEN)
- Analects 4:8: "If a man in the morning hear the right way, he may die in the evening without regret."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · Note: Legge's "the right way" = dao
B4-C3: The Master's whole doctrine is one all-pervading unity, glossed by Tsang as zhong (faithfulness to one's nature) and shu (reciprocity / its benevolent exercise toward others). (FOUNDATIONAL / REN+SELF)
- Analects 4:15: "Shan, my doctrine is that of an all-pervading unity… The doctrine of our master is to be true to the principles of our nature and the benevolent exercise of them to others,— this and nothing more."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: zhong (faithfulness/doing-one's-utmost), shu (reciprocity)
B4-C4: The exemplary person is conversant with righteousness; the small person with gain. (FOUNDATIONAL / YI+JUNZI)
- Analects 4:16: "The mind of the superior man is conversant with righteousness; the mind of the mean man is conversant with gain."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: yi (righteousness) vs li 利 (gain); junzi
B4-C5: A son may remonstrate gently with his parents, but never abandon reverence — even when corrected, no murmur. (OPERATIONAL / FAMILY+LI)
- Analects 4:18: "In serving his parents, a son may remonstrate with them, but gently; when he sees that they do not incline to follow his advice, he shows an increased degree of reverence, but does not abandon his purpose; and should they punish him, he does not allow himself to murmur."
- Stance: assert · Importance: supporting · Untranslatable: xiao (filial reverence)
Step 4 — Clusters
| Cluster | Atomic statements | Intent |
|---|---|---|
| Abiding in ren | B4-C1, B4-C2 | Humaneness is a settled abiding; to hear the Way is to be ready to die |
| The all-pervading unity | B4-C3 | Zhong + shu sum the Master's doctrine |
| Rightness over gain | B4-C4 | The junzi's orientation distinguishes him from the small person |
| Filial remonstrance | B4-C5 | Reverence is never surrendered, even in disagreement |
Step 5 — Internal tensions
None genuine.
Step 6 — Synthesized book principles
B4-P1: Humaneness is a settled abiding that endures poverty and prosperity alike
The ren person rests in ren — not abandoning it even for the space of a single meal, cleaving to it in haste and in danger. Without virtue, neither poverty nor enjoyment can be endured.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: REN+SELF · Covers: B4-C1 · Evidence: Analects 4:2, 4:5 · Untranslatable: ren
B4-P2: The Master's whole doctrine is the unity of zhong and shu
Confucius's teaching is one all-pervading unity: faithfulness to the principles of one's own nature (zhong) and their benevolent exercise toward others (shu) — this and nothing more.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: REN+SELF · Covers: B4-C3 · Evidence: Analects 4:15 · Untranslatable: zhong, shu
B4-P3: The junzi is oriented to rightness, not gain
The junzi is conversant with yi; the mean person with profit. Character is measured by what one is oriented toward; to hear the right way is itself worth a life.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: YI+JUNZI · Covers: B4-C2, B4-C4 · Evidence: Analects 4:8, 4:16 · Untranslatable: yi, junzi
B4-P4: Filial remonstrance is gentle, reverent, and never murmuring
A son may correct his parents, but only gently; reverence is increased when correction is not received, and even punishment is borne without murmur.
- Tier:
OPERATIONAL· Domain: FAMILY+LI · Covers: B4-C5 · Evidence: Analects 4:18 · Untranslatable: xiao
Step 7 — Traceability
| Principle | Atomic statements | Passages |
|---|---|---|
| B4-P1 | B4-C1 | Analects 4:2, 4:5 |
| B4-P2 | B4-C3 | Analects 4:15 |
| B4-P3 | B4-C2, B4-C4 | Analects 4:8, 4:16 |
| B4-P4 | B4-C5 | Analects 4:18 |
Step 8 — Quality
- Coverage: the load-bearing aphorisms of Book IV (abiding in ren, the all-pervading unity, yi-vs-gain, filial remonstrance) are each captured.
- Orphaned: 4:1 (virtuous neighbourhood), 4:3 (only the virtuous can love/hate aright), 4:7 (knowing a man by his faults), 4:9 (shame of bad clothes), 4:10 (no foregone for/against, only the right), 4:11 (sanctions of law vs favours), 4:13 (govern with the ease of li), 4:14 (concern with worthiness, not position), 4:17 (seeing worth, emulate; seeing fault, examine self), 4:19–4:21 (more xiao aphorisms), 4:22–4:24 (cautious speech), 4:25 (virtue not alone), 4:26 (frequent remonstrance disgraces).
- Principles: 4 (within range).
- Traceability: 100%.
Step 9 — Validation
- Standalone comprehension (frame-independent): B4-P1 (abiding virtue), B4-P3 (rightness over gain), and B4-P4 (filial remonstrance with reverence) all read as intelligible. B4-P2 is the single most concentrated statement of the Confucian inner shape: zhong + shu — and the claim (be true to one's better nature; treat others as you would be treated) is a strong cross-tradition convergence candidate, while the warrant (a "nature" given by Heaven and cultivated, neither commanded by a deity nor escaped via liberation) is distinctively Confucian.