Source: Zhuang Zhou in the Pre-Qin Dynasty: "The sword of today's ministers will take 19 years to solve thousands of cows, and if the blade is newly researched."
Brief introduction of Zhuangzi Health Master: Zhuangzi Health Master is the third part of Zhuangzi, which belongs to the internal chapter. It is generally believed that Zhuang Zhou wrote it himself. This is an article about keeping in good health. The meaning of "health care master" is not "health care" in the modern sense. Its meaning should be "keeping in good health", "all one's life", "raising relatives" and "doing one's best".
Originated from X: n f ā y ú xing, it refers to describing very sharp or showing sharp edges; Description: new hair: just polished; Yao: A whetstone. The knife has just sharpened on the grindstone; Example: Clear Gong Zizhen's letter to Wu Hongsheng: "Today, there are fellow villagers Ma Xiaolian and Suo Changan who know each other."
Introduction to Zhuangzi: Zhuangzi (about 369-286 BC), a philosopher in the mid-Warring States period, was Zhuang's surname Zhou, whose name was Zixiu (left), Han nationality, and Mongolian nationality (now Mengcheng, Anhui, also known as Shangqiu, Henan and Dongming, Shandong). He was a great thinker, philosopher and writer in the pre-Qin period of China. Zhuangzi was originally a descendant of Chu Zhuangwang and the main founder of Taoism. Together with Laozi, the ancestor of Taoism, they are called "Laozi and Zhuangzi", and their philosophical thoughts are respected as "Laozi and Zhuangzi's philosophy" by the ideological and academic circles, but their literary talent is better than Laozi's. Zhuangzi is a masterpiece, and people have interpreted it in many versions, including A Happy Journey and The Theory of Everything. Zhuangzi advocated "harmony between man and nature" and "governing by doing nothing". Zhuangzi's imagination is extremely rich, his language is freely used and flexible, and he can make some subtle and unspeakable philosophies fascinating. His works are called "literary philosophy, philosophical literature". According to legend, he also tried to live in seclusion in Nanhua Mountain. Therefore, at the beginning of Tianbao, Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty named Zhuang Zhou as a South China True Man and his book Zhuangzi as the South China True Classic.