Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Supplement to Mohism
Texts and Authorship
Like most classical Chinese texts, the Mozi, our main source
for Mohist thought, originally consisted of a collection of
bamboo-strip scrolls called pian, or "books," each of which
was itself a distinct text or series of short texts ranging in length
from several hundred to several thousand graphs. Hence the
Mozi is not a single composition or work, in the modern
sense, but an anthology of diverse writings probably composed at
different times by different writers or editors. No part of the
anthology purports to be from the hand of Mo Di himself.
According to a table of contents compiled during or before the Han
dynasty (206 B.C.-219 A.D.), the Mozi originally consisted
of 71 books, of which 18 are now lost. The 71 books fall into five
groups, which are likely of different origin.
- The first group consists of seven short texts on a variety of
topics, including essays summarizing Mohist doctrines, anecdotes
about Mozi, and a pair of essays that expound what are essentially
mainstream early Chinese views on self-cultivation and the value of
worthy scholar-officials. This block of texts is probably the latest
part of the corpus, dating from perhaps the mid to late 3rd century
B.C. (one book mentions the fall of a king known to have died in 286
B.C. (Lau, 1963)).
- The second group is the core of the collection, comprising ten
"triads," or sets of three essays expounding the ten main doctrines of the Mohist
school, plus two further books containing criticisms of the
Ru (Confucians), some of them perhaps stock rebuttals used
in debates (and all of them hostile, descending at times to petty
slander). Of these 32 texts, seven of the triad essays and one of the
anti-Confucian books are now lost. This block of texts probably
contains the earliest parts of the corpus, perhaps from Mozis
lifetime or shortly after his death around the end of the 5th century
B.C. The essays appear to be of varied date and origin, however, and
linguistic, formal, and thematic evidence suggests that they fall
into several chronologically distinct strata. One clue to their
dates is that Book 18, which falls within a relatively early stratum,
must have been written after 431 B.C., since it mentions a war that
occurred that year (Graham, 1989). A further clue is that Book 19,
which falls within a middle stratum, was probably written well before
334 B.C., because in a list of warlike contemporary states it
includes Yue, which was conquered and absorbed by its enemy Chu that
year. (For further discussion of the stratification of the triads,
see The Ten Triads.)
- Next come six books known as the "Later Mohist" or "Neo-Mohist"
texts. These include two sets of short "canons" (jing), two
sets of longer "explanations" (shuo) of the canons, a brief
but rich text on argumentation and logic, and a collection of
fragments from two or more lost essays on ethics and semantics. These
books treat a variety of topics, including language, epistemology,
analogical reasoning, ethics, geometry, mechanics, optics, and
economics, and are of the highest philosophical and historical
interest. Unfortunately, the texts are the most difficult and corrupt
in all the classical Chinese literature. The best editorial
reconstruction of the canons and explanations is Grahams
(1978), although fundamental aspects of his interpretation of the
texts are questionable (Geaney, 1999). This section of the corpus is
probably chronologically later than most of the doctrinal books. A
reasonable conjecture, based on the intellectual milieu implied by
the texts, would be that they date from the first half of the 3rd
century B.C.
- The fourth group comprises five books that we might call the
"dialogues" or the Mohist "analects." Four are structured mainly as
series of short conversations between Mozi and various disciples or
opponents, perhaps after the model of the Confucian
Analects. The fifth relates an anecdote about Mozi
persuading the powerful ruler of Chu not to attack the weak state of
Song and then, on his journey home, being denied shelter from the
rain by the keeper of one of Songs city gates. These books
reflect a flourishing, well-organized Mohist group that trains
students, recommends them for government posts or dispatches them on
military assignments, and engages in spirited debates with
representatives of rival advocacy groups, such as the Ru
(Confucians). The writers are familiar with parts of the Confucian
Analects, quoting a passage thought to be from the middle
strata of that text. Their social status and intellectual environment
seem more advanced than those implied by the earliest doctrinal
books. Though any estimate of the date of these texts is speculative,
a reasonable conjecture is that they date from the middle to late
decades of the 4th century B.C. It is thus likely that many of the
conversations they report are at least partly fictional.
- The final block of 21 books is devoted entirely to military
engineering and tactics for defending cities during siege
warfare. Ten of these books are lost and others are seriously
corrupt. (A partial reconstruction is presented in Yates, 1980.)
Unlike any other part of the Mozi, many of these books are
organized as replies by Mozi to questions by a leading disciple, Qin
Guli, who is referred to as "Master Qin," suggesting that the texts
might have been composed by his disciples and their followers.
This article focuses on aspects of Mohist thought as presented
in the core doctrinal books (the ten triads, books 8-37) and the
dialogues (books 46-49). (For more information on Later Mohist
thought, see the separate entry for "Mohist Canons.")
The ten triads are ten sets of three essays expounding the
ten main doctrines
of the Mohist school. At the time the Mozi was compiled,
each of the ten doctrines was represented by three identically titled
essays, labeled the "upper," "middle," and "lower" parts of their
respective triad. Six of the triads have been preserved complete;
four are now missing one or two essays. The essays in the six
complete triads are partly similar, running parallel in places for
several paragraphs at a time. Yet the texts also show significant
differences in language, structure, and content. A number of theories
have been proposed to explain the significance of the three versions
of each essay. The best explanation, supported by analyses of both
language and content, seems to be that the essays belong to different
chronological strata and thus represent different stages in the
development of Mohist thought (Brooks, 1996; Fraser, 1998). Later,
longer essays modify and supplement earlier, shorter ones, developing
more sophisticated doctrines, remedying weak points, addressing new
issues, and responding to objections. The different strata were
probably produced by different writers or editors, who may have
belonged to the same or different factions of the Mohist
movement. However, the strata do not coincide exactly with the
division of the texts into "upper," "middle," and "lower" versions,
so these labels do not demarcate three distinct series of texts
attributable to three different Mohist factions.
For a summary of the argument for this conclusion, including a
brief critique of the most prominent competing theories, see the
following supplement:
Significance and Chronology of the Triads
All but three of the essays in the ten triads begin with an incipit
"Our Master Mozi states...," a formula used throughout the essays to
introduce key doctrinal statements. Since much of the content of the
texts is attributed to Mozi in this way, readers have traditionally
been inclined to treat them as generally reliable reports of his
speech and to regard Mozi as the author of all the ideas the texts
present. However, this interpretive approach is undermined by
several points.
First, what is known of ancient Chinese writing practices suggests
that attribution of a doctrine to a historical figure in a Warring
States text is not a sufficient reason for believing that the person
actually espoused that doctrine. Most writing in pre-Han China was
anonymous, and writers commonly placed their own ideas in the mouths
of a venerated teacher or historical figure. For example, scholars
have long argued plausibly that many remarks in the Analects
attributed to Confucius and speeches in the Guanzi
attributed to Guan Zhong were actually written long after their
deaths. Moreover, existing texts were routinely rearranged, modified,
and supplemented by editors and compilers.
Second, the essays in each triad sometimes present different, even
incompatible views that suggest modifications in position over time
in response to changing circumstances, challenges from opponents, and
perceived weaknesses in earlier positions. One essay in each triad is
considerably shorter than the others, which introduce and develop
issues not raised in the briefer text. Often a single thinker will
revise his views over time, of course, and it remains possible that
all the essays express the thought of one man. But on the whole the
disparities between them seem better explained by the hypothesis that
they were composed by different writers and editors working in
different social and intellectual settings. This hypothesis also best
explains significant linguistic differences between some of the
essays (for more information, see the discussion in
Significance and Chronology of the Triads).
Third, in some essays, a significant portion of the argument is not
attributed to Mozi at all, but presented in a narrators voice,
with only occasional citations of Mozis words. This raises the
possibility that the basic structure of the argument is due to the
writer or editor, and not to Mozi himself.
Given these considerations, we cannot safely attribute to Mo Di
himself all of the views expressed in the core doctrinal books, nor,
a fortiori, those advanced in the rest of the anthology. A
more defensible stance is that the doctrinal essays collect together
texts by an unknown number of anonymous Mohist writers, which
develop, refine, or extend basic themes or ideas first set forth by
Mozi. But the available evidence is so limited that we have no
rigorous way of determining which of the detailed statements in these
texts, if any, represent Mozis own views and which are
extensions, revisions, or entirely new ideas introduced by his
followers. Moreover, even if we had some reliable means of picking
out the founders original statements, the other, later material
might well prove to be of greater interest.
For these reasons, in interpreting and discussing the Mozi,
the most productive and defensible approach is probably to set aside
the issue of which parts of the corpus do or do not represent the
views of the historical Mo Di. At the same time, scholarly precision
demands that we not suggest, even indirectly, that the texts are
generally an accurate presentation of the words or views of a single
great thinker named "Mozi," since historically we know this may well
be false. Accordingly, instead of discussing the ideas of "Mozi," a
historical figure whose exact relation to the texts is unknown, we
should discuss the diverse, sometimes conflicting statements of
"Mohist" doctrines, understood to be an evolving set of views
preserved in a collection of texts probably composed by different
persons over many years.
At first glance, the core doctrinal books of the Mozi may
appear to be continuous, unified essays. Closer inspection, however,
suggests that many of them are highly composite texts, produced by
splicing independent short paragraphs together to form a longer
whole. An editor or compilers hand is readily apparent in
places, such as when semi-independent passages are integrated into a
longer essay by repeating a brief concluding formula after
each. Similar paragraphs are often reused in different books in the
same or different triads (Maeder, 1992), and in a few places
distinctive vocabulary strongly suggests that different paragraphs
within the same book are of diverse origin (Fraser, 1998). It is thus
probable that, like the anthology itself, some of the individual
books were not originally written as integral works, but composed in
piecemeal fashion or in stages, the writers or compilers gradually
adding new sections over time.
A common conjecture about the three series of doctrinal essays is
that they represent three separate redactions of a shared oral
teaching (Graham, 1985). Stated in this simple form, this conjecture
is probably incorrect, for three reasons. First, linguistic features
indicate that the theory that the three series are the canonical
texts of three groups of Mohists is probably mistaken (for details,
see
Significance and Chronology of the Triads).
Second, the essays in each triad differ too extensively in structure
and content to plausibly be considered alternative versions of the
same orally transmitted teaching. In general, the three parts of each
triad are not mere variants of each other, but address different
issues and offer different arguments. Third, in some longer essays,
paragraphs that run parallel to a shorter essay alternate with other
paragraphs in which distinctive stylistic and linguistic features are
clustered (Fraser, 1998). Also, topics raised briefly in one essay
are sometimes developed at greater length in another, apparently
later one. These patterns suggest that written versions of some of
the essays were used as sources for others in the same triad, which
supplement and expand on them.
These points make it unlikely that the three essays in each triad
represent separate versions of a single, original oral teaching. The
possibility remains, however, that the essays might be jointly based
on a brief core of orally transmitted material, which was later
written down and augmented by new, written material. Traces of this
oral core might be evident in certain repetitive, formulaic passages
in which two or more of the essays run almost exactly parallel. It is
also likely that long after the Mohists adopted the practice of
writing down their doctrines, some of their compositions continued to
be intended for memorization and oral delivery, especially since some
of the Mohists and perhaps much of their audience were probably
illiterate. Hence even texts that were composed with the aid of
writing may retain the rhythmic, repetitive, formulaic structure
characteristic of oral composition and recitation.
References
- Brooks, A. Taeko, 1996, "Evolution of the Mician Ethical
Triplets," Warring States Papers (forthcoming). (Originally
circulated as Warring States Working Group Note 94rev (1996).)
- Fraser, Christopher, 1998, "Thematic Relationships in the
Mozi Political Essays," Warring States Papers
(forthcoming). (Originally circulated at Warring States Working Group
10 (April 1998).)
- Geaney, Jane, 1999, "A Critique of A. C. Grahams
Reconstruction of the Neo-Mohist Canons," Journal of
the American Oriental Society 119.1: 1-11
- Graham, A. C., 1978, Later Mohist Logic, Ethics and
Science, Hong Kong: Chinese University Press
- ----, 1985, Divisions in Early Mohism Reflected in the Core
Chapters of Mo-tzu, Singapore: National University of Singapore,
Institute of East Asian Philosophies
- ----, 1989, Disputers of the Tao, LaSalle: Open
Court
- Lau, D. C., 1963, Lao Tzu: Tao Te Ching, London:
Penguin
- Maeder, Erik W., 1992, "Some Observations on the Composition of
the Core Chapters of the Mozi," Early
China, 17: 27-82
- Yates, Robin D. S., 1980, "The Mohists on Warfare: Technology,
Technique, and Justification," Journal of the American Academy of
Religion, 47.3, Thematic Issue S: 549-603
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Copyright © 2002
Supplement to Mohism
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy