The Analects is the foundational text of Confucian philosophy: a collection of sayings, conversations, and anecdotes attributed to Confucius and his disciples, compiled in the generations after his death. Organised into twenty books, it covers the full range of his thought — from personal self-cultivation and filial piety to ritual propriety, humaneness (ren), and the moral basis of good government. The Master speaks in aphorisms, dialogues, and brief portraits of character, teaching by example as much as by argument. More than any other single work, the Analects shaped Chinese civilisation and, through it, the cultures of East Asia. It remains one of the most widely read philosophical texts in human history.
Full Text10 chapters · Public domain
1
Learning and Self-Cultivation
~10 min
›2
Rites and Humaneness
~11 min
›3
The Disciples
~14 min
›4
The Master's Ways
~13 min
›5
Words, Caution, and Ceremony
~15 min
›6
Grief, Loss, and Humanity
~17 min
›7
Government and Righteousness
~21 min
›8
The Superior Man and Social Order
~16 min
›9
Virtue Under Pressure
~14 min
›10
Disciples on Virtue
~11 min
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