Confucius' Fish I Want explains what the Confucian debate about life and death is.

The fish I want "

1. Mencius used metaphor to explain the truth in the article "I want what I want". Among them, "don't accept gifts for ten thousand minutes, and add me for ten thousand minutes."

. The second sentence, around the point of view of sacrificing one's life for righteousness, further proves the central argument of this paper.

The central point put forward in this paper is: to live, to have nothing to want, to be upright, and to have what I want; You can't have both, and you have to sacrifice your life for righteousness.

One sentence that can sum up the whole idea of this article is that life, no desire, no hesitation, I do whatever I want; You can't have both, and you have to sacrifice your life for righteousness.

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Take "fish" and "bear's paw" as metaphors to answer this question skillfully. Please write the original sentence: fish, what I want, bear's paw, what I want; You can't have your cake and eat it. You can't have your cake and eat it.

4. The idioms appearing in "Fish Wants What I Want" are: sacrifice one's life for righteousness, and eat the old; From this, we can think of three words that Mencius once said: wealth can't be lewd, poverty can't be moved, and power can't be bent. Reminiscent of Confucius' words: commit suicide and die.

Confucius said in the Analects of Confucius, Wei Linggong, "A benevolent person is benevolent, and there is no harm to benevolence, but killing himself is benevolence." Mencius further elaborated Confucius' thought in "I Want Fish", which showed the Confucian sentence about the debate between righteousness and benefit of life and death: those who give up their lives for righteousness also.

The sentence that reflects Mencius' correct understanding of the gentleman's money in the fish is: I will accept it in 10,000 minutes without arguing, so what's the use of that 10,000 minutes for me!

A sentence that embodies the idea of "nature is good" in Fish I Want is: not only the wise have a heart, but everyone has a heart, and the wise cannot lose their ears.

Mencius used mouth desire as a metaphor for the sentence of sacrificing one's life for righteousness. Fish, what I want; Bear's paw is what I want, and I can't have both. Give up the fish and take the bear's paw.

Mencius believes that people who can sacrifice their lives for righteousness are; More than the living, more than the dead.

10 Mencius believes that the behavior of losing sincerity is: accept it for ten thousand minutes without arguing for etiquette (for the beauty of the palace; Accept it to serve wives and concubines; I did this to get to know my poor people.

1 1 The sentences that express the shame of "pedestrians" and "beggars" are: Call it and people on the street will receive it; Begging for help is too much.