Confucianism · Source book
Analects Book 05
Analects Book V — Kung-ye Ch'ang (Portraits and the Seed of Reciprocity)
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../00-methodology.md. Citation:Analects 5:<chapter>.
Book's role
Book V is largely biographical portraits — Confucius appraising disciples and historical figures and so revealing the standard by which character is measured. Within this gallery sit three transferable principles: that one judges others by conduct, not words (5:9); the seed form of the reciprocity rule (5:11) — Tsze-kung's aspiration that the Master gently corrects as still beyond him; and the Master's own wish for the aged, friends, and the young (5:25), which is ren in microcosm.
Atomic statements
B5-C1: Judge a person by examining conduct, not by accepting words; words must be tested against deeds. (OPERATIONAL / LEARNING+SELF)
- Analects 5:9: "At first, my way with men was to hear their words, and give them credit for their conduct. Now my way is to hear their words, and look at their conduct."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
B5-C2: The reciprocity rule, stated as an aspiration: not to do to others what one would not have done to oneself. (FOUNDATIONAL / REN+YI)
- Analects 5:11: "Tsze-kung said, 'What I do not wish men to do to me, I also wish not to do to men.'"
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: shu (reciprocity) — here in seed form, before its full statement in 15:23
- Note: the Master replies that Tsze-kung has not yet attained it — registering shu as a difficult, lifelong rule.
B5-C3: The Master's wish: to give rest to the aged, sincerity to friends, and tender care to the young. (EXHORTATION / REN)
- Analects 5:25: "[The Master said,] They are, in regard to the aged, to give them rest; in regard to friends, to show them sincerity; in regard to the young, to treat them tenderly."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: ren implicitly — humaneness across the life stages
Step 4 — Clusters
| Cluster | Atomic statements | Intent |
|---|---|---|
| Words vs deeds | B5-C1 | Conduct is the test of character |
| Reciprocity in seed | B5-C2 | The negative Golden Rule — aspirational, not yet attained |
| The Master's wish | B5-C3 | Ren enacted across generations |
Step 5 — Internal tensions
None genuine.
Step 6 — Synthesized book principles
B5-P1: Conduct, not words, is the test and shape of character
One reads character from deeds, not from speech; one's own deeds, not professions, are what one is.
- Tier:
OPERATIONAL· Domain: SELF+LEARNING · Covers: B5-C1 · Evidence: Analects 5:9
B5-P2: The reciprocity rule (shu) and ren across life stages
Tsze-kung's seed form — "what I do not wish men to do to me, I also wish not to do to men" — names the rule the Master will later call lifelong (15:23). The Master's own wish — rest for the aged, sincerity for friends, tender care for the young — is ren enacted across generations.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: REN+YI · Covers: B5-C2, B5-C3 · Evidence: Analects 5:11, 5:25 · Untranslatable: shu, ren
Step 7 — Traceability
| Principle | Atomic statements | Passages |
|---|---|---|
| B5-P1 | B5-C1 | Analects 5:9 |
| B5-P2 | B5-C2, B5-C3 | Analects 5:11, 5:25 |
Step 8 — Quality
- Coverage: the load-bearing transferable principles of Book V (deeds-over-words, shu in seed, the Master's wish) are each captured.
- Orphaned: 5:1–5:8 (marriages and disciple appraisals — Kung-ye Ch'ang, Nan Yung, Tsze-chien, Tsze-kung, etc.), 5:10 ("rotten wood cannot be carved"), 5:12 (Heaven's way cannot be heard), 5:13 (Tsze-lu's eagerness to practise), 5:14 (Kung-wan unashamed to ask of inferiors — restated as B6-C3 in Book VI), 5:15–5:24 (further character portraits), 5:26 (none can perceive their own faults), 5:27 (love of learning above other virtues). Most are situated portraits that exemplify rather than originate principles.
- Principles: 2 (within range).
- Traceability: 100%.
Step 9 — Validation
- Standalone comprehension (frame-independent): B5-P1 (deeds reveal character) and B5-P2 (reciprocity; humaneness across life stages) read as intelligible ethical claims to an outsider. The reciprocity rule (in both its seed and full forms) is among the strongest cross-tradition convergence candidates in the entire corpus — the warrant in Confucianism (it follows from shared human nature and from ren, not from a divine command) is the particularity.