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corrected terminology "current script" and "ancient script"; several claims need sources or citations. Unclear where they were taken from. |
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{{More footnotes|date=May 2021}}
{{Confucianism}}
In [[Chinese language|Chinese]] [[philology]], the '''Ancient Script Classics''' ({{zh|c=古文經|p=Gǔwén Jīng|w=Kuwen Ching}}), commonly known as the '''Old Texts''', refer to some versions of the [[Five Classics]] discovered during the [[Han
Historical sources record the recovery of a group of texts during the last half of the 2nd century BC from the walls of [[Confucius]]’s old residence in [[Qufu]], the old capital of the [[State of Lu]], when Prince Liu Yu (d. 127 BC) attempted to expand it into a palace upon taking the throne there. In the course of taking the old wall apart, the restorers found versions of the ''[[Classic of History]]'', ''[[Rites of Zhou]]'', ''[[Yili (text)|Yili]]'', ''[[Analects of Confucius]]'' and ''[[Classic of Filial Piety]]'', all written in the old orthography used prior to the reforms of the [[
==Terminology==
; Current Script Texts
: Confucian classics that were reconstructed from surviving copies and scraps.
; Ancient Script Texts
: These alternate versions of the classics{{
; Forged texts in Ancient Script
: This concerns primarily the rediscovered version of ''[[
; Received Texts
: This term indicates any texts that have been transmitted, overall continuously, from ancient times to the present. This group includes the ''[[I Ching|Changes]]'' and ''[[Classic of Poetry|Poetry]]'', the Current Script version of the ''Yili'', a combined version of the ''Analects'', and the Current Script version of ''History'' with the 25 forged chapters.
==Controversy among new schools==
By the 1st century, a new controversy had begun between these two texts. The "current script texts" are those that had been transliterated into the new orthography back in the beginning of 2nd century BC,{{Citation needed|reason=which texts? Transliterated by whom?|date=August 2023}} either from oral transmissions or from texts that had survived the Qin
The "ancient script texts" were the ones that off and on since the late 2nd and during the 1st century BC had turned up, some discovered in the walls of
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 "current script texts" portray Confucius as a prophet or "uncrowned king" that should have received the [[Mandate of Heaven]].
The Ancient Script school was rationalistic.
The
Later Han (AD 25–220) scholars began favoring the Ancient Script Texts. [[Zheng Xuan]] synthesized the teachings of both schools.
== Modern interpretations ==
Significance of the
==See also==
*[[Chinese classic texts]]
*''[[
*[[New Text Confucianism]]
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==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
{{Confucian texts}}
{{Han
[[Category:Ancient Chinese philosophical literature]]▼
[[Category:Chinese classic texts]]
[[Category:Confucian texts]]
[[Category:Four Books and Five Classics]]
▲[[Category:Ancient Chinese philosophical literature]]
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