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{{More footnotes|date=May 2021}}
{{Confucianism}}
In [[Chinese language|Chinese]] [[philology]], the '''
==Terminology==
;
: Confucian classics that were reconstructed from surviving copies and scraps.
;
: These alternate versions of the classics{{which|reason=which classics?|date=August 2023}} were found after the
; Forged
: This
; Received Texts
:
==Controversy among new schools==
By the
The "
In reality, the burning of the books probably did little more than symbolically burn a few copies of the Confucian books conveniently at hand in the capital.{{Citation needed|date=September 2009}} Many other copies survived elsewhere, and these were available for copying into the new orthographic standard set by Qin and its [[clerical script]] successor which evolved under Han
The "
The
The
Later Han (AD 25–220) scholars began favoring the
== Modern interpretations ==
Significance of the
==See also==
*[[Chinese classic texts]]
*''[[
*[[New Text Confucianism]]
==References==
{{
==Sources==
*{{ Cite thesis | degree = PhD | publisher= University of Washington | title = Pi Xirui and ''Jingxue lishi'' | date= 1994 | last= Aque | first = Stuart V. | hdl = 1773/11124 | chapter= Introduction }}
* {{ cite journal | last= Nylan
* {{ Cite journal| last=Ess
▲* Ess, Hans Van, 'The Old Text/New Text Controversy. Has the 20th Century Got It Wrong?' in: ''T'oung Pao'', 80 (1994), p. 146-170. A study that addresses the views of modern scholars.
{{Confucian texts}}
{{Han
[[Category:Ancient Chinese philosophical literature]]
[[Category:Chinese classic texts]]
[[Category:Confucian texts]]
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