Teachers often use the saying "Love others as you love yourself" in "Mozi" to teach us that we should care for others as much as we care for ourselves.
"Love others as you love yourself" means to care for others as much as you care for yourself. "Love others as you love yourself" is Mozi's idea of ??"universal love". In response to the Confucian saying that "love has degrees", he believes that there is no distinction in love levels, no distinction between thick and thin, closeness and distance.
Mozi is an ancient thinker, so his thoughts are quite open. It is precisely because of this that his thoughts are so advanced. In the early days, he proposed "universal love" and "non-attack" to both A theoretical perspective with love at its core. It is precisely because of this ideological point of view that he is recognized and loved by many people, making him stand out in an era when a hundred schools of thought are contending. "Universal love" means loving all people in the world regardless of hierarchy, distance, or closeness; "non-aggression" means opposing aggressive wars and safeguarding world peace for mankind.
I like Mozi not only because of his ideas, but also because of his style. He only followed his own ideas to make his way in the world, and taught by "loving others as you love yourself" How we love and care for others. It turns out that teachers often use this time-honored famous saying to educate us. Why don't we learn this famous saying passed down from victory in "competition"?