英文摘要 |
This paper reviews ancient Chinese concepts of life from the Shang and Chou to the Ch'in and Han Periods. In general, these changes can be said to be related to a trend of secularization, as well as to the transformation of the political and social structure from a feudal to a prefectural-bureaucratic system. Ancient Chinese society up to the Spring and Autumn and Warring States Periods seems to have undergone a fundamental transformation. In relation to this topic, my previous research examined problems of a structural nature; the current paper brings evidence to bear on the issue through research on the mentality of the period. I divide the concepts of life in this period of over a thousand years into three stages. The first stage covers the Late Shang and Western Chou, when life was thought to come from the ancestors, and the primary method for extending life was to pray to the ancestors. During these four to five hundred years, we find that earlier prayers for life emphasized that of the clan as a group. It is probably only from the middle of the Western Chou (about the end of the loth century B.C.) that individual venerability first became an object of prayer. |