This sentence comes from the Ming Dynasty. This sentence was said by Fang Xiaoru in the Ming Dynasty. Fang Xiaoru (1357 ——1July 25th, 402), a native of Ninghai, was called "Mr. goucheng" because his hometown used to belong to goucheng. When King Xian of Shu was in Hanzhong Prefecture, he named his reading room "Zheng Xue", also known as "Mr. Zheng Xue", a minister, scholar, writer, essayist and thinker in Ming Dynasty.
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Original text:
Fang Ming Xiaoru said: "Anyone who is good at fear must be honest, keep his word to a certain extent, stop acting to a certain extent, occasionally go beyond the rules and never make a big mistake." To be awed and not to do it is to learn to respect and fear, to have a bottom line, and to do something. Confucius said: "A gentleman has three fears, one is afraid of destiny, the other is afraid of adults, and the third is afraid of the words of saints. The villain is not afraid of destiny. " .
Interpretation: Anyone who is worried must have his own meaning, saying that he has any plans, and his behavior is limited. Occasionally, it will go beyond the time and not set a big standard. There is awe in the heart, and there is a limit to the behavior. It is to learn to respect and fear when doing things for people, and to have a bottom line, what to do and what not to do. Confucius said, "A gentleman has three fears: fear of destiny, fear of adults and fear of the words of saints. The villain does not know the destiny and is not afraid. "