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A vast and thoughtful compilation, this work gathers the writings of a Song‑era scholar whose mind roamed from the heavens to everyday conduct. The sections range from cosmological treatises on the unity of qi and the patterns of the cosmos, to essays on ritual, music, governance and moral cultivation. Readers encounter clear, systematic arguments that seek to reconcile the ancient Confucian classics with the insights of Buddhist and Daoist thought, presenting a vision of harmony that links the natural world with human virtue.
The opening essay, “Zheng Meng,” sets the tone by probing the fundamental principle of “Great Harmony,” describing how the interplay of yin and yang gives rise to all phenomena. It invites listeners to contemplate the invisible forces that shape seasons, bodies, and spirits, while urging a practical application of these ideas to personal conduct and societal order. The prose is both scholarly and accessible, offering a rare glimpse into the intellectual currents that shaped medieval Chinese philosophy.
Language
zh
Duration
~3 hours (184K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-11-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1020–1077
A major thinker of China’s Song dynasty, this early Neo-Confucian philosopher helped shape later Chinese ideas about human nature, moral life, and the structure of the universe. His writing is remembered for bringing big metaphysical questions into everyday ethical life.
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