Philosophy: Eastern Philosophy: Confucius, Buddhism, and Daoism
Comparing major ideas from Confucianism, Buddhism, and Daoism
Philosophy: Eastern Philosophy: Confucius, Buddhism, and Daoism
Comparing major ideas from Confucianism, Buddhism, and Daoism
Philosophy - Grade 9-12
- 1
Confucius taught that a well-ordered society begins with moral individuals and respectful relationships. Explain the idea of filial piety and describe why it was important in Confucian thought.
Think about how behavior inside the family might shape behavior in the wider community.
Filial piety is respect, care, and duty toward one's parents, elders, and ancestors. In Confucian thought, it was important because the family was seen as the foundation of society, and respectful family relationships helped create social harmony. - 2
The Five Relationships in Confucianism include ruler and subject, parent and child, husband and wife, older sibling and younger sibling, and friend and friend. Choose two of these relationships and explain what responsibilities each side has.
In the parent and child relationship, parents should guide and care for their children, while children should show respect and gratitude. In the ruler and subject relationship, the ruler should act with wisdom and justice, while subjects should be loyal when the ruler acts morally. - 3
Confucius emphasized the concept of ren, often translated as humaneness or benevolence. Explain what ren means and give one example of how a person could practice it in daily life.
Focus on actions that show care for other people.
Ren means acting with kindness, empathy, and concern for others. A person could practice ren by helping a struggling classmate, treating others with respect, or choosing fairness over selfishness. - 4
Buddhism begins with the Four Noble Truths. Summarize the Four Noble Truths in your own words.
The Four Noble Truths teach that life includes suffering, suffering is caused by craving and attachment, suffering can end, and the way to end suffering is to follow the Eightfold Path. - 5
Explain the Buddhist idea of attachment. Why does Buddhism view attachment as a cause of suffering?
Consider how change affects things people want to keep forever.
Attachment is clinging to desires, possessions, people, or outcomes as if they can provide lasting satisfaction. Buddhism views attachment as a cause of suffering because everything changes, so clinging to temporary things leads to disappointment, fear, and frustration. - 6
The Eightfold Path includes right understanding, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration. Choose three parts of the Eightfold Path and explain how they could guide ethical behavior.
Right speech could guide a person to avoid lying or harmful words. Right action could guide a person to avoid harming others and to act with compassion. Right mindfulness could help a person notice emotions and make thoughtful choices instead of reacting carelessly. - 7
Daoism often emphasizes living in harmony with the Dao, or the Way. Explain what the Dao means and why it is difficult to define completely.
Think about the difference between directly experiencing something and describing it in words.
The Dao means the natural way or underlying order of reality. It is difficult to define completely because Daoist thought sees the Dao as deeper than ordinary language, and any simple definition limits what is beyond fixed categories. - 8
Explain the Daoist concept of wu wei. Give one example of wu wei in action.
Wu wei means effortless action or acting in harmony with the natural flow of events rather than forcing outcomes. An example is a skilled athlete, musician, or artist who performs smoothly through practice and awareness instead of tense overthinking. - 9
Compare Confucianism and Daoism in their views of social order. How do their approaches differ?
One tradition focuses more on duties and roles, while the other focuses more on natural balance.
Confucianism emphasizes social roles, rituals, education, and moral duties as ways to create order. Daoism is more skeptical of rigid rules and encourages simplicity, naturalness, and harmony with the Dao rather than forcing society into strict patterns. - 10
Compare Buddhism and Daoism in how they respond to desire and striving. Identify one similarity and one difference.
A similarity is that both Buddhism and Daoism warn against being controlled by restless desire and excessive striving. A difference is that Buddhism focuses on overcoming attachment through the Eightfold Path, while Daoism emphasizes returning to natural simplicity and acting in harmony with the Dao. - 11
Read the statement: A good person should improve the world first by improving personal character and fulfilling duties toward others. Which tradition does this statement most closely match: Confucianism, Buddhism, or Daoism? Explain your answer.
Look for clues about character, duty, and relationships.
This statement most closely matches Confucianism because Confucianism emphasizes moral self-cultivation, proper conduct, and fulfilling duties within relationships as the basis for a harmonious society. - 12
A student says, These traditions are all the same because they all teach people to be good. Write a response that explains why this statement is too simple. Include at least one key idea from each tradition.
The statement is too simple because the traditions define the good life in different ways. Confucianism emphasizes moral character, ritual, and social responsibility. Buddhism focuses on understanding suffering, reducing attachment, and following the Eightfold Path. Daoism emphasizes harmony with the Dao, simplicity, and wu wei.