Expand as follows:
Interpretation: Confucius does not talk about weirdness, bravery, rebellion or ghosts. "Machamp is puzzled by the silence of the son" comes from The Analects of Confucius, and the chapter of Shure focuses on Confucius' tireless learning spirit. So it can be explained from another angle: Confucius taught disciples to stay away from ghosts and gods, and gentlemen should take the right path. If you don't worship ghosts and gods with mindfulness, it must be made by ghosts and gods. Confucianism pays attention to the golden mean and takes human nature as the practical criterion. Confucianism believes in ghosts and gods, but does not advocate the pursuit and worship of ghosts and gods. If the just thought fails, the evil thought will dominate.
Interpretation: He once taught his disciples to stay away from ghosts and gods. If you don't worship ghosts and gods with mindfulness, it must be made by ghosts and gods. This is the same as Taoist defense. Confucianism pays attention to the golden mean and takes human nature as the practical criterion. Confucianism believes in ghosts and gods, but does not advocate the pursuit and worship of ghosts and gods. If the just thought fails, the evil thought will dominate. Taoist practice is to seek Tao, not technique, and to make people understand that the magical power of Taoism is only a by-product in the process of enlightenment and should not be indulged.