Dao

Zou Yan: The Pioneer of Yin-Yang and the Five Phases

Zou Yan (c. 305–240 BCE): The Pioneer of Yin-Yang and the Five Phases

Zou Yan (c. 305–240 BCE) pioneered the philosophy of Yin-Yang and the Five Phases, creating a cosmology that shaped Chinese thought for centuries. His vision of balance, cycles, and transformation continues to echo in medicine, politics, and philosophy today.

Dong Zhongshu

Dong Zhongshu (c. 179 – c. 104 BCE): The Man Who Made Confucianism Rule an Empire

Dong Zhongshu (c. 179 – c. 104 BCE) was the architect of Confucian state ideology in the Han dynasty, synthesising Confucian ethics with cosmological theories. His thought anchored imperial governance, education, and political legitimacy for nearly two millennia.

Li Si (c. 246–208 BCE): Architect of China’s first empire

Li Si, architect of China’s first empire, forged unity through law, order, and ruthless control—only to be destroyed by the same system he created. His rise and fall reveal both the power and peril of absolute authority.

Han Fei (c. 280–233 BCE): The Architect of Order

Han Fei (c. 280–233 BCE) was the sharpest voice of Legalism, the hard-edged philosophy that helped forge China’s first empire. Living in the brutal Warring States era, he argued that people can’t be trusted to act virtuously — only strict laws, harsh punishments, and centralised power could hold a state together. Though his ideas were ruthless, they shaped the Qin dynasty’s unification of China and left an enduring imprint on its bureaucratic system. Han Fei reminds us that order can be built without kindness — but at a cost.

Huizi was an ancient Chinese thinker

Huizi (4th c. BCE): The Paradox Master of Ancient China

Yang Zhu, the 4th-century BCE founder of Yangism, championed self-preservation, natural enjoyment, and acceptance of death in defiance of duty-bound traditions — a radical reminder that life’s true worth lies in living authentically before it ends.

Yang Zhu

Yang Zhu (4th c. BCE) – The Philosopher of Self-Preservation

Yang Zhu, the 4th-century BCE founder of Yangism, championed self-preservation, natural enjoyment, and acceptance of death in defiance of duty-bound traditions — a radical reminder that life’s true worth lies in living authentically before it ends.

Liezi, also known as Lie Yukou

Liezi (c. 4th century BCE): The Daoist Storyteller of Shadows and Winds

Discover the extraordinary life and groundbreaking ideas of Wang Bi, a luminary in Chinese philosophy whose interpretations of Daoism and the Book of Changes have influenced generations of thinkers. Explore his profound understanding of the nature of existence and the complexities of life, and be inspired by his enduring quest for wisdom.

Zhuangzi (c. 369–286 BCE): Skeptic, Storyteller, Sage

Discover the extraordinary life and groundbreaking ideas of Wang Bi, a luminary in Chinese philosophy whose interpretations of Daoism and the Book of Changes have influenced generations of thinkers. Explore his profound understanding of the nature of existence and the complexities of life, and be inspired by his enduring quest for wisdom.

image inspired by Wang Bi, capturing the essence of his philosophical thoughts and the serene yet profound nature of Daoism. This visual representation blends traditional Chinese artistic elements with a touch of modernity, symbolizing the timeless relevance of Wang Bi's ideas

Wang Bi: The Young Philosopher Who Illuminated the Dao

Discover the extraordinary life and groundbreaking ideas of Wang Bi, a luminary in Chinese philosophy whose interpretations of Daoism and the Book of Changes have influenced generations of thinkers. Explore his profound understanding of the nature of existence and the complexities of life, and be inspired by his enduring quest for wisdom.