About This Book
The commentary opens with a preface on the purpose of classical learning and the social consequences when instruction decays, then offers a close exegesis of a concise moral syllabus. It sets three guiding aims—clarifying innate virtue, renewing the people, and reaching supreme goodness—and prescribes a sequential practice: investigate things to perfect knowledge, make intentions sincere, rectify the mind, cultivate the person, order the family, govern the state, and pacify the world. Each step is illustrated with classical citations and practical admonitions for rulers, teachers, and learners.
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