Brief introduction of Fu Shan
Fu Shan (1607- 1684) was a Taoist thinker, calligrapher and physician during the Ming and Qing Dynasties. The first name is Chen Ding, the word is Green Bamboo, and the word is changed to Green Master. There are also aliases such as turbid Weng and Huaguan. Han nationality, Taiyuan, Shanxi. Fu Shan claimed to be a disciple of Laozi and Zhuangzi, and he himself repeatedly emphasized in many occasions and works that "an old man learns from Laozi and Zhuangzi", "I am a disciple of Laozi and Zhuangzi", "I am a teacher of Laozi and Zhuangzi" and "I am a painter". Consciously inherit Taoist ideology and culture. He studied and expounded Laozi and Zhuangzi's propositions such as "Taoism is natural", "inaction", "whether there is a beginning" and "hiding without hiding", and developed the traditional Taoist thought with 1 He used to be Amin's student, lived in a hut and adopted his mother. Kangxi raved about Hongbo and resigned many times. When he arrived in Beijing, he claimed to be an old problem and came back without trying. Zhuangzi's classic wisdom became the ideological resource absorbed by Fu Shan, surpassing the eternal intimate theory. Fu Shan said to himself, "In the winter of your company, I moved from Fenzhou to Tuditang, and my luggage is only Nanhua scenery, which has always been in front of me." [1] He once wrote articles on Zhuangzi's free travel, life, foreign things, Ze Yang, etc. in small letters [2]. And often pretend to be Zhuangzi's disciple. Gu is convinced of his ambition. He knows everything about learning, besides classics and history, he is also familiar with the pre-Qin philosophers and is good at calligraphy and painting medicine. He is the author of "Frosty Red Little Students Collection" and so on. In some martial arts novels, Fu Shan is described as a martial arts expert. He is a famous Taoist scholar who knows everything about philosophy, medicine, inner alchemy, Confucianism and Buddhism, poetry, calligraphy, painting, epigraphy, martial arts and textual research. He was regarded as a model figure in safeguarding national unity in the late Ming and early Qing Dynasties. Together with Gu, Huang Zongxi, Wang Fuzhi, Li Qing and Yan Yuan, Liang Qichao called them "six great masters in the early Qing Dynasty". He wrote "Gynecology in Fu Qingzhu" and "Andrology in Fu Qingzhu", which were handed down from generation to generation and were known as "medical sages" at that time.