
Reading Guide
by Liang Qichao
About This Novel
I think that a Chinese who has received a middle school education or above should read several very important books in his country... Mr. Shao. However, when reading ancient books today, the first thing is that it cannot arouse interest; the second thing is that there is not much time to immerse oneself in studying among the vast books; the third thing is that it takes patience and time to read it reluctantly, but it is also difficult to get the gist. ... If you want to remedy this shortcoming, books such as "Problems Solved by Essential Books" or "Reading Methods of Essential Books" cannot but be said to meet the urgent requirements of the times. Although I haven't done a good job in these articles, I finally want to add a little fun and save a little energy for young people on this road. --Liang Qichao. About the author Liang Qichao (February 23, 1873 - January 19, 1929) was a representative figure of modern China's reformers, an ideological enlightener in modern China, a great social activist, and was called the pride of the public opinion circle by his time. He is also a heavyweight scholar and one of the four professors of the School of Chinese Studies at Tsinghua University in the early Republic of China. His articles are full of discussion, majestic and unrestricted, and often emotional and highly motivating. His representative work "Young China" has influenced and inspired several generations of Chinese people. Liang Qichao is recognized as an encyclopedic figure in Chinese history, and one of the rare figures who can still make great achievements in academic research after retiring from the political stage. Introduction: "Reading Guide" is a collection of Mr. Liang Qichao's "Essentials of Introductory Books on Chinese Studies and Their Reading Methods" and "Essential Books and Their Reading Methods". The former introduces basic Chinese classics, explains the characteristics and reading methods of each book, and the text is simple and concise. The latter was a lecture note for the "Summary of Groups of Books" he taught at Tsinghua School, and gave a systematic introduction to classics such as The Analects of Confucius, Historical Records, Zuozhuan, and The Book of Songs. In addition, the appendix also includes several texts such as "Two Main Roads to Governance". The author talks about many personal reading experiences in the book, which still have important enlightenment significance for us today.
What Readers Think
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Official(5)Scraped 7d ago
Good reading, good reading, good reading, good reading.
. . . . . .
Master, profound knowledge! !
Reading method
This book taught me how to read!
can't read
Illiterates can't understand
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 7d ago
Good reading, good reading, good reading, good reading.
. . . . . .
Master, profound knowledge! !
Reading method
This book taught me how to read!
can't read
Illiterates can't understand
