“The difficult things in the world must be done with ease, and the great things in the world must be done with details” (Sutra 63). However, although the qualitative changes of things originate from the beginning of changes in things, even though the changes in things begin very early. It is important and the easiest to control - "It is easy to maintain when it is stable, easy to plan when it is not showing signs, it is easy to be destroyed when it is brittle, and it is easy to scatter when it is small" (Sutra 64) - but because of its stage, "it is easy to greet it without seeing its head, and then follow it" "You cannot see what is behind you" (Sutra 14), "You cannot know the end of it" (Sutra 59), and it is the least likely to be noticed by people and is often ignored by people. Therefore, Lao Tzu reminds people over and over again that they should be cautious and "cautious at the end as at the beginning", " "If you are wading through rivers in winter, you are as if you are afraid of your neighbors" (Sutra 15). We must pay attention to the subtle changes in things, guard against minor changes, and be prepared for disasters. Therefore, "take care of things before they happen, and treat them before they are chaotic" (Sutra 64). We must pay attention to the accumulation of quantity. , be down-to-earth and start bit by bit, oppose self-reliance and eagerness for success, and understand the truth of "no matter how big or small... a picture is more difficult than it is easy, and it is greater than its details" (Sutra 63). Lao Tzu also believed that things are most vital and promising when they remain in their initial state of change, just like in the infant stage of life, not only are the vitality the strongest, but they are also the most protected, so he happily issued The emotion of "I am alone without warning, like a baby without a child... I am unique from others, but I value my food from my mother."
Seek common ground while reserving differences. In the book "Zhuangzi", ideal politics is described as a politics in which "the king is like a branch and the people are like wild deer". Legalists believe that the most important thing for a harmonious society is that everyone is uniform in front of legal rules, without exception. Correspondingly, politics means implementing severe punishments and laws, taking the will of the country and the monarch as the will, taking the right and wrong of the law as the right and wrong, and letting people sacrifice their private lives to serve the public and sacrifice themselves to serve the king.