Mozi (Mo Tzu, or Micius) who preaches…
477 BCE to 334 BCE
Mozi (Mo Tzu, or Micius) who preaches pacifism and universal love in China, establishes a dialectical method of argument.
Chinese philosopher Lao-tze, the probable author of the “Tao-te Ching” anthology, formulates Taoism as a religion.
The oldest surviving Chinese literature dates from this age, as does the emergence of three important schools of philosophy: Confucianism, Taoism (Daoism), and Legalism.
Chinese education, largely conducted in private homes, is shaped for the most part by four schools of thought: Confucianism, Legalism, Mohism, and Taoism.
People
Groups
Qi (Shandong), (Chinese) state of
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Jin, (Chinese) state of
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Yan, (Chinese) state of
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Lu, (Chinese) state of
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Zheng, (Chinese) state of
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Qin, (Chinese) state of
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Chinese Kingdom, Zhou, or Chou, Eastern Dynasty
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Yue, (Chinese) state of
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Chu (Chinese state)
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Confucianists
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Zhongshan, (Chinese) state of
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Han, Chinese state of
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Zhao, (Chinese) state of
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Taoism
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Wei (also Liang), (Chinese) state of
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