Good words: sorrow born from depression, excessive intelligence, silence, supreme happiness, unsettled blood, swallowing a mouthful, obeying nature, destroying vitality, dripping with interest.
Good sentences:
1. Mortals become more and more numb as they get older. You are no longer as curious and interested as three or five-year-old children.
2. The habit of reading is to find an interest in learning, which can be used to focus on in one's leisure time. There are endless books to read, and many books are not worth reading once, so you must choose carefully.
3. In a purely rational world, there can only be law but not morality. Even if we talk about morality, it is morality based on reason, not morality on the heart. The former is forced by external forces, while the latter is motivated by true feelings. , The morality that asks reason but not the heart can only restrain human beings but cannot bring them happiness. Although norms are different from facts, they cannot but be based on facts.
4. First, any book worth reading must be read at least twice. The first time you read it, you must read it quickly, focusing on the main idea and characteristics of the whole article. The second time you need to read it slowly, you need to evaluate the content of the book with a critical attitude. Second, after reading a book, you must take notes on the outline, exciting points, and your own opinions. Taking notes not only helps you remember, but also forces you to be careful and stimulates your thinking.
5. In short, sorrow comes from depression, and the way to relieve it is to vent it; depression is due to stillness, and the way to vent it is to move.
Zhu Guangqian's "12 Letters to Youth":
Zhu Guangqian is a famous modern and contemporary aesthetic master, literary theorist, educator, and translator. He spent a long time perceiving beauty, studying beauty, and practicing beauty.
He exchanges sincerity for sincerity and likes to be friends with young people, but he is also sober, self-possessed, calm and rational. In "12 Letters to Youth", he affectionately addresses young readers and friends he has never met before, starting with "friends" and ending with "your friends." He once wrote in "Talking about Beauty": "Survive like an adult, live like a child." Even if the social environment is too dangerous, no matter how complicated the interpersonal relationships are, he never loses his sincerity and sincerity, and maintains his childlike innocence and innocence. Interesting, "Use the spirit of transcending the world to do the business of joining the world."