Ta Hsueh and Chung Yung are two of the central texts of early Chinesethought, encapsulating Confucian philosophy on the Way of moralcultivation and spiritual attainment. Traditionally held to be the work oftwo of Confucius' closest disciples, the books were compiled in theirpresent form late in the second or first century BCE and have occupieda central position in educational and political life for almost a thousandyears throughout the East Asian cultural sphere. The texts focus on theconnection between internal self-cultivation and the external real-ization of one's moral core in the fulfilment of the practical aims ofConfucian life: the observance of ritual, the proper conduct of person-al relationships, and the grand enterprise of maintaining order in thestate and the world.