One of the most important things of legalism was the legal innovation that all people were equal under the law. Lord Shang wrote in The Book of Lord Shang that, “…from ministers of state and generals down to great officers and ordinary folk, whosoever does not obey the king’s commands, violates the interdicts of the state, or rebels against the statutes fixed by the ruler, should be guilty of death and should not be pardoned (Shang & Duyvendak 1928 142).” As Americans we may falsely assume that equality before the law (the driving principle behind our fourth amendment) is a Western concept but here is an early version of that same principle in Ancient China. Another facet of Legalism that aided China and whose legacy influenced China for millennia to come was Legalism’s efficient bureaucracy. During the short life of the Qin Dynasty, the decentralized feudal system was replaced by a central well-disciplined bureaucracy (Shang & Duyvendak 1928 70). Due to this new system, feats that would require the efforts from the whole of China were now possible. In the fifteen years that Qin Dynasty reined, the Great Wall, the Grand Canal, and a new road system was constructed (Peralta 2014). Legalism greatly aided China by administering justice fairly across China and by giving China a strong, central bureaucracy whose legacy still shapes China …show more content…
Legalism brought equality under the law and an effective centralized bureaucracy to China, while at the same time sought to stifle opposing traditional philosophies and oppressed the common citizens. To understand China today, it is vital that one must have a thorough understanding of the ideas and concepts of