discard all desires and worries from one 's mind
Pure inaction, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ī NGJ ì NGW ú w é I, which means a kind of philosophy and governance of Taoism in the spring and Autumn period. It means that everything should be taken as it is and manpower should not be forced to do it. It comes from the stele Ode to Juezi Jian.
The origin of Idioms
Jia Zhi of the Tang Dynasty wrote in his ode to the humble stele of Juezi: "the music of Qin and soup, the hall of Juezi, is quiet and inactive, and the people of the city are healthy."
Idiom usage
It refers to the concept of Taoism.
Examples
The 16th chapter of "on the whole house" says: "for the time being, I will always be away from all evils, so it is called Qingjing."
Fan Zhongyan's answer to Zhao Yuanhao in Song Dynasty: "the emperor of Zhenzong obeyed heaven's principles and did nothing."
Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty wrote a general warning to the world: Zhao Taizu sent Jingniang thousands of miles away: "monks are pure and do nothing, and the world is not polluted."
In Shuo yuan · Jun Dao written by Liu Xiang of Han Dynasty, "Duke Ping of Jin asked Yu Shikuang," what is the way of human being and Jun? " He said to them, "the way of man and king is pure and inaction."
Chinese PinYin : qīng jìng wú wéi
discard all desires and worries from one 's mind
people are hurrying to and fro. dōng lái xī qù
The handle of a hundred years. bǎi nián zhī bǐng
No one in the court should be an official. cháo lǐ wú rén mò zuò guān
Make a gap by pointing out flaws. zhǐ xiá zào xì