[Valid RSS]
Mr. Keatley's Primary Source PodCast
THE source for primary sources in Mr. Keatley's World History class.
 

Categories

podcasts

Syndication


Archives


Keyword Search



November 2009
S M T W T F S
     
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930


January

December

� 

This reading is from The Analects of Confucius, translated by Arthur Waley. 

Confucius was born in 551 B.C.E.  A philosopher of life and government, he hoped that his moral Way would essentially restore to Chinese society the values and practices of the age of the duke of Zhou, a twelfth-century B.C.E. leader whom Confucius deeply admired. For his efforts, posterity accorded him the elegant title Kong Fuzi (Kong the Philosopher), which Western scholars have Latinized into Confucius. He died in 479.

Confucius claimed to possess no special genius or knowledge. He simply saw himself as someone who revered the old ways and followed them zealously. As far as we know, nothing he wrote or edited survives. Early Confucian disciples, however, managed to preserve several sayings ascribed to Confucius and his immediate pupils. In time these were gathered into a book known as The Analects (Lun Yu). We do not know which of these maxims Confucius actually uttered, but collectively they provide us with the best available view of Kong Fuzi's teachings as remembered by those who knew and followed him.

There is no question that much of what Confucius taught was already part of Chinese culture. However, he took such traditional values as filial piety (respect for ones parents and ancestors) and propriety (regard for proper decorum) and turned them into moral principles. He insisted that human beings are moral creatures with social obligations. He also believed that humans, or at least men, are capable of perfecting themselves as upright individuals. His ideal moral agent was the superior man (zhunzi) who cultivated virtue through study and imitation of the moral Way of the past. As you study the following selections, note the role that propriety (li) plays in Confucius's system. For him propriety meant much more than good manners or proper etiquette. It was the primary interior quality that set the superior man apart from all other humans.

For a transcript of the reading please go to Mr. Keatley's Primary Source Page.
Direct download: Confucianism.mp3
Category: podcasts -- posted at: 7:23 AM
Comments[0]

This reading is from "The Papyrus of Ani," translated by E.A. Wallis Budge.

Morality is a part of culture, a large part of culture. The early civilizations were not monkeys in caves they were fully formed Homo Sapiens sapiens with as much, if not more, capacity for thought than you or I.

The Egyptian Book of the Dead is an insight into that morality just as the Koran, Torah, Bible, and other works are for us today.

For a transcript of the reading please go to Mr. Keatley's Primary Source Page.

Direct download: Egyptian_Book_of_the_Dead.mp3
Category: podcasts -- posted at: 10:45 AM
Comments[0]

This Podcast is from Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament, 3rd edition. Edited by F.A. Speiser and James B. Oritchard.

This short reading attempts to show some of the imbalances in this law system. The credo eye for an eye is true but only if you can see level with the person you offended or were offended by. The treatment of women, slaves and the poor under the Code are very interesting to say the least.

Here you will find Codes 215-220, these deal with surgeons and how they must bill a patient and the penalty for "messing up."

Please check out the transcript of this reading located at Mr. Keatley's Primary Source Page.

Direct download: Code_of_Hammurabi.mp3
Category: podcasts -- posted at: 10:38 AM
Comments[0]