Han Feizi's famous sayings are as follows:
A thousand-mile embankment is destroyed by an ant nest - "Han Feizi Yu Lao"; flashy and unreal, empty and useless - "Han Feizi is hard to say"; desire Haste makes waste - "Han Feizi's "Wai Chu Shuo" above left); Don't nitpick but look for small flaws - "Han Feizi's General Theory"; Win without arrogance, lose without resentment - "Shang Jun Shu Zhi Zhi".
Extended information:
Han Fei (about 280 BC - 233 BC), also known as Han Feizi, was a native of Xinzheng, South Korea (now Henan) in the late Warring States Period. Ancient Chinese thinker, philosopher and essayist, representative of the Legalist school.
Han Fei’s thoughts on the rule of law are based on the evolutionary view of history as the theoretical basis for the implementation of the rule of law, the establishment of a unified feudal monarchy as the ideal and goal, and “ruling the country by law” as his thought. The core of the theory uses materialist epistemology as his weapon for observing things and fighting. They are organically connected and integrated, forming Han Fei's relatively complete ideological system.
Han Fei’s works summarized the experience of early Legalism and formed a political ideological system that combines law, technique and momentum with law as the center, and became the culmination of Legalism’s extensive learning from the strengths of others. Han Fei emphatically summarized the thoughts of Shang Yang, Shen Buhai and Shen Dao. Shang Yang, Shen Dao, and Shen Buhu respectively advocated emphasis on law, emphasis on power, and emphasis on technique, each with its own characteristics. Han Fei proposed the idea of ??closely integrating the three.