I ask you on the first floor, isn't Chinese studies a philosophy? Are only Westerners pursuing the origin of the world? Didn't anyone in ancient China pursue the origin of the world? Five elements, yin and yang, what is this? Anna Golas, a western philosopher, believes that nature is made up of countless tiny particles invisible to the naked eye, and everything can be divided into smaller parts. Isn't this the image of a person mentioned in Laozi's Tao Te Ching, with the image of the universe? Whether westerners or orientals, we all ask the same questions, such as where the world comes from and why people live. Learning philosophy is not to distinguish who is right from who is wrong, but to understand his way of thinking and depth of thinking, so as to establish his own mode of thinking. Just like you, I don't believe you can read Laozi.
Motto: Philosophy makes people happy, because philosophy is the beacon of life.
This is what my first philosophy teacher said in the first class. Take a look.
Does philosophy make people wise, or does philosophy make people wise?
I don't know, what I feel from my personal learning experience is more about cherishing a quiet life.
Let philosophy enter the classroom, that is, go back to childhood exploration and thinking together, such as why people are alive? Why is the grass green? How does the sun heat stones? Wait a minute.
In fact, people live more of a life that they can't live now. College students should know more about philosophy, so as to wake themselves up, get out of the mode of examination-oriented education all the year round, seek their own life value, learn to think, learn to be independent, learn to be self-respecting and learn to set up lofty ideals in the atmosphere of colleges and universities. Most of these come from philosophical reflection. Let philosophy into the classroom, in fact, is to face the confusion of life with students and build the meaning of people together.
Let philosophy make us wise, and at the same time, let us provide more platforms for philosophy. Socrates said, "A life without reflection is not worth living." Similarly, a life submerged in material desires may not be worth living.