Confucianism Concepts and the Moral Theory
poli final essay
FINAL EXAM INSTRUCTIONS AND PROMPTS
We will not respond to emails asking straightforward questions answered in this document. Please read the instructions carefully.
Formatting Requirements: All essays must be in 12 point Times or Times New Roman font, double spaced, with one inch margins. Name, class information, and title blocks on the first page must be single spaced. Headers and footers on subsequent pages must be no more than one line.
Citations and Works Cited: Use parenthetical citations including lecture date or page number as is appropriate (Magagna Lecture DATE; Yao 2002 at 14). Works cited pages are not necessary unless citing material other than lectures or books listed in the syllabus’s required reading section. You may cite one source from outside class a maximum of two times.
Length: Essays shall be no longer than 7 pages. We will stop reading at the 7th page. There is no official minimum length. We do grade, however, on your ability to sustain arguments about complicated topics about which whole books are written so you should really not be surprised if your essay that ends with one word on the sixth page gets positively destroyed by the graders as showing insufficient argument or detail.
Topics: Please choose one of the following topics.
- Compare and contrast western and East Asian systems of law and justice
- explain Confucian moral theory a practice explain the five constant virtues and the concept of ren
- explain Confucian political economy and its lasting legacies
- explain Confucian law
- explain Confucian ritual theory
- explain the characteristics of modernity and apply them to Confucian East Asia
Answer preview
Confucianism Concepts and the Moral Theory
Confucianism is practiced within Asian society, and it is used to describe a system of ethical and social philosophies. It was built on the backbone of a religious foundation that intensely relied on transcendent idealities within the traditional Chinese society and similarly on basic social values. Its founders, however, did not aim at founding a new religion but objectified towards reviving and interpreting the Zhou dynasty religion practices. Its practice, therefore, sought to affirm the accepted norms…
(2200 words)