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#Analects #Zang Wenzhong #Liuxia Hui #Political Ethics #Philology

On the Usurpation of Status: A Critical Exegesis of the Analects Passage "Is Zang Wenzhong a Usurper of Status$1"

This article provides a rigorous exegesis of the *Analects* passage regarding Zang Wenzhong’s "usurpation of position," utilizing philological analysis and historical contextualization to examine the political ethics underlying his failure to promote the virtuous Liuxia Hui. By synthesizing evidence from the *Zuo Zhuan* and the *Records of the Grand Historian*, the study elucidates Confucius's profound discourse on the legitimacy of political authority and the moral imperatives of personnel selection.

Tianwen Editorial Team May 7, 2026 5 min read PDF Markdown
On the Usurpation of Status: A Critical Exegesis of the Analects Passage "Is Zang Wenzhong a Usurper of Status$1"

Chapter 11: The Core Proposition of "Position" (Wei) and "Virtue" (De)

In pre-Qin political philosophy, Wei is not merely a job title; it is a repository of duty. Confucius’s concept of "rectification of names" (zhengming) is the antidote to "usurpation." If a ruler is not a ruler, or a minister is not a minister (i.e., not fulfilling the duties of their station), they have "usurped" their role. Zang Wenzhong’s failure to elevate the virtuous rendered his own occupancy of office empty of moral content.