Written by the disciples or posterity of Confucius
and completed around 475BC during the early Warring
States Period
(475-221BC), Lunyu
(The Analects
of Confucius ) recorded Confucius' words
and deeds. It recorded Confucius' thoughts of society, politics, philosophy,
ethic, education and so on, even his habits and minutia of his life. The book
was mostly written by the disciples or posterity of Confucius, and it offered
the essential materials to study Confucius.
Among the stack of books written for
research on Lunyu in past dynasties, the extant He Yan's Lunyu
Jijie (Interpretation of the Analects) and Zhu Xi's Lunyu Jishi
(Annotation to the Analects of Confucius) are representative works about
Lunyu from the Confucian school. He Yan lived
in the Three
Kingdoms Period
(220-280), and Zhu Xi lived in the Song Dynasty (960-1279).
In
the Qing
Dynasty (1644-1911), Liu Baonan
wrote Lunyu Zhenyi (The Right Meaning of the Analects), adopted the viewpoint from the
Han
Dynasty
(206BC-220AD), the Song Dynasty and the Qing
Dynasty, and further expounded on He Yan's book. Cheng Shude, a scholar of
modern times, compiled Lunyu Jishi (Annotation to the Analects) by
combining more than two hundred books, which has a high reference
value.