• Art of War Chapter – 9.5

    This passage talks about army management: earn soldiers’ trust before punishment, yet enforce rules after gaining loyalty. Balance benevolent guidance and strict discipline. Consistent daily execution of orders builds harmony and obedient troops for guaranteed victory.

  • Art of War Chapter – 9.4

    This passage stresses army quality beats quantity. Troops should avoid blind charges, focus unified power and analyze foes thoroughly to win. Generals without careful planning who belittle enemies will inevitably be captured.

  • Art of War Chapter – 9.3

    This segment covers comprehensive enemy observation tactics. It interprets signals from terrain, wildlife, dust, envoys, soldiers’ behaviors and camp conditions to judge foes’ motives, morale, supplies and command flaws for accurate battlefield judgment.

  • Art of War Chapter – 9.2

    This passage sets camping standards: pick high, sunny, fertile ground to keep troops healthy. It warns against six deadly terrains, lure enemies near them, and thoroughly search nearby woods and wetlands to guard against hidden ambushes and spies.

  • Art of War Chapter – 9.1

    This passage lays out camping and combat rules for four terrains: mountains, rivers, marshes and plains. It details optimal positions and tactics like striking foes halfway across water. Mastery of such geographic edges enabled the Yellow Emperor to defeat rival tribal lords.

  • Art of War Chapter – 8.4

    This chapter outlines five fatal character flaws that ruin generals: reckless bravery, excessive cowardice, hot temper, over obsession with honor, and overly tender compassion. All these weaknesses trigger military catastrophes, so commanders must guard against such extreme dispositions.