英文摘要
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The article centers on argumentation in Annotations to Taijitu and Tongshu (Penetrating the Scripture of Change) of Zhou Dun-Yi and On Moderation of Zhang Zai to attempt to restore and construct the thought and structure of Confucius' Dingjing skill in the light of the implementation form of "one settles himself to moderation, benevolence and justice." First of all, to preliminarily prove the existence of the concepts of moderation, benevolence, justice and having no desire in the texts of the Analects of Confucius, the author organized the texts of Zilu and Gongye Chang and found that the concepts of moderation and having no desire could be found in the texts indeed. However, as the aforementioned concepts scattered in each chapter of the Analects of Confucius, the author further interpreted Zhang Zai's On Moderation and found that the argumentation and logic of Dingjing in his work corresponded with Wei Zheng, thus promoted a hint for the development of the article. As a result, based on the analysis of "stressing etiquette before one can stand on one's own legs; one can be granted power when he is not confused" in On Moderation, the author eventually found that "the etiquette corresponding to the time one is thirty when he establishes his stand, and the wisdom corresponding to the time one is forty when he is not confused" was the original implementation form of the Dingjing skill. "Wisdom, benevolence and bravery" that appeared in the later text and the thesis of "one's mind rests in benevolence, loves benevolence when having no desire and dislikes cruelty without fear" in fact connected to "the benevolence corresponding to the time one is fifty when he knows his destiny" and "the justice corresponding to the time one is sixty when he knows truth in all he hears" which thus formed the implementation logic of etiquette, wisdom, benevolence and justice from the age of thirty to sixty. This once again corresponded to the perfect state of Confucius' middle way in "at seventy, one follows what his heart desires without transgressing what is right."
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