Academic introduction
Hu Daojing, his father Chen Huai, is an expert in Chinese studies, good at poetry and prose. His representative works include Hu Poetry, Qiu Shan Wen Cun, Outline of China Literature History and Annotations and Collations of Various Scholars. Mr. Chen Huai's old poems are deeply appreciated by Mr. Masako, who commented that "the taste is sour and salty, and the function is old and new." Mr. Park An is good at writing, exegesis and collating, and he is a famous master of Chinese studies in academic circles. Mr. Dao Jing comes from such a family background and is more studious and diligent since he was a child, so his success is no accident. One characteristic of Mr. Dao Jing's father's research method is that every research should be copied. In his early years, he copied many books by hand. Although it was completely lost in 19 13 by the bandit troops of Yuan warlord Zheng Ru, it was copied a lot later. Therefore, Mr. Dao Jing has been adhering to the court motto of "copying once by hand is better than reading ten times" since he was a child. While studying the classics of the pre-Qin and Han dynasties extensively, he also developed the learning method of copying books by hand. At that time, Mr Chen Huai was the editor of Shanghai Commercial Press. Mr. Dao Jing not only copied many valuable ancient books borrowed by his father from Hanfenlou Library in the library, but also often borrowed invisible books from teachers' strengths and stayed up all night. Write auxiliary memory. Mr. Dao Jing recalled this study experience and said, "Zang, a native of Dongguan, is in his twenties. If he wants to read Han Shu by Ban Gu, and if he can't borrow it for a long time, he will write his own book. I personally realized it before I was twenty years old. "
Mr. Dao Jing's interest in the history of ancient science and technology in China, especially his research on "Coordinates of the History of Chinese Science"-Meng Qian Bi Tan, began in his middle school days. He's here