Abstract The persistent prioritization of public virtue over private virtue in modern China demands critical re-examination. From a hermeneutical perspective, the balance between public and private virtues necessitates a recalibration. This recalibration must be grounded in evolving socio-political conditions. The ancient-modern transformation constitutes the fundamental prerequisite for analyzing the status of public and private virtues. Within the classical paradigm, the primacy of private virtue was axiomatic; within the modern framework, the precedence of public virtue is incontrovertible. The modern condition precludes direct extrapolation from private to public virtue. The traditional Confucian methodology of conceptualizing virtue’s “public nature” through individual moral cultivation necessitates transition to a modern framework of differentiated public and private virtues, though the social ethical efficacy of private virtue and the political ethical functionality of public virtue must be discretely validated. This phenomenon transcends simple Chinese-Western comparative analysis, demanding comprehension through the lens of historical transformation. The bifurcation of public and private virtues represents a universal human condition rather than a regionally specific experience.
Jiantao Ren (Wed,) studied this question.