Wang Yangming's main works include: "Great Learning", "The Complete Works of Wang Yangming", "Travel Records", "Ji Travel Wen", "Wang Wencheng Gongquan Shu", etc.
1. "Great Learning" is a book published by Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House in December 1992. The author is Wang Shouren (Wang Yangming). This book is a programmatic philosophical work by Wang Shouren (Wang Yangming). Disciples regard it as the introductory textbook of Confucian sage learning.
2. "Wang Wencheng Gongquan Shu" is a book published by Zhejiang Book Company during the reign of Tongzhi and Guangxu of the Qing Dynasty (1862-1908). The author is Wang Shouren of the Ming Dynasty, a Confucian scholar. The book has thirty-eight volumes and includes works such as "Preface to the Conclusion of Song Zi's Later Years", "Shu Tao", and "Preface to the Ancient Edition of the University".
3. "The Complete Works of Wang Yangming" is a book published by Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House on October 12, 2011, written by Wang Shouren. "The Complete Works of Wang Yangming" is the most important work on the study of Wang Yangming's thoughts on psychology and Wang Yangming's life. It is the most personal and controversial masterpiece of Confucianism. It is also an inspirational work for modern people to successfully cultivate themselves and strengthen their personal hearts.
4. "Zhuan Xi Lu" is a philosophical work, compiled and compiled by Wang Yangming's disciples from his quotations and letters. Wang Yangming was a philosopher of the Ming Dynasty in China and a representative of the Neo-Confucian school of thought in the Song and Ming Dynasties. This book records his quotations and academic letters. The word "chuanxi" comes from the phrase "chuanxihu" in "The Analects of Confucius".
5. "The Traveling Essay" is a memorial essay written by Wang Shouren, a thinker and writer in the Ming Dynasty. The article describes that when the author was exiled to Longchangyi, Guizhou, he witnessed the sudden death of three members of Li Mu's family in a foreign land. He had never known Li Mu's master and servant, but they had some connections. The full text not only mourns the deceased, but also expresses the author's misery when he was relegated to a foreign land, showing pity for others and himself, hanging himself and hurting his life, all at the same time. The words are sad and sincere, affectionate and pathos, with repeated twists and turns.