326. Sun Tzu's Art of War 4|Soldiers use deceit and surprise to win

In the first section of "The Art of War", "The Plan", Sun Tzu concentrated on the "deceitful tactics of the soldier" and put forward the idea of ??"victory by surprise", which gave us a lot to think about and learn from.

Original text

Definition

Interpretation

Be honest, be frank, and create a "personality".

When marching and fighting, we pay attention to "deceit", hiding the truth and showing the false, taking the wrong edge with the sword, and winning by surprise.

Using troops is a matter of doing things and can be flexible and changeable.

If you know your enemy and yourself, you can fight a hundred battles without danger.

This sentence is familiar to everyone, and it also comes from "The Art of War" by Sun Tzu. It will be discussed later, but I will talk about it briefly here.

The premise of a soldier's "deception" is to accurately detect the actual situation of both the enemy and ourselves, and make a decision based on comparison.

Knowing your enemy and yourself is the prerequisite and foundation for doing a good job, whether as a person or in doing things.

Just think about it, if you can’t figure out the situation between ourselves and the enemy, how can you show that you can’t use it or don’t use it?

If you are "unable" and deliberately reveal your "inability" to the enemy, then it will become a strange story instead of being eliminated.

We often say that a small hermit hides in the wild, a big hermit hides in the city.

Dahai believes that the key word proposed by Sun Tzu in this chapter is "hidden clumsiness".

If you are strong, don't look capable. On the contrary, it is exactly what is needed when the strength is insufficient.

Whether it is concealing the true and showing the false, showing what is near and taking the far, whether it is to avoid the strong and attack the weak, or to confuse the enemy's mind, we all pay attention to "disguise".

In essence, it is to keep a low profile, hide your strength, and pretend to be a pig to eat the tiger.

Finally, the situation has been decided, and everyone suddenly realizes: It turns out that you are the real tiger, not paper.

Aiming at a specific goal, we should not relax on the green hills, always have the enemy in our eyes, and always have the mission in our hearts.

Based on the specific situation of the other party, analyze the response strategy in detail, especially focusing on the "strong points" of the other party to weaken its overall strength.

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The macro design is principled, and the specific implementation is pragmatic, cleverly combining strategic principles with tactical flexibility.

Only by being mobile can you activate the situation and gain the initiative for flexible response.

Whether it's a slanted move or an unprepared attack, the word "strange" is all in seconds.

Whether it is a surprise victory or a surprise victory, the "victory mechanism" proposed by Sun Tzu highlights the "surprise".

However, if there is no "innovative" thinking, it will not be "wonderful", and the chance of "winning" will become smaller.

Sun Tzu's blunt statement "Don't pass it on first" is actually warning us: Don't stick to rules, don't set limits on yourself, and have no rules.

From another perspective, without innovation, we will lose vitality, lose hope, and there will be no "poetry and distance" of development.

This is true whether it is on the battlefield, in social life, or in the field of science and technology.

Qi Fanqi’s 8th Writing Camp, clocked in the 6th article, with a word count of 1470, and a total of 8549 words. The 239th article of the annual advanced camp, with a total of 412,122 words.