• The Fall of Jingzhou: A Masterclass in Strategic Deception

    This article takes Jingzhou’s fall as a deception case for Sun Tzu’s rule. Eastern Wu used Lü Meng’s feigned illness and Lu Xun’s flattering letters to lull arrogant Guan Yu, bribed his discontented subordinates, and seized Jingzhou stealthily, costing Guan Yu his life.

  • Feigning Inaction: The Perilous Trap of the Baideng Siege

    This article illustrates Sun Tzu’s tactic “feign inaction when ready to strike” via the Baideng Siege. Modu hid elite troops and showed weaklings, trapping Emperor Gaozu for seven days, a warning against mistaking feigned vulnerability for true weakness.

  • The Art of Deception: Sun Bin’s Masterpiece at Maling

    This article analyzes Sun Bin’s classic deception at the Battle of Maling. He reduced cooking stoves daily to feign desertion, luring arrogant Pang Juan into an ambush. It perfectly embodies Sun Tzu’s maxim of hiding strength to manipulate foes psychologically.

  • The Legend of Shi Yan and the Birth of Decadent Music

    This legend records musician Shi Yan forced by tyrant King Zhou of Shang to create decadent licentious tunes. Blamed for the dynasty’s fall, he drowned himself by Pu River. Centuries later, ghostly melodies of his music were heard there, recorded in ancient historical texts.

  • Tian Ji and the Horse Race

    This story tells how strategist Sun Bin helped General Tian Ji beat King Wei in horse races. By rearranging horse tiers to sacrifice one round for two wins, it illustrates strategic trade-offs and instrumental rationality echoing Sun Tzu’s deceptive warfare thought.

  • Warfare as Instrumental Rationality: Sun Tzu’s “Deceptive Tactics”

    This article interprets Sun Tzu’s “war relies on deception” via Weber’s instrumental rationality. It contrasts his pragmatic trickery with moralistic warfare, citing historical battles to prove deception minimizes losses and secures survival.