A Glorious Beginning: When Reason and Compassion Return to the World

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Yicheng · May 10, 2025
A nation’s real strength doesn’t come from its economy or military power, but from having cultural ideals people can believe in. When people can tell right from wrong, stand up to power and temptation, and come together for justice and self-respect, that society has a future. Civilization doesn’t arise by chance. It takes effort and […]

A nation’s real strength doesn’t come from its economy or military power, but from having cultural ideals people can believe in. When people can tell right from wrong, stand up to power and temptation, and come together for justice and self-respect, that society has a future.

Civilization doesn’t arise by chance. It takes effort and commitment. The foundation of this persistence lies in the civic spirit of reason, self-respect, love, justice, freedom, and happiness.

Today’s world is filled with chaos, not only due to institutional failure but also the collapse of value systems. Vulgar content dominates public discourse, short-sighted thinking guides decision-makers, and people are increasingly finding it hard to believe that terms like “reason” and “responsibility” still have any real meaning.

Thus, any nation seeking progress and development must first undergo a profound cultural reflection—reaffirming clear spiritual and cultural ideals.

I. Cultural Decline: A Sign of Civilization Losing Momentum

A civilization’s true strength isn’t about how big its territory is or how much wealth it has, but how it treats its people.

When culture begins to abandon the pursuit of human dignity, reason, and kindness—when it starts to see short-sightedness as cleverness, indifference as maturity, and pleasure as freedom—this society, though still loud and busy, is already crumbling from within.

We have seen this before: Ancient Rome lost its civic responsibility in a haze of luxury, the late Qing dynasty lost its cultural confidence under foreign pressure, and today, some societies are drowning in mindless consumerism, shallow values, and anti-intellectual chatter, slowly forgetting what public good, moral courage, and human compassion really mean.

To rebuild a strong cultural foundation, we don’t need to “cleanse” society, but we do need to reignite culture’s real purpose: it should not be just a tool for entertainment or propaganda, but a force that helps people see further, think deeper, understand each other more, and learn to be responsible for others while living with dignity.

A truly healthy culture isn’t afraid of diversity or criticism, but it can keep society grounded, preventing it from sinking into a cold, numb, and meaningless routine.

II. Institutions Should Support Ideals While Citizens Spark Hope

In a truly mature and prosperous nation, the government and its citizens should never be opposing forces. Instead, they should be a community that supports and uplifts each other. History has shown us that countries with overly concentrated power, suppressing the will of the people, often end up divided and stuck in rigid systems.

These lessons remind us that for a society to keep growing, a healthy political system and a strong community culture must be deeply connected.

“National-citizen culture” refers to a political and cultural ecosystem built on a solid national system, with citizens at its core, where fairness, justice, freedom, and responsibility coexist.

“Community culture,” on the other hand, focuses more on the social atmosphere of mutual respect, cooperation, and the shared pursuit of happiness that citizens build together in public life.

If social systems can actively encourage citizens to grow into rational, brave, and responsible individuals—rather than mere followers of power—they will inject vitality into society.

At the same time, citizens should, under the influence of community culture, rise above indifference and self-interest, and actively participate in the work of building civilization.

When the values of the state and the recognition of citizens are perfectly aligned, both will stand on the same ideal. This creates a positive cycle: the state is the protector of citizens’ freedom and happiness, and citizens are the builders of the state’s civilizational ideals.

III. Reshaping Citizens’ Rationality, Self-Respect, Optimism, and Resilience

Great nations are built on extraordinary citizens.

This excellence comes from an education and social system that supports every individual’s growth, helping them develop self-respect, confidence, rationality, compassion, optimism, resilience, courage, and responsibility.

Self-respect is the belief in one’s own dignity and freedom. It allows us to stand tall before the world, always confident in our own value and worth.

Confidence is the ability to remain clear-headed and determined in the face of adversity and challenges, giving us the courage to tackle difficulties and shape our own future.

Rationality is the ability to think clearly and make independent judgments amid the noise and chaos of information. It keeps us from being easily swayed by rumors or emotions, allowing us to maintain clear thoughts and a fair perspective.

Compassion enables us to recognize the pain and needs of others, to open our hearts, care for every life, defend justice, and strive to make the world a better place.

Resilience is not just physical health—it’s inner strength and determination. It allows us to stand firm under pressure, untouched by vanity or burdened by desires.

Citizens must form a shared understanding and work together to integrate these qualities into education and culture. They should not remain abstract concepts but become the inner strength that guides individuals toward a healthier, more harmonious society.

IV. Cultivating a Culture of Rationality, Freedom, and Happiness

The ultimate goal of a great nation’s cultural ideal is to create a civic value system based on rationality, freedom, and happiness.

This system includes:

  • Ensuring that the rights to individual freedom of thought, speech, belief, and personality are protected by the the institution, and preventing any manipulation of public opinion or culture by power.
  • Promoting the rights of citizens to freely choose their own path in life, express their opinions, and participate in national affairs.
  • Guaranteeing an environment and the right for citizens to pursue happiness—not limited to material possession, but encompassing spiritual freedom, a rich inner life, personal dignity, and social justice.

Reason, freedom, and happiness go hand in hand. Without reason, freedom fades; without freedom, happiness is out of reach. That is why a healthy civil society must protect the mindset and environment where reason and freedom can thrive—only then can everyone have a fair shot at a fulfilling life and personal growth.

The ultimate vision of the Glorious Nation

A truly glorious nation is a civil community where every citizen possesses reason, freedom, compassion, and a fulfilling life. In such a society, the state and its people share the same ideals, support each other through sound institutions, inspire one another spiritually, and together build a life of dignity and meaning.

True civilization is not only about strength, but about kindness; not only about self-reliance, but about service to others; not only about perfected systems, but about clarity of conscience.

This is the ultimate vision of a glorious nation:

A place where citizens live with dignity and confidence, guided by reason and courage, enjoying freedom and well-being, grounded in kindness and compassion—a nation that stands tall among the world’s civilizations and embraces its responsibility for the future of humanity.

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Time, history, and how we understand them

Time, history, and how we understand them

Daohe · Jun 5, 2025

Since the dawn of human civilization, history has carried people’s collective memory and experience. People have long tried to draw lessons from it, hoping to avoid repeating past mistakes and to push society forward. Yet when we look back across thousands of years, the rise and fall of dynasties, the cycles of war and peace, […]

重新认识时间与历史的关系

重新认识时间与历史的关系

Daohe · Jun 5, 2025

自人类文明诞生以来,历史便承载着我们的集体记忆与经验。人们常试图从历史中汲取教训,以避免重蹈覆辙、推动社会进步。然而回顾数千年的文明演进,王朝更替、战争与和平、专制与反抗似乎反复出现,呈现出某种周期性的循环。 原因不在于历史本身,而在于我们看待历史的方式。 当我们以“时间线”的视角审视历史,历史就成为一个可以被分析、归纳与理解的对象,帮助我们辨识文明演化的脉络与制度演进的逻辑。 而当我们以既有的经验去类比现实,便容易落入命运论的思维模式,将历史简化为宿命的重复,使得经验的教训难以真正转化为制度变革或认知跃迁。 本文将从这两种不同的历史观出发,探讨它们对人类文明认知、集体心理及制度构建的深层影响,并尝试回答一个关键问题:为何我们常常意识到历史的教训,却依然难以摆脱文明困境的轮回? 一、时间线历史观:还原事实,厘清路径 将历史置于时间轴上,是一种理性且系统的观察方式。它以事实为基础,将事件依时间顺序展开,使过去不再只是模糊的传说或情绪化的记忆,而成为可以分析、理解的历史现实,具备因果关系与结构逻辑。 这种方式的核心价值在于: 时间线历史观的价值,在于它拒绝将历史视为命运的重演,而是强调变量的作用。 它承认历史的开放性与文明路径的多样性,强调人类行为的能动性与制度选择的重要性。 文明是否走向进步,并非由所谓的“历史规律”决定,而取决于我们如何面对现实、反思过去、选择未来。 二、历史中的历史观:经验循环与宿命陷阱 与以时间线为基础的理性观察不同,另一种更常见的历史理解方式,是在历史中看历史——即人们倾向于以过去的历史模式解读现实,并尝试从中提炼出“规律”,以此指导当下。 这种思维背后的动因,是人类对不确定性的天然恐惧。面对复杂多变的现实,我们倾向于从既有经验中寻找解释与预判路径,以此缓解对未来的焦虑。但正是这种趋向确定性的本能,容易滑向宿命论的深渊。 具体体现在以下几个方面: 以历史看历史,最大的危害是让历史教训合法化为历史规律,使当代人失去纠错与变革意志。 三、历史为何教而不改 为何人类社会屡次面对相似的灾难,却始终难以真正吸取教训?问题并不在于历史本身不清晰,而在于文明内部存在三种深层机制,使得历史教训在传承与转化过程中被系统性削弱,甚至失效。 1. 权力的自我维系机制 执政者与既得利益集团往往出于延续统治的需求,有意回避甚至篡改历史真相。前朝之覆可能被描述为“天命已尽”或“人心叵测”,而非制度崩溃或社会失衡。 这种对历史教训的选择性叙述,实质是为了削弱变革的正当性,从而维持现有秩序。 2. 集体认知的惰性机制 公共意识倾向于接受熟悉、线性、符合传统经验的解释,而对复杂性与不确定性保持天然警惕。这种认知惰性让社会更愿意接受“盛极必衰”这样的宿命叙事,而非深入剖析具体的制度性失败。 久而久之,历史经验被简化为模式,变成一种“心理安慰”,而非行动指南。 3. 叙事权的封闭控制机制 谁掌握叙事,谁就掌握历史的意义。在大多数社会中,历史往往由官方书写,反思性的民间声音则被边缘化甚至封锁。结果是,即使真实的教训存在,也难以进入主流教育与公共讨论,从而失去触达集体意识的渠道。 这三种机制相互交织,使文明难以形成有效的自我修正能力。历史不仅被遗忘,更被格式化、被利用,成为延续旧模式的工具,而非开启新路径的资源。 因此,哪怕灾难重演,社会依然可能选择熟悉但失败的方案,陷入一次次看似“不可避免”的轮回。 四、文明突围的现实路径 要真正吸取历史的教训,文明必须挣脱经验主义与宿命论的束缚,回归基于事实、逻辑和变量的历史理解。这种突围不是抽象的理念转变,而是现实中集体认知和制度实践的深刻重构。 这意味着: 结语 当我们将历史的发展置于时间线中去看待,历史便回归其真实面貌,成为文明认知自身演进路径的参照。 而当我们用既有的历史模式去解释现实与未来,便容易落入经验的循环与宿命的陷阱,使教训失效,让文明困于自我复制的轮回。 文明的进步并非时间推移的自然结果,也不是历史规律的自动演化。它的发展依赖于少数清醒之人——那些敢于质疑旧范式、突破经验窠臼、重构制度与秩序的人。他们推动时代断裂与文明重生,赋予历史真正的价值。

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