Confucius was not interested in religious salvation and the afterlife. He had less patience for gods, and Confucius stated that “if we do not know how to serve man, then how can we know about the spirits?” Therefore, if we are not familiar with life at this point, then how can we know about death? Confucius believed that people’s problems could not be solved by supernatural powers, but by their own efforts and knowledge learned from the ancestor’s experiences. Therefore, Confucius believed that praying was a waste of time. Confucius did not speak of things concerning physical exploits, weird things, disorders or spirits. However, he viewed how the Buddhist rewarded and how their punishment after death was an attempt to …show more content…
to 256 B.C.). He was born in northern China in the Lu province into a family of humble circumstances. Confucius began studying under the village tutor, and at the age of fifteen, devoted his life to study. However, in his twenties, he became a teacher and gathered a group of loyal disciples. The values he espoused of education, family loyalty, work ethic, value of traditions, conformity to traditional standards, honoring of ancestors, and the unquestioning obedience to superiors’ remains entrenched in the Asian culture.
Confucius avoided spiritual issues in his teachings. However, he believed in spirits and the supernatural. He was humanistic and rationalistic in his outlook of teaching. Therefore, according to Confucius the core problem of mankind is that the people are not educated and do not know how to conduct themselves properly in the societal roles. Therefore, his main goal is to become educated concerning life and live a moral life. He acknowledges a supreme power that establishes the moral order of the universe. The “Mandate of Heaven” it refers to fate and events occurring in life beyond the control of the