Seven Worthies

Seven Worthies

Seven Worthies

of the bamboo grove

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Blog2024-09-26T21:32:21+00:00

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Xi Kang – worthiest worthy of the bamboo grove?

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in the grove

Ji Kang – Worthiest Worthy of the Bamboo Grove?

The more I learn about Ji Kang (one of the Seven Worthies of the Bamboo Grove), the more intriguing he becomes. His father died in his youth, but he rose to prominent posts in government and married into the ruling family. He shared his friend Ruan Ji’s distaste for the court and it seems that he really took to heart Zhuangzi’s rejection of division within society. Ji Kang disengaged from the court and joined his friends in the bamboo grove near his home.

But where Ruan Ji managed to escape political danger through cultivating a drunken iconoclastic persona, Ji Kang seems to have struggled to pull off the same trick and eventually met his end through the machinations of a man whom he had offended by brusquely refusing overtures of a political position. Ruan Ji mastered the role of the wise fool, but Ji Kang – it seems to me – was never fully at peace with this approach.

One thing you can say is that Ji Kang had the courage of his convictions. Zhuangzi may have extolled the virtues of the wheelwright or the potter as those in tune with the Way, but Ji Kang was prepared to retrain as a metalworker, shocking the society of his day. He pursued alchemy, too, searching for immortality in spiritual and chemical approaches.

And yet Ji Kang could not remain aloof from the political world he came from. At one point he toyed with the idea of raising an army against the powers that usurped the ruling Wei family, before being dissuaded. His eventual execution followed his intervention in a political dispute involving his friend. Ji Kang was a doer – socially engaged. He […]

May 5, 2021|

Seven Worthies launched

The Seven Worthies goes live

The Seven Worthies site has gone live! We start with just the seven worthies themselves – the group of scholars and officials from the third century AD who assembled in a bamboo grove to discourse on philosophy away from the pressures of court life.

I hope that this list of seven, which gives the site its name and is the inspiration behind it will soon be joined by many more of the exciting-sounding lists from Chinese philosophy and historiography – the eight immortals, the three kingdoms, the four treasures. There’s still more to do on the seven, though. Only Ruan Ji currently has any supplementary information and the same needs to be done for Xi Kang and Liu Ling at the very least.

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May 2, 2021|
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