Planning things depends on people, achieving things depends on heaven" is common sense in practice. What is needed for its "correctness" is not demonstration or refutation first, but understanding, how to use philosophical methods and start from the basic principles of materialism. To understand it.
Things, plans, things, being, people,
Cheng, and heaven, how should they be defined in materialist philosophy?
In fact, there are many schools of materialist philosophy, and they are very different, and even the understanding of "materialism" is different. In this context, this question is actually a false question, even if it is only based on a certain school of theory! There is no school that has sufficient categories and concepts to accurately and rigorously define "strategy, things, existence, people,
achievement, and heaven", especially "people".
Philosophy is difficult. There is also a famous saying in aesthetics: (Discussion) Beauty is difficult. Knowing what is difficult should be a criterion for getting started in philosophy.
If you understand it in a specific context. The specific abstraction of the above daily vocabulary seems to be able to bypass the difficulty of "accurate and rigorous definition". In this context, according to my philosophical opinion: "thing" is an objective reality, and "strategy" is a kind of rational subjectivity. Activities, "things" are the interactive process of subjective and objective reality that "people" actively initiate and strive to control with purpose, "being" is determined by, "people" are value judges, rational subjective actors and subjective (purpose) ) Seen objectively,
"Achieving things" means the realization of the goals of "things" and "people", and "heaven" is the overall objective reality and its power. Based on this assumption, the following is the analysis of "making things happen". The proposition that success depends on people and on heaven.