Thanks to the Western Confucian, I read an editorial in the China Post regarding a speech by Taiwan’s president-elect Ma Yin-jeou.  Ma apparently emphasized the importance of integrity and sincerity in the appointment of public officials:

President-Elect Ma Ying-jeou stated
that attaching importance to moral character is very important to
today’s Taiwan. The new government that is to be formed after his
inauguration will put character above capability in appointing
officials, he stressed.

    It’s not clear if Ma himself made the obvious connection to Confucianism (perhaps he kept it implicit) but the China Post editors did:

Confucian values are the
cornerstone of the moral system of the Chinese and that of many of
China’s neighbors, such as Korea and Japan. These two countries owe
their economic prosperity to the influence that Confucianism has had on
their cultures.

Chinese dynasties that attached importance to
Confucian values were almost all strong and prosperous, whereas those
that ignored the sage’s teachings were inevitably weak and short-lived.

It is, therefore, little wonder that, over recent years, the government
has been rife with corruption with many officials indicted or
imprisoned for graft and other immoral deeds.

      A couple of things come to mind here.  First, the editorial is a reminder of the political-sociological trend in Taiwan that continues to place the island within the purview of "Chinese culture."  It is easy to lose sight of that trend, as it has been challenged so strongly in recent years by the counter current of Taiwanese identity.   Taiwanese cultural identity is, I believe, strong and  Ma’s election does not signal a popular rejection of it.  Rather, it seems more likely that it is Ma, and other "mainlanders" and Chinese culturalists, who have had to absorb Taiwanese identity in order to be politically viable.   But identity and culture are dynamic; so we will see if Ma’s presidency does lead to an increase in the prominence of Chinese cultural identity on Taiwan. 

     Second, I cannot let pass the assertion that Confucianism somehow caused economic development in East Asia.  What is meant by "Confucianism" here?  Certainly not the famous Confucian disdain for materialist profit-seeking.  As I have argued before, there is a way in which Chinese society has never really been Confucian, because Chines society has always held within it a commercial dynamism, fueled by material profit-seeking, that transgressed Confucian notions of humane conduct.  So, in this sense, the significant economic growth and transformation of East Asia is a contradiction of certain Confucian principles, not a confirmation of them.

     This works in another way as well: the role of a strong, regulatory state.  The "East Asian model" of economic development – perhaps best described institutionally by Chalmers Johnson in his notion of the developmental state – relied upon a strong central bureaucracy and, in the early stages of economic growth, a kind of "soft authoritarianism."   None of this is particularly Confucian, if we mean by Confucian what is to be found in the Analects and Mencius.  In both texts there is an emphasis on exemplary moral leadership over reliance on law and the coercion, implicit or explicit, that stands behind the law.

     For students of Chinese history, this should come as no surprise.  Confucianism is perhaps best understood not as an empirical description of what China actually was, but rather as a moral exhortation to what China should be.  And in big and important ways, in matters of state craft and economic policy, China has historically tended to be more Legalist than Confucian, described in a recent article in The American Interest by Victoria Tin-bor Hui( pdf!).

      There are ways in which Confucianism has been a part of Taiwan’s historical development.  But those effects must be understood in relation to not only the particular historical context of Taiwan, but also in the cultural context of Taiwanese identity and the political-historical context of Legalism.

Sam Crane Avatar

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6 responses to “Confucius in Taiwan, again”

  1. Allan Lian Avatar

    If I understand it correctly, during their times, Confucius and Mencius exhorted rulers not to think of profits – in terms of annexing land of weaker states, or raising taxes on the people for wars (to obtain gains) and to build palaces and grounds of splendor. Let us not forget, that the two sages happened to live during what is known as the Spring and Autumn period, and the Warring States where various rulers think of hegemony.
    Instead, both Confucius and Mencius advised rulers to first enrich the people and then educate them. That would be benevolence and justice on the part of rulers if they did these, since they would not be thinking of their own profits, but loving and profiting the people.
    If a state is poor, how can it be strong? When people prosper, there will be enough to eat, the old can eat meat and wear silk.
    When people are educated, they can learn culture; improve their lives and that of their family manifold, if they wish. If they can read and write, they will know the laws and their rights, and will not be so easily fooled or bullied. (Think of the subprime mortgage mess in the States where certain borrowers were hoodwinked.)
    If an economy is weak or goes into a recession, because rulers had been greedy or corrupt, how can the people really prosper? A change of Rule may well be necessary. In addition, Mencius and probably Laozi would call such rulers, thieves.

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  2. Jonathan Dresner Avatar

    I’ve been running across a number of arguments, lately, that Confucianism could be a sound foundation for modern business ethics — “Corporate Social Responsibility” and the Global Compact movement are big — and I have the same mental block. Confucianism is not anti-prosperity, but neither is it a system in which competitive markets have a comfortable place. It’s all very well to run one company in a Confucian manner (I suppose) but how should it handle competition, negotiation, advertising (there’s a non-Confucian concept!)?
    Be forewarned, though: it’s gonna keep coming back up.

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  3. Tian Avatar
    Tian

    Successfully chinese dynasties had always been outwardly confucianist to win hearts and minds, but in actuality legalist, as innovated by Emperor Han Wu Di.
    http://www.chinese-forums.com/showthread.php?t=1478

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  4. Allan Lian Avatar

    “Successfully chinese dynasties had always been outwardly confucianist to win hearts and minds, but in actuality legalist, as innovated by Emperor Han Wu Di.”
    Tian,
    Every ancient or modern civilization has their share of good and bad rulers. Only history will tell. If the curious want to know why harsh laws were implemented during the times of Emperor Wu, read up on the chapter on ‘The Harsh Officials’ in the Records of the Historian (Shiji). The better ones, similar to Lord Shang the ‘founder’ of Legalism, really thought the laws were good for the state and the people.
    History told us that Lord Shang suffered from his own laws, was killed and his corpse torn limb from limb. His family was wiped out. And Sima Qian commented, ‘The bad end he finally came to in Chin was no more than he deserved’.
    The only thing I disagree with your above quoted statement, is that like some historians of elite institutions in the UK, you have completely ignored the existence of Daoists – those who followed the teachings of the Yellow Emperor and Laozi – in the top echelons of the Han Court, who had also influenced the Han Emperors in their rule. (Think of Zhang Liang and Chi An among others)
    If our teachers have been wrong or did not do proper homework, can earnest and sincere students wholly blame them on our own inadequate understanding of a subject? If teachers seemingly make the same ‘mistake’ over time, should students rather keep quiet or subtly try to point it out?
    Together with the opening up of free market economies, advocates of globalization, academics and businessmen have clamored for the rule of law in China and other emerging markets. Can we then say that since the Hans ruled by laws, by default, they were two thousand of years ahead of their time!

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  5. David Martin Avatar
    David Martin

    Columbia University Press is selling Burton Watson’s translation of the Analects for just $10 (half price). Was it terribly unpopular?

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  6. J B Avatar
    J B

    This is a little random, but the KMT seems to me to be a bit Confucian and the DPP more Daoist/ folk religionist. The KMT’s monuments (Zhonglieci and other Martyr’s Shrines, CKS Memorial Hall) strike me as unmistakably Confucian. KMT supporters in Taipei are not very interested in the Buddhist/ Daoist rituals that can be seen all over southern Taiwan, and even in Taipei’s green-leaning Wanhua and Datong. Instead, they emphasize traditional culture and education (they draw a lot of support from teachers). Chen Shuibian went to Daoist temples to pray for election victory, while after winning Ma Yingjiu visited Chiang Kai-shek’s masoleum.

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