Han Fei or Han FeiZi
Han Feizi, named Han
Fei, was a prince of the royal family of Han during the Warring
States Period (475-221BC). He and Li Si studied with the philosopher
Xun Kuang. Li Si, who later became chancellor of the Qin Dynasty
(221-206BC) under the First Emperor Qinshihuang, felt that he was not
the equal of Han Fei. But Han stuttered and could not present his ideas
in court, which was a serious impediment. He overcame this by
developing one of the most brilliant styles in ancient China.
Han Fei saw the gradual,
but constant, decline of the State of Han and tried on several
occasions to persuade the king to follow different policies, but the
king proved incapable of following his advice. He witnessed with
increasing despair how rulers of his day were beguiled by Ru
(Confucianism) and Mohist philosophers who prattled endlessly about
moral virtues and by roving bands of knights-errant who performed acts
of daring in contravention of the laws. Both caused the increasing
disorder of society and distracted rulers from the real tasks of
governing. "When the state is at peace, rulers support scholars and
knights-errant, but when troubles arise they employ men of arms. Thus
they support people they do not need and do not support those they do
need."
Ultimately, Han Fei's
works made their way to the Qin State where the king, who later became
the First Emperor Qinshihuang, saw them and wanted to meet the man
who wrote them. Li Si identified the writings as those of his
classmate Han Fei, and Han Fei did come to Qin in 234BC. But even
though the First Emperor was pleased with Han Fei's advice, he did not
fully trust him. Yao Jia, who had been censured by Han Fei for his
conduct, played on the suspicion that, being a member of the royal
family of Han, Han Fei could never be entirely loyal to the interests
of Qin, noting "that it is the nature of human feelings that he will
always work for the interests of his native Han and not for those of
Qin." The First Emperor accepted Yao's conclusion and had Han Fei
imprisoned for a crime. Han Fei tried to defend himself, but he could
not get an audience. So Li Si sent him some poison so that he could
commit suicide. The First Emperor later regretted his condemnation of
Han Fei and was going to pardon him, but Han was already dead.
When he died in 233, Han
Fei was still a young man, but he had already established a reputation
because of his brilliant writings. Some 55 of his books survive
collected together in Han Feizi. His main philosophies include:
-- Having Regulations
No country is permanently
strong. Nor is any country permanently weak. If conformers to law are
strong, the country is strong; if conformners to law are weak, the
counrry is weak... Any ruler able to expel private crookedness and
uphold public law, finds the people safe and the state in order; and
any ruler able to expunge private action and act on public law, finds
his army strong and his enemy weak...
To govern the state by
law is to praise the right and blame the wrong. The law does not fawn
on the noble... To warn the officials and overawe the people, to
rebuke obscenity and danger, and to forbid falsehood and deceit,
nothing could match penalty. If law is definite, the superiors are
esteemed and not violated. If the superiors are not violated, the
sovereign will become strong and able to maintain the proper course of
government. Such was the reason why the early kings esteemed Legalism
and handed it down to posterity.
-- The Two Handles
The means whereby the
intelligent ruler controls his ministers are two handles only. The two
handles are chastisement and commendation. To inflict death or
torture upon culprits, is called chastisement; to bestow
encouragements or rewards on men of merit, is called commendation.
http://www.history-of-china.com/spring-and-autumn-period/hanfeizi.htm
http://www.history-of-china.com/spring-and-autumn-period/hanfeizi.htm
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