What do you mean, heartless?

Ruthless desire means: no emotion, no desire, that is, no secular desire.

Ruthless without desire can also be said that everything is empty, without desire and without demand.

No lust is often used as a Buddhist term, which means that family members break through all worldly things, see all the changes in the world clearly, and reach the realm of forgetting worldly dust.

First of all, ruthless detailed explanation:

1 stands for hypocrisy.

Said by: Ming Dynasty's "Ordered to Read People's Books in detail": ..................................................................................................................................................... "

Author: Zhang

Interpretation:? "And a hypocrite can't do his duty."

2, no good feelings; No feelings.

From Biography of Sun Hong in Han Palace: "Qi people are treacherous and heartless. At first, they established this discussion with ministers, but now they have betrayed it and are disloyal. " ?

Author: GongSunHong

Interpretation: "Qi people are deceitful and have no feelings. At first, they put forward this suggestion to us. Now they are carrying it and disloyal. " ?

3. It means no mercy. ?

Said by: Biography of Zhou Shu Yu Xin: "This is not dangerous, but also cruel to Lu." ?

Author: Yu Xin

Interpretation: "There is no dangerous behavior at all, and there is no mercy in salary."

An ancient poem "Gardenia" in the Tang Dynasty said: "It is valuable to reflect on Jiangbo and touch you mercilessly."

Author: Du Fu

Interpretation: No feelings move you, the most important thing is to be in the river. "

4. Buddhist terminology.

As opposed to "sentient beings", it refers to things other than people in the world, such as vegetation and stones, mountains and rivers and the earth. Love is the meaning of all beings and the living. It refers to human beings, heaven, hungry ghosts, animals, Asura and other sentient beings. The combination of sentimentality and ruthlessness is the general summary of Buddhism to the world.

Second, there is no desire to explain:

From: the words of a wise man: "There are hundreds of rivers, and tolerance is great; The wall stands thousands of miles, and there is no desire. "

Author: Lin Zexu

Interpretation: The reason why the sea can accommodate thousands of rivers is because it has such a broad mind;

The precipice can stand upright because it doesn't have much desire to stand upright.

Said by: Tao Te Ching: "Therefore, there will never be a desire for happiness. There is always a desire to watch. "

Interpretation: I often put myself in a state of "no desire, no desire", because only in this way can I find more interesting problems.

Then let yourself enter the state of "desire", because there is desire to have motivation,

Only in this way can I confirm or solve these problems I have found.

Author: Laozi

Extended data:

Tao Te Ching is a philosophical work of Lao Zi (Li Er) in the Spring and Autumn Period, also known as Tao Te Ching, Lao Zi's Five Thousand Words and Lao Zi's Five Thousand Articles. It is a work before the separation of pre-Qin philosophers in ancient China and an important source of Taoist philosophical thoughts.

The text of Tao Te Ching takes "morality" in the philosophical sense as the main line, and discusses the ways of self-cultivation, governing the country, using troops and keeping in good health, but most of them aim at politics. It is the so-called "inner sage and outer king", known as the king of all classics, with profound meaning and wide tolerance.

The author Lao Zi, surnamed Li Minger, is called Bai Yang. Huaxia nationality, a native of Qurenli, Li Xiang, an ancient county of Chu, was a great philosopher and thinker in the Spring and Autumn Period and the founder of the Taoist school.

Laozi is a world cultural celebrity, one of the world's 100 historical celebrities, and has the classic Tao Te Ching. The essence of his works is simple dialectics, and his theory has a far-reaching impact on the development of China's philosophy. In Taoism, Laozi is regarded as the ancestor of Taoism. Laozi and Zhuangzi of later generations are also called Zhuang zi.

References:

Baidu encyclopedia-Laozi

Baidu Encyclopedia-Tao Te Ching