
A History Graduate Student Who Returned to the Western Han Dynasty
by Potato Liu
About This Novel
One day, I will let the word Han spread throughout the world, and let all countries in the world be proud to be pro-Han. I want the friendly civilization of China to spread to all parts of the world, and let light illuminate dark corners. I want all the forces to understand: Anyone who offends our strong men will be punished no matter how far away they are! [Early Years of Hanwu] The Traveler--Bai Mo
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(3)Scraped 3d ago
Please update more, the subject matter is quite good, I hope the more you write, the better ✍
come on
A history novice came here uninvited and wrote it very well.
These five stars give the author the hard work of coding, but I still have to say that I am unhappy.
Why is the protagonist so boastful about immortality when he talks to the emperor? Since the protagonist doesn't have the strength to make money first and make things that can be done in modern times, wouldn't it be more convincing to rely directly on strength to speak? For a Confucian school of thought that relies on imperial power granted by heaven, the protagonist can't argue with modern ideas? Not to mention the deep-rooted thoughts of the ancients, in this era where the official Hundred Schools of Thought still exists, it has not yet reached the point where Confucianism is the only one to be respected. The protagonist now has a lot of maneuverable space, and he can just kick it off the altar... If Confucianism is truly exclusive in a few years, what else can the protagonist do? Do you want to rely on illusory gods and goddesses to start talking about anything you want to do? It is estimated that the more Liu Che will die, the more the protagonist will die... Also, there are many mistakes in saying this. What the protagonist wants to do later cannot be justified, and Confucianism can even criticize the protagonist... In a word, the protagonist's talk about immortality is a poisonous point.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(3)Scraped 3d ago
Please update more, the subject matter is quite good, I hope the more you write, the better ✍
come on
A history novice came here uninvited and wrote it very well.
These five stars give the author the hard work of coding, but I still have to say that I am unhappy.
Why is the protagonist so boastful about immortality when he talks to the emperor? Since the protagonist doesn't have the strength to make money first and make things that can be done in modern times, wouldn't it be more convincing to rely directly on strength to speak? For a Confucian school of thought that relies on imperial power granted by heaven, the protagonist can't argue with modern ideas? Not to mention the deep-rooted thoughts of the ancients, in this era where the official Hundred Schools of Thought still exists, it has not yet reached the point where Confucianism is the only one to be respected. The protagonist now has a lot of maneuverable space, and he can just kick it off the altar... If Confucianism is truly exclusive in a few years, what else can the protagonist do? Do you want to rely on illusory gods and goddesses to start talking about anything you want to do? It is estimated that the more Liu Che will die, the more the protagonist will die... Also, there are many mistakes in saying this. What the protagonist wants to do later cannot be justified, and Confucianism can even criticize the protagonist... In a word, the protagonist's talk about immortality is a poisonous point.









