Chinese Philosophy and Literature
Chinese poets and philosophers such as Lao Tze, Confucius, Mencius, Mo Ti (Mot Zu) and Tao Chien (365-427 AD (CE)) contributed to the development of Chinese civilisation.
Sun-Tzu, a military strategist, wrote the work called Art of War. The Spring and Autumn Annals is the official chronicle of the state at the time. The Yellow Emperor’s Canon of Medicine is considered China’s earliest written book on medicine. It was codified during the time of Han Dynasty.
Lao Tze (c. 604– 521 BC (BCE)) was the master archive keeper of Chou state. He was the founder of Taoism. He argued that desires the root cause of all evils.
Confucius (551–497 BC (BCE)) was famous among the Chinese philosophers. He was a political reformer. He insisted on cultivation of one’s own personal life. He said, “If personal life is cultivated, family life is regulated; and once family life is regulated, national life is regulated.”
Mencius (372–289 BC (BCE)) was another well-known Chinese philosopher. He travelled throughout China and offered his counsel to the rulers."