Han Feizi

  • Han Feizi – Chapter 6.4

    Han Feizi argues rulers cannot supervise all personally. Replace personal checks with laws, strict rewards and punishments to control officials and secure power.

  • Han Feizi – Chapter 6.3

    Han Feizi defines the ideal minister: fully loyal, obedient, law-abiding, no private ambition. Reject self-seeking scholars to secure absolute monarchical power.

  • Han Feizi – Chapter 6.2

    Han Feizi argues that private cliques ruin states. Rulers must govern by law, not favor or reputation, to stop collusion and secure power.

  • Han Feizi – Chapter 6.1

    Han Feizi argues no state stays strong forever. Power depends on enforcing laws, not heroic rulers. Corrupt officials break laws and ruin states.

  • Han Feizi – Chapter 5.3

    Han Fei advises rulers to stay calm and non-active. Verify ministers’ words against deeds, enforce impartial rewards and punishments without favoritism.

  • Han Feizi – Chapter 5.2

    Han Fei urges rulers to stay hidden, calm, and unpredictable. Block five ministerial obstructions, eliminate cliques, verify deeds and titles, and secure absolute power.

  • Han Feizi – Chapter 5.1

    Han Fei blends Taoism and Legalism. Rulers stay calm, hide preferences, use non-action, leverage ministers’ talents, take credit, and shift blame to keep supreme power.

  • Han Feizi – Chapter 4.2

    Han Fei cites history: over-powerful ministers and lords cause state collapse. Rulers must enforce strict laws, limit their wealth, troops and arms to keep power.

  • Han Feizi – Chapter 4.1

    Han Fei warns rulers: overly favored ministers and powerful clans threaten the throne. Keep absolute power, limit their wealth and influence to avoid usurpation.