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her home works is .....................

describe the major belief of confucianism,daoism,and buddhism,and explain how these system have influeced east asian culture




i've tryed really hard i'm at my friends house i can afford a computer so i'm using her's anyways her reportdue tomorrow it is mandtory folks so please give any facts she only ten thanks for help a mommy out and whoever has the best answer i'll be glad to reward the ten points to.

2006-10-26 13:11:17 · 18 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Homework Help

my daughter is in 10 in the 5th grade she smart and she goes to public shool with smart kids like her the teacher are caring understand and VERY STRICT WHEN IT BOILS DOWN TO LEARNING and if you don't turn in you homework you might get in serious trouble ,my daughther can not have tjhat she;'s been on the honor roll 17 times she class president and plays on the orchestra i will not let one miss assignment messs her over i'm trying to get her to particpate in gymnastics to or secrtnize swimmming/diving but anyways she must get va vgood grade and go through schoolm asc12th grade valedictorin

2006-10-26 13:33:34 · update #1

18 answers

Start with the sites below:

Confucianism is actually a philosophy of life, not a Religion. The same can be said of Taoism and Buddhism.

Confucius held that Society was made up of five relationships: Those of husband and wife, of parent and child, of elder and younger brother, or generally of elders and youngsters, of Ruler and Minister or subject, and of friend and friend.

In Taoism, Tao, roughly translated as path, is a force which flows through all life and is the first cause of everything. The goal of everyone is to become one with the Tao.

Salvation for the Buddha comes with Nirvana after enlightenment. Salvation from the sufferings on earth, and, most important, salvation from the curse of reincarnation.

2006-10-26 13:31:33 · answer #1 · answered by Richard 7 · 69 3

According to Encarta encyclopedia, Confucianism is centered around "the principles of good conduct, practical wisdom, and proper social relationships... It has influenced the Chinese attitude toward life, set the patterns of living and social value, and provided the background for Chinese political theories and institutions."

Daoism states that "the individual should ignore the dictates of society and seek only to conform with the underlying pattern of the universe, the Dao," meaning the avoidance of anything "strained, artificial, or unnatural." The tenets of Daoism are often espoused alongside those of Buddhism in Asia.

Buddhism's main ideas were contained in the Four Noble Truths. Research these. Buddhism's influence on East Asian culture are innumerable; I won't state them all here. In short, it is the prevalent religion of East Asia.

Once again, most of this information is quoted directly from Encarta; visiting the website would probably help a lot.

2006-10-26 13:27:50 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I took some of this from past school books and papers and only took the major points to try and help. This is a very hard question to put in a 10 years old perspective but here goes. Good luck!

According to the idea of karma in Buddhism, an individual has free will, but he carries the baggage of deeds done in previous lives. A follow the "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you" line of thinking with what are called "paths to nirvana" or to have a better afterlife.
Although Confucianism, Buddhism and Daoism – the dominant traditions of East Asia – have certainly been rivals at one level, it has been characteristic of the living philosophical traditions defining of East Asian culture to pursue mutual accommodation through an ongoing process of encounter and appropriation; hence the familiar expression sanjiao weiyi, ‘the three teachings (Confucianism, Buddhism and Daoism) are as one’. A continuation of this process is presently underway with the ongoing East Asian appropriation of Western philosophy[communism for one big example].
At the core of the classical East Asian world view is the cultivation of radial harmony, a specifically ‘centre-seeking’ harmony which is productive of consensus and orthodoxy. This harmony begins from what is most concrete and immediate – that is, from the perspective of any particular human being – and draws through patterns of deference from the outside in toward its centre.

2006-10-26 13:44:42 · answer #3 · answered by NotSoTweetOne 4 · 1 0

Been there, performed that. My daughter needed to pass as much as her room till she was once competent to do homework. She has even eaten dinner up in her room which she hates. If you allow her win this, it is a enormous loss and can retain. It's no longer only a topic of having a foul grade. It will probably be environment a precedent for the longer term and extra fundamental tasks. My daughter is now eleven and is doing so good in tuition. She comes residence and is aware of that she will be sitting on the eating room desk till her homework is completed. That is after she's had a potty and snack holiday. I could speak to her trainer and ask if she has any issues at tuition that you are no longer conscious of. You additionally might wish to invite the instructor for strategies. At this age, it is a well factor to present to aid in her lecture room in the event that they permit it. It will provide you a way of the way she is in tuition and provide you a few well perception.

2016-09-01 03:12:23 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Start with the sites below:

Confucianism is actually a philosophy of life, not a Religion. The same can be said of Taoism and Buddhism.

Confucius held that Society was made up of five relationships: Those of husband and wife, of parent and child, of elder and younger brother, or generally of elders and youngsters, of Ruler and Minister or subject, and of friend and friend.

In Taoism, Tao, roughly translated as path, is a force which flows through all life and is the first cause of everything. The goal of everyone is to become one with the Tao.

Salvation for the Buddha comes with Nirvana after enlightenment. Salvation from the sufferings on earth, and, most important, salvation from the curse of reincarnation.

2006-10-27 09:06:36 · answer #5 · answered by streetzofla 2 · 1 0

luv2swimd, iupui1976, especially richardho, stop being such bastards. you know, christine might not have the best english. besides, yahoo answers is for HELPING people, if you got nothing else better to say, shut the **** up.

christine, i'd go to wikipedia and askjeeves.com. You can also go to hsilai.com, it is a temple website and is very helpful.
If you have any other questions, feel free to e-mail me.

ps. richardho, get a life. Ive never seen anyone that is such an asshole and bastard like you

2006-10-27 10:37:54 · answer #6 · answered by Sakura_Blossoms 2 · 1 0

confuciasm- i think this one's like success in life stems from a healthy social life in the first place....like if you have family problems or something it'll get in the way of your learning to the best of your abilites and stuff
confucian ethics were the core of education in 2nd century bc...so of course these ethics are still present today in east asia
daoism- basically says that you should let life take its course and not interfere with it

buddhism-is obviously influential today because it's the most common religion found in india i believe...common in china too i think... basically says that suffering is caused by desire, so if you end desire you end suffering and enlightenment is obtained though meditation and right conduct

the only thing i dont kno is how the daoism was influenced east asia today

2006-10-26 13:21:41 · answer #7 · answered by laloookava774 2 · 1 1

First of all, one of your questions say that you're a 3rd grader, now you have a kid that's 10?!

If you're 21 and have a kid that's 10.. how is that possible? 5th graders do not learn about religion; and teachers would not give questions that require the internet or anything other than their history book until they're in middle school. The question itself sounds like high school or college work.

2006-10-29 02:00:52 · answer #8 · answered by Kaitlyn 4 · 2 1

I am in college and this was one of the questions in my philosophy class and I do not think that a ten year old would have to answer this. Maybe you should do your own homework and not try to get others to do it for you under the pretense that it is for your daughter. What kind of mother are you that you are doing your daughter's homework? The point of school is that she learns and she can not do that if you do her homework, not fair to all the kids who do their own homework. Anyways, I do not think this is for a ten year old kid so do your own work.

I just looked at your profile and it says you are 21. so you were 11 when you had your daughter. Just do your own homework, the answers are in your textbook.

2006-10-27 04:30:47 · answer #9 · answered by blu_drgn25 4 · 2 1

This is crap! There is no way that this is a 10 year-old's homework. This is more like late high school/early college kind of material. Although, based on the spelling and grammar in that question, I do think that the question was written by a 10 year-old, probably with some sort of learning disorder.

2006-10-26 15:49:34 · answer #10 · answered by richardhoggard 2 · 2 2

This is pretty hard for a 10 yr old! Also your question is pretty broad. I'd try googling these terms and seeing what you get there. It will no doubt be of more help than whatever anyone here can tell you.

2006-10-26 13:14:26 · answer #11 · answered by I ♥ AUG 6 · 1 1

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