Wilderness on Paper

Wilderness on Paper

by Li Muma

Length:
136Kwords
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Updated 6y agoScraped 18d ago
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About This Novel

I was reading in a daze that day, and suddenly I had a whim: I thought that Hegel's "black" is related to the blackness of ink, and the dialectical relationship between black and white is inexhaustible... So I "forced" this short article. Hegel is the master of dialectical thought, and the relationship between black and white in calligraphy is highly consistent with philosophy. For the first time in the history of philosophy, Hegel regarded dialectics as the driving principle of all movements, all lives, and all undertakings, and as the soul of all true scientific knowledge. In the field of calligraphy theory, our ancestors also showed dialectical thinking very early on. Over the past millennium, dialectical thinking has been enriched and developed in calligraphy theory and practice, and has become an artistic totem as vigorous, luxuriant and full of vitality as trees.

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