Confucius' thoughts on learning and thinking are as follows:
1. No haste, no gain. Haste makes waste; If you see small profits, you can't achieve great things.
2. A gentleman's name must be spoken, and his words must be feasible. A gentleman's words mean nothing.
3. The soil must spread its wisdom, and it has a long way to go. Isn't it important to think that benevolence is your own responsibility? Isn't it far to die before you die?
4. Make friends by writing, and help others with kindness.
5. Being kind is hard to learn, its cover is also stupid, being good at learning is hard to learn, and its cover is also swinging: being good at believing is hard to learn, its cover is also a thief, being straight and hard to learn, its cover is twisted, being brave and hard to learn, its cover is chaotic, and being good at learning is also crazy.
6. You can entrust an orphan of six feet, you can send a life of a hundred miles, and you can't take it away when you are in a big festival.
7. You can talk to others without talking to them, and lose people: you can't talk to them without talking to them. He who knows does not lose people, nor does he lose words.
8. Quality is better than literature, and literature is better than quality. Gentle, and then a gentleman.
9, by, the sea girl knows it! One’s true knowledge lies in recognizing what one knows and what one does not know.
1. I am rich and can ask for it. Although I am a whip-wielding person, I also do it. If you can't ask for it, do what I want.
11. What's the complaint if you seek benevolence and get benevolence?
12. Seeing what is right, giving life in times of danger
13. Knowing it silently, learning tirelessly, and being tireless in the sea, what is it for me!
14. The deceased is like a husband, never giving up day and night.
15. If you don't uphold morality and have a good channel, how can you be a success or a failure?