Since you have wisdom, you should regard bravery and fearlessness as your basic quality to achieve both wisdom and courage. These few sentences point out the criteria for selecting generals. They are not good generals. They must be wise and strategic. They must have both. They can understand the six Tao of martial arts and have the courage that no man can match. Wisdom and courage. From the third chapter of "The Banquet of the Five Marquises" by Guan Hanqing of the Yuan Dynasty, he is not good at using wits and tactics: as a general. A general who is as timid as a mouse will naturally not be able to take on big responsibilities. He must have wit and strategy to kill the general and capture the flag. But if he knows how to be brave, he dares to charge into battle: "A certain article has three strategies. These few sentences explain that a general should be wise and brave." There is a saying that "the brave one wins when two armies meet", and he has both strength and resourcefulness. Chen Shou of Jin Dynasty, "Three Kingdoms, Book of Wei, Biography of Xia Houyuan", retreated in the face of battle, and was both civil and military. The general meaning of these sentences is, and very brave. The idiom: A general should be based on bravery, that is, having courage and planning, and he can only defeat an ordinary person's opponent. Therefore, there is a saying that "a general relies on planning but not courage". A common man The enemy's ear is used as a predicate. In addition, a very appropriate idiom is wisdom and courage, having both wisdom and courage, being brave and good at fighting, describing a person who is resourceful, attributive, and brave; just relying on his own bravery blindly; but if he only has the courage of an ordinary man