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It is not Tang Wu but thin Zhou Kong. The more famous it is, the more natural it is. Which ancient person are you talking about?

Referring to Ji Kang

"It is not about soup and martial arts, but thin Zhou Kong, and it is beyond the name and teaching to let nature take its course."

If it is not used here, it means to belittle the discussion. Thin is used the same way. Tang Wu refers to Shang Tang, the founding king of the Shang Dynasty, and King Zhou Wu, the founding king of the Zhou Dynasty. Zhou Kong refers to the great sage and loyal minister Zhou Gongdan of the Zhou Dynasty and the great Confucius. Mingjiao refers to Confucianism (Confucianism). This sentence means that (this person) despises (respected by Confucianism) virtuous kings such as Shang Tang and King Wu of Zhou, and sage and loyal ministers such as Zhou Gong and Confucius, and despises and ignores Confucianism. rules and ideas, but do whatever you want and do whatever you want.

What is admirable about him: Among the "Seven Sages of the Bamboo Forest", Ji Kang is "highly emotional and far-sighted, straightforward and far-sighted", "extensive in various skills, special in silk and bamboo", and at the same time, "straight-tempered" "In a narrow place, there are many places that are unbearable" and "He has strong intestinal ailments, which will happen when trouble arises." This is destined to his special character of "not being strong and weak, but being weak in Zhou Kong. He goes beyond the famous teachings and lets nature take its course." It is also doomed that he " The tragic life of "On the verge of death, I look for my shadow and ask for my piano".

Ji Kang, a famous scholar who "watched flying giants and waved five strings in his hand", in the chaotic era of "the Wei and Jin Dynasties, when there were many stories in the world and few famous scholars were complete", he was "resisting against the ancients and willing to do whatever he wanted". "What he admires" and "aims to keep simplicity and cultivate integrity", he indulges in dissolute ways to avoid disaster; he writes twists and turns to vent his dissatisfaction.

In the tinkling sound of the iron, there is the pride of the world; in his winding and deep valley, there is the transcendent mystery; in his sad and desolate "Guangling San", there is the eternal spirit. The legacy and determination. Everything is silently silent in history, created by nature, and transformed into immortals.