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Máo Suì Zì Jiàn (毛遂自荐)
Idiom Explanation: Máo Suì Zì Jiàn (毛遂自荐) Basic Information Pinyin: máo suì zì jiànLiteral Meaning: Mao Sui recommends himself.Figurative Meaning: Volunteer for a task or recommend one’s own abilities to take on a mission without waiting for others to appoint you. Cultural Background This idiom originates from a famous historical story of the Warring…
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Mencius – Chapter 14.38
Mencius traces the sage Way’s five-century transmission from Yao-Shun to Confucius via direct witnesses and later inheritors. A century after Confucius, he grieves no successor carries the orthodox line, revealing his solemn mission to uphold Confucian wisdom.
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Mencius – Chapter 14.35
Mencius claims curbing excessive desires is the finest way to nurture one’s innate good heart. Few desires let people retain most original virtue, while rampant cravings dim one’s inherent moral nature, forming a core Confucian self-cultivation principle.
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Mencius – Chapter 14.34
Mencius advises scholars to hold moral superiority over nobles. He dismisses lords’ lavish palaces, feasts and grand hunts as worthless excess. Rooted in ancient righteous principles, he fears no powerful figures who only chase material luxury.