Principles of Living · Bookplate
Wang Yangming
@wang-yangming
“Wang Yangming (1472–1529) was a Chinese philosopher, general, and statesman of the Ming dynasty. He is best known for developing the influential Neo-Confucian philosophy of the unity of knowledge and action and for his School of Mind teachings.”
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The manifesto · 15 principles
Believe that moral truth is universal and accessible to ordinary people, not only scholars or elites.
Respect learning, but remember that books and doctrines are secondary to lived realization.
Use disciplined effort to overcome habits, emotions, and desires that distort judgment.
Do not wait for perfect certainty before acting; righteous action itself clarifies understanding.
Treat every situation as an opportunity for moral practice, whether in government, war, study, or ordinary life.
Face adversity, danger, and uncertainty with calm resolve, because virtue is proven in difficult circumstances.
Serve society through responsible action, not withdrawal from the world; moral cultivation should be lived in public life.
Prioritize moral rectitude over personal gain, comfort, rank, or fear.
Act with sincerity and authenticity; inner truth must match outward behavior.
Practice self-examination daily and remove selfish desires that obscure your original moral clarity.
Look inward before blaming external circumstances, because moral failure usually begins in the heart-mind.
Cultivate the mind as the root of all moral life; self-mastery begins with correcting one’s own intentions.
Do not treat learning as abstract theory; test every insight in real conduct, work, and decisions.
Unify knowledge and action: if you truly know what is right, you must immediately do it.
Seek the innate moral conscience (liangzhi) within yourself; trust that every person has an inner knowing of right and wrong.