Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Zhuge Liang's 36 plans?

Zhuge Liang's 36 plans?

Zhuge Liang's thirty-six plans are as follows: the first plan

Eliminate evil, the second plan.

Understanding human nature, the third plan

Be good at distinguishing talents from the fourth plan.

Third, by the way, the fifth plan.

Discipline, the sixth plan

Alert, plan seven

The use of abdomen, the eighth plan

The use of machine shapes, the ninth plan

The use of punishment, the tenth plan

Reward, eleventh plan

The way to judge the cause, the twelfth plan

Take advantage of the situation and seek, the thirteenth five-year plan

The way of false rights, the fourteenth plan

Make good use of three customers and fifteen plans

Make good use of it, plan 16.

Do it by chance, the seventeenth plan

Do your best, plan 18.

Take advantage of the situation, the 19th plan.

Get on well with others, the twentieth plan

The Art of Inspiration, the 21st Plan

The most important thing is self-encouragement and the twelfth plan.

The way to accept words, scheme 23

The way to get along, 24 plans.

Check the doubt and solve the danger, the 25 th plan

Appropriate measures, the 26th plan.

Emotion and restraint, plan 27.

The fatwa has a section and Plan 28.

Cut off, the 29th plan.

Thinking, the thirtieth plan

Yincha, No.31m

Make way, plan 32.

Here we go. Plan 33.

Live a simple life

Peace of mind, plan 34

Strict discipline in the whole division, 35 plan

Deal with the enemy, the 36th plan.

Houying Zhuge Liang (181-23410-8), a native of Yang Du, Xuzhou (now yinan county, Linyi City, Shandong Province), was an outstanding politician, strategist, essayist and calligrapher during the Three Kingdoms period. When he was alive, he was named Hou of Wuxiang. After his death, he pursued loyalty to the marquis of Wuxiang. Because of its military ability, the Eastern Jin regime was posthumously named King Wu Xing. Representative prose works include An Example and A Book of Commandments. He once invented the wooden ox, the flying horse, the Kongming lantern and so on, and transformed the crossbow, called Zhuge Lian crossbow, which can hit all targets with one crossbow. In the twelfth year (234), Yu Jianxing died in Wuzhangyuan (now Qishan, Baoji).

Liu Chan regarded him as a loyal minister, so later generations often referred to Zhuge Liang as a loyal minister and Zhuge Wuhou. Zhuge Liang is the representative of loyal ministers and wise men in China traditional culture. He devoted himself to his life and died.