Lonely Indignation

  • Han Feizi – Chapter 11.5

    The peril of great states of ten‑thousand chariots lies in overly powerful ministers; the peril of medium‑sized states of one‑thousand chariots lies in excessive trust in personal attendants. These are universal troubles for all rulers.

  • Han Feizi – Chapter 11.4

    The difficulty of implementing law and statecraft exists not only in great states of ten‑thousand chariots but also in medium‑sized states of one‑thousand chariots.

  • Han Feizi – Chapter 11.3

    Those who form cliques to deceive the ruler and twist words for private gain are invariably trusted by powerful magnates.Those who can claim military merit are elevated through official ranks and titles; those who cannot win false reputations are strengthened by external state influence.Thus those who delude the ruler and serve private factions gain…

  • Han Feizi – Chapter 11.2

    When powerful magnates control key state affairs, both inner‑palace attendants and outer officials become their tools. Hence neighboring states will not cooperate unless relying on them, so enemy states speak for them. Government officials cannot advance unless submitting to them, so ministers serve them. Palace attendants cannot approach the ruler unless clinging to them,…

  • Han Feizi – Chapter 11.1

    Men of wisdom and statecraft must possess far‑sighted vision and sharp insight. Without sharp insight, they cannot expose private scheming.Men capable of upholding law must be resolute, firm and upright. Without firm uprightness, they cannot correct treacherous conduct.