The Analects – Chapter 155 (7.7). Confucius’ principle of education without discrimination

7.7
The Master said, “From the very poorest upwards – beginning even with the man who could bring no better present than a bundle of dried flesh – none has ever come to me without receiving instruction.”

子曰:「自行束脩以上,吾未嘗無誨焉。」

Notes

Confucius said: “I have never denied instruction to anyone who offered even minimal token of sincerity in learning.”

This statement from the Analects embodies Confucius’ revolutionary educational principle of “education for all without discrimination”. With minimal symbolic requirement — a bundle of dried meat that even ordinary families could afford — Confucius shattered the ancient barrier that limited education to the aristocracy, making this declaration a landmark for popularized education in Chinese history.

“To silently store knowledge in my mind, to never tire of learning, and to never grow weary of teaching others – what of these have I truly achieved?”(Analects 7.2)

“Never growing weary of teaching others” is the attitudinal cornerstone of “never refusing to teach anyone”. Confucius maintained a patient and dedicated attitude toward all earnest seekers of knowledge, never slacking off because of a student’s family background or natural aptitude. This was the key to the implementation of his educational philosophy.

The dried meat was never tuition but a symbol of learning sincerity. As Confucius stated: “The noble person seeks the Way, not material gain”. This practice broke the millennia-old monopoly of “education confined to officials” where commoners were denied schooling.

“Education knows no class distinctions.”(Analects 15.39)

Education should be accessible to everyone, regardless of social status, wealth, ethnicity, or intellectual ability.

This is the overarching guiding principle behind the maxim “To anyone who brings me even a small gift of dried meat as a token of respect, I have never refused to teach”. The bundle of dried meat (shu xiu) was merely a symbol of a student’s sincere desire to learn, not a threshold to screen people based on their social identity. Confucius’ true proposition was to break down class barriers and make education available to all who were willing to learn. Together, these two tenets form the core of his educational thought of equality.

Among his disciples, Yan Hui (extreme poverty) and Zilu (humble background) became exemplary scholars.

“A handful of rice to eat, a gourdful of water to drink, living in a mean street – others would have found it unendurably depressing, but to Yan Hui’s cheerfulness it made no difference at all….(Analects 6.11)

Two millennia later, Confucius’ words still remind us: Education’s essence is “enlightening minds” not “reinforcing hierarchies”; true educators forever remain open to all with sincere hearts for learning.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *