Who Needs Self Control?

How far today in chase, I wonder

Has gone my hunter of the dragonfly

10th Century Japanese poet
Image Source: Pexel

In previous posts, I discussed virtue and morality and their opposites. I’d like to continue by swinging my lens to the east and set the focus on ancient China and Japan. First in the crosshairs is the Chinese philosopher K’ung Ch’iu translated into Latin by the Italian Jesuit Matteo Ricci and his companion Michele Ruggieri in 1582. Thus we know him as Confucious.

Confucius was the contemporary of Buddha and the Greek philosophers Pythagoras, Xenophanes, and Parmenides. Confucius died in 479 BCE and as a tribute to their master, his students wrote his analects or words of wisdom.

Where the Christian Bible explores the Israelites and later the Gentiles relationship with God and lays down the precepts of righteous living, The teachings of Confucius urge the development of virtue and moral character as a way of creating the conditions for good government and individual character. Sinners and Saints on one side and high moral and low moral character on the other. Probably we could draw some tight similarities between the ancient west and east.

Confucius believed that true wisdom was available to all people who genuinely seek it. The Chinese philosopher was influenced by the even more ancient belief in the Mandate of Heaven from the Tao Te (Tao- the way and Te – virtue or moral character). The analects of Confucius and the Tao Te were both meant to develop moral and virtuous leaders and only such a leader has the right to govern the people.

Once when asked what is wisdom? Confucius replied, “To devote oneself earnestly to one’s duty to humanity.” How far we’ve come in these few 1,545 years. In the wrong direction it may seem. (Note 1.)

In the age of the Samurai of Japan 1185 -1868, the warrior-poets defended the warring provinces against hostile take over and even turned back the Mongol invasion in 1264. They became the highest social class in Japan with the right to do as they pleased with the lives of others.

Their stoic nature and absence of fear belied a deep sense of restraint of the natural and emotional self. They were perhaps the most disciplined warriors on the planet in their day. Inazo Nitobe wrote in his Code of the Samurai, 1905, “Since the very attempt to restrain natural promptings entails suffering,” the Samurai and the people of Japan released their emotional suffering through poetry which is still widely read today.

What were the seven virtues of Bushido, the Samurai code? They were Justice, Courage, Benevolence, Politeness, Truthfulness, Honor, and Loyalty. These are indeed noble virtues for a warrior class or anyone who would dare to be a good citizen of the ancient world or today. (Note 2.)

So why were the Hebrew Israelites always at odds with their laws of purity, right living, and worship of God. Why did the Kingdoms of China fall into ruin through corruption only to fall further from humanity with Chairman Mao? Why were the Samurai disbanded? Why is the largest religion on this angry blue planet, Christianity, an apostasy in the mouths of the disbelievers?

It could be that no culture of civilization, religion, or government in human history has successfully removed our human nature from the forefront of our consciousness. We are ruled by our emotions and obsessions. Self sacrifice for others is not natural, yet the example is plentiful. Righteous government by virtuous people is laughable as an impossibility. We seem to be rotating once again through the death throes of civil unity where emotional urges rule the day.

Through my studies, I finally made peace with the world. I can live a natural life to its logical end and whether the world is virtuous or not will make no difference until wisdom prevails.

Note 1. The Analects of Confucius, Arcturus Publishing Limited, reprint 2024.

Note 2. The Code of the Samurai, Bushido: The Soul of Japan, Inazo Nitobe, 1905, Chartwell Books reprint 2013.

46 responses to “Who Needs Self Control?”

  1. An excellent post, Daniel.

    Why did the Hebrews fall in their right living and worship of God?

    Why did the kingdoms of China fall into ruin through corruption?

    Why were the samurai disbanded?

    Why was Don Quixote who sought a return to the ideals of knightly chivalry and honour considered a fool and insane?

    Probably because as the British writer G. K. Chesterton once wrote, “Original sin (also known as man’s innate sin nature) is the one theological doctrine for which there’s an overabundance of empirical evidence.”

    Which is why Jesus had to die on the Cross almost 2000 years ago (having died in either April 32 AD or April 33 AD thus making either 2032 or 2033 the 2000th anniversary) on Good Friday.

    For if He hadn’t, none of us would make it to Heaven on our own.

    We might be spending eternity roasting away on a rotating rotisserie barbecue spit over open flames 🔥 next to the likes of Joe Biden, Justin Trudeau or Pope Francis.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      Very good points Chris! The question about Don Quixote has always troubled me. I’ve dreamed a few impossible dreams too. He proved you could accomplish a lot with a good suit of armor and a donkey. It appears the story of original sin has played out exactly as described. We can do better. WE know we can, but we are all out of virtuous leaders and in the ensuing chaos, we are left on our own to figure out why there is a strip joint and liquor store next to the Evangelical Mega Church.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Oh in answer to the question why is there a strip joint and liquor store next to the Evangelical Mega Church it’s so the pastor doesn’t have so far to walk.

        Liked by 3 people

        1. Hyperion Avatar
          Hyperion

          Brilliant answer. It fits perfectly into the subject of the post. Convenience and pleasure are our most desired state of being. This natural tendency puts us in direct conflict with any precept to the contrary. IMHO.

          Liked by 1 person

    2. Serene Grace Avatar
      Serene Grace

      🙂✝️🕊️

      Liked by 2 people

      1. 🙂✝️ 🕊️

        Liked by 2 people

  2. Yes, Don Quixote did prove that you could accomplish a lot through using a donkey and a good suit of armour.

    One of Orson Welles’ biggest dreams (unfulfilled it turned out) was to make a movie about Don Quixote.

    He wrote a screenplay adaptation of Cervantes’ novel and did some filming over the years but never got around to finishing the project.

    I read Don Quixote on my own (no teacher assigned it to me) back in High School when I was in Grade 11.

    I was inspired to do so by a public speaking tournament I was in earlier that year.

    If I won, I would have won a trip to see the United Nations in New York City.

    However two out of the three judges were from the University of Alberta Faculty of Education (as my dad a schoolteacher pointed out those people have always been stupid) and the third judge was a drama coach.

    All of the other contestants save the winner thought my speech (on Terrorism: The Tragedy of Our Times) had won.

    So did the Drama coach who awarded 1st place to me.

    The two professorial dolts from the Faculty of Education however gave 2nd place to me and 1st place to somebody who gave a long boring speech on Nuclear Energy that sent most of the audience asleep (the last I heard about that imbecile was that he was a high ranking bureaucrat in Canada’s Department of Foreign Affairs under Canada’s 2nd biggest asshole Prime Minister Brian Mulroney).

    During that tournament a Bible believing United Church of Canada minister (rare back then and even rarer today) gave a guest speech on Don Quixote and Christ.

    Talking about how the song To Dream The Impossible Dream (from the musical Man From La Mancha) applied to the life of Christ and how Don Quixote was a fool in the world’s eyes but then so was Christ a fool in the eyes of the world.

    So after having heard that speech I read Don Quixote The Novel by Cervantes and I was always impressed with the figure of Don Quixote.

    To be thought a fool for being honourable and chivalrous.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      I too have a copy of Cervantes book. It reads with perfect clarity even tho it was written in the 1600’s. I believe it to be one of the most read novels in history since it is still in print 400 years later. We often fail to achieve our greatest potential because we are defeated by the doubts, fears, and disbelief of others. Not to mention our own anxiety to try something bold and new. The reality is people are capable of extraordinary things if they choose to proceed with determination and a bit of study.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Very true, Daniel.

        Liked by 1 person

    2. Public speaking made me who I am today. I got lucky. I won my contest and lived like a little celebrity for a while. Oh, the memories! The fame! And yes, the women! It’s been all downhill from there but it was worth it. (You might say I’m one of those who peaked…not in high school…but two years later! I’ll take it! LOL!)

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Hyperion Avatar
        Hyperion

        You were every young man’s dream, George. You tasted the wine of the gods. Now we wait patiently for your stories that we may live vicariously through your adventures. Me? I’m desperately scrambling to keep body and soul together just long enough to spend all the money I saved for retirement.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. You can spend it…but can you enjoy it? That’s the rub, I’m gonna draw retirement in April and I am determined to live long enough to get back every dime the gov’t ever taken. Gonna stay alive outta spite.

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Hyperion Avatar
            Hyperion

            Ha Haaa! Brilliant plan. Make sure you get every dime back and don’t take no digital doge coins.

            Liked by 1 person

        2. I was lucky, and coasted downhill on all the overconfidence and energy I built up from winning early.

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Hyperion Avatar
            Hyperion

            Nothing wrong with that. Sometimes we forget we need a plan for the next stage of life. If you can still shave in the mirror without looking away, you did good. Now let’s celebrate by watching the next generation do all the amazing unlawful things they promised us on social media.

            Liked by 1 person

    3. Serene Grace Avatar
      Serene Grace

      I bet the “1st place winner” who works for the government got his job through nepotism, he probably won through corruption that too. 🤔

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Yes the tournament was sponsored by a group calling itself the Rebekkahs and the Independent Order of Odd Fellows.

        Years later when I started studying Freemasonry, I discovered the Rebekkahs and the Independent Order of Odd Fellows were organizations associated with the Freemasons.

        It might have been that the “first place winner’s father” was a Freemason and the two Faculty of Education profs might have been as well.

        I imagine Freemasons, like Communists, probably taught in various Faculties of Education across Canada and the U.S. to produce teachers who would go out to produce a generation of brainless “woke” youth like we have today.

        Liked by 2 people

        1. Serene Grace Avatar
          Serene Grace

          That’s how the world operates, I’ve heard of the Odd Fellows, I think they’re particularly perverse, actually they all are. I used to think that merit was how people advanced but it’s just who you know.

          Wokeism, radical feminism etc all are Marxist/Communist and essentially luciferean. It’s a wicked, corrupt world.

          I won 2nd place in a writing competition too, but it was a fair contest. 2nd place is cool 🙂

          Liked by 2 people

          1. I did get to attend a mock United Nations Security Council camp in the foothills of the Canadian Rockies that summer.

            So yeah, 2nd place is cool.

            I remember in that mock Security Council, all the nations on it ganged up on Israel.

            Much like real time UN Security Councils.

            Liked by 1 person

            1. Hyperion Avatar
              Hyperion

              The UN Security Council is another association of odd bedfellows. Islamic Extremists, Dictators, Communists, and Liberal Socialist make up the group. Israel, being the moderate bedfellow among the moral defunct, doesn’t stand a chance unless they do better at being odd.

              Liked by 1 person

              1. Israel 🇮🇱 needs to have a sodomite Prime Minister like Ireland 🇮🇪 did for awhile.

                Then they’d become more accepted – at least in the Western world.

                Maybe even less by the Muslims.

                As the gay group Pansies For Palestine 🇵🇸 still finds itself being chased from pro-Hamas rallies.

                Islam ☪️ not showing the same embrace of sodomy as today’s watered down Christian doctrine Church denominations do.

                Liked by 1 person

                1. Hyperion Avatar
                  Hyperion

                  The Sodomite Embrace is fracturing a lot of church denominations these days. There is a definite live being drawn in the church’s and progressive as well as prosperity doctrine is shaping a new religion in what could be called the third reformation. 🤔

                  Liked by 1 person

                  1. Very much so.

                    I think you would enjoy reading the blog I wrote for Easter Sunday yesterday entitled Harvey Tallbanger Throws A Fruit Pie In Joe Biden’s Face Plus A Video of My Favourite Easter Hymn As It Is Sung By A 100 Voice Choir.

                    Liked by 1 person

                    1. Hyperion Avatar
                      Hyperion

                      I will teleport right over 🛸

                      Liked by 1 person

                    2. I had a chapter two or three chapters ago that dealt with the subject of teleportation 🛸 interestingly enough. 😀

                      Liked by 1 person

                    3. Hyperion Avatar
                      Hyperion

                      It seems the collective consciousness of the conscientious is dreaming about getting beamed up outta this place.

                      Liked by 1 person

        2. Hyperion Avatar
          Hyperion

          It was various Freemasons that put together the Revolution in America and subsequently created the government. The Free Masons also designed the infrastructure for Washington DC as well as the financial system. Later they created the education system and now you know why America is as it is. America was built by the people who built Solomon’s Temple and all the castles of Europe. If it were not for Dan Brown, nobody would know this 😏

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Actually Dan Brown must have read a lot of the Bible Prophecy books of the 1970s and 1980s- books foretelling the New World Order.

            Because much of what Brown said was in those books.

            Except for the idea that Jesus Christ married Mary Magdalene and they have a bunch of descendants running around today.

            That idea he borrowed from Baigent and Leigh’s book Holy Blood, Holy Grail and their later book The Messianic Legacy.

            Baigent and Leigh sued Brown for plagiarism and lost- a judge pointing out that if their idea was historical and non-fictional that they marketed it as, then this idea couldn’t be plagiarized.

            If shows the hazards of marketing your fiction as non-fiction like Baigent and Leigh did.

            Liked by 1 person

            1. Hyperion Avatar
              Hyperion

              Definitely! Dan Brown did an excellent job of making up a series of total whoppers of fiction using some real facts here and there to make it juicy but the world loves a good lie and the rest is historical fiction. I wonder if he was the father of conspiracy theories?

              Liked by 1 person

              1. Undoubtedly.

                As the Devil 😈 is the father of factual conspiracies.

                The British writer Malcolm Muggeridge having noted in a statement he made in the 1970s, “The only way a conspiracy theory of history would work is if there actually exists a personal Devil – an immortal supernatural being that has existed over millennia who does the same plans over and over again- just updating them for the age of humanity that he’s currently living in- but the ultimate plan remains the same- to drive God from His throne.”

                Liked by 1 person

                1. Hyperion Avatar
                  Hyperion

                  The mysterious works of Satanic forces can fool the most discerning person.

                  Liked by 1 person

                  1. But especially the least discerning.

                    Liked by 1 person

                    1. Hyperion Avatar
                      Hyperion

                      Oh yes, those poor souls just dive right in the well of doom.

                      Liked by 1 person

      2. Hyperion Avatar
        Hyperion

        I think nepotism is the only way someone can get a civil service job. 🤔

        Liked by 1 person

  3. Someone has to ask the big questions are you’re doing it. I’m watching society and culture drift tend toward entropy…which is the direction everything must go…as we are one with the Universe…but one always holds onto the hope that our consciousness separates us from these physical laws… but it just doesn’t seem to be so. In the confusion, evil sneaks in and manipulates events to make things even worse. Witness, as we destroy ourselves with our own greed and stupidity. I swear I woke in in a parallel cartoon universe and I can’t explain it.
    Spend trillions on education next go around, no wars.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      Well said George. Nothing escapes the forces of entropy. The concept of time is a pure human illusion to help us cope with physical reality and change. The desperate struggle to escape the physical universe and shape our reality into a singular experience has led us to realize we don’t need each other anymore. We were a lawn of manicured grass and lovingly attended trees, bushes, and flowers and then we became an abandoned estate returning back to nature. First the old manor must collapse and return to soil then the wildness of nature can resume without us. I think this is a metaphor of human history. What next? Hopefully as you wrote, education becomes the priority and conflict becomes extinct.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. What ye sow so shall ye reap: we have elected idiots and clowns as a consequence of spending trillions on wars and making education unaffordable for the masses.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Hyperion Avatar
          Hyperion

          Exactly! And we are stumbling with loaded diapers and soiled agendas toward our selected doom, which we paid for with our tax dollars. We’ll all have the last laugh when we’re gone.

          Liked by 1 person

  4. Serene Grace Avatar
    Serene Grace

    Confucius was revered in Korean culture too, but only the wealthy could afford to study philosophy and ettiquette but I think the root message of virtue and respect for elders is ingrained within the culture. Formality (for those older than you) is in the language, so even children learn this. Bowing is also imbedded as a second nature reflex. In Western culture I think chivalry was shown to women and the elderly but now with wokeism it’s viewed as chauvinism. I remember learning about samurai, they started becoming lawless, pirate-like they no longer followed a code of behavior. I have a long-standing grudge against the Japanese culture that allowed for inhumane atrocities against civilians during several wars against Koreans, Chinese especially.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      Thank you Judy for rounding out the message. It is true that as hard as people tried to inact a civil code of virtue and respect, all failed eventually. The Samurai became more like a gang of thieves in the end. The honorific code of the east has begun to slip as western materialism seeps into every crack of society. I think we could learn a lot from the teaching of Confucius as well as other moral codes. Even the Gospel, as powerful as it is, has drained from the hearts of humanity. However, we still maintain the will to pursue righteous living if we choose too.

      Liked by 1 person

  5. “whether the world is virtuous or not will make no difference until wisdom prevails.”

    I agree with this.

    I have not made peace with the world, the world that includes religions, governments, corporations, wars, greed, imbalance, etc.

    I have however, found a peace in myself, where I can live.

    Thank you for this article, Daniel!

    Like

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      You found the true monastery of enlightenment, Resa and it shows in all you share with us. Often we create a living hell within to match the hell outside. I too eschew the worldly existence and live fully with my Calvin and Hobbes cartoon life. I am posting a series of older analects and anecdotes so we can compare the wisdom of others with our own. We don’t have to be Saint Francis of Assisi or Saint Clare of Assisi to learn from them. Confucius was wise indeed but he didn’t have to talk much. Einstein was a real clown with a good sense of humor but spent much of his time alone unlocking the universe. I hope to show that we are the makers of or destiny whether alone or collectively. We can let virtue and compassion guide us or we can let greed and power guide us. They each have widely separated results. As deeply defective as I am, I do try to stay in the light of life.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. It sounds great, Dan!
        There’s a definite lack of light on earth right now. When I look at history, I see lack of light has always been a plague.

        We in the first world have much and many different issues than 3rd world countries.

        All this inequity is a drag on light’s energy.
        Not my fault, not in my backyard, it’s not in the budget, god forbids it…. Man is man’s worst plague.

        Anyway, I’ve found a place, like many, where the light shines though love, compassion, understanding and the arts.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Hyperion Avatar
          Hyperion

          Beautifully said, Resa. I too see the iniquity of humanity and it has indeed been with us from the start. Maybe that is why there are those few people that shine through the darkness and offer the keys to escape it if one dares. Keep shining your light, it is bright, and comforting.

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Thank you! xx

            Liked by 1 person

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