
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


What is ritual really for? In this episode, four passages reveal why Confucius cared less about jade, silk, bells, and drums — and more about the bonds that wholehearted participation creates.
We trace the meaning of 禮 (ritual) and 約 (keeping in bounds) through the Analects, take a detour into the 17th-century Chinese Rites Controversy — when Jesuits and the Pope clashed over whether Confucianism was a religion — and put Confucius and Pope Clement XI side by side on what it means to participate in a ritual.
Along the way: why drum machines didn't kill dancing, what a bar mitzvah can teach us about bonds, and how a river without banks becomes a swamp.
Follow along with the episode guide at analects.net.
By Elliott BernsteinWhat is ritual really for? In this episode, four passages reveal why Confucius cared less about jade, silk, bells, and drums — and more about the bonds that wholehearted participation creates.
We trace the meaning of 禮 (ritual) and 約 (keeping in bounds) through the Analects, take a detour into the 17th-century Chinese Rites Controversy — when Jesuits and the Pope clashed over whether Confucianism was a religion — and put Confucius and Pope Clement XI side by side on what it means to participate in a ritual.
Along the way: why drum machines didn't kill dancing, what a bar mitzvah can teach us about bonds, and how a river without banks becomes a swamp.
Follow along with the episode guide at analects.net.