integrate punishment with education
Mingxing Bijiao, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m í NGX í NGB ì Ji à o, which means to use the criminal law to describe the people, so that people know the law, fear the law and abide by the law, so as to achieve the effect that education can not achieve. From the book of history Dayu desert.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of history Dayu Mo: "the Ming Dynasty is based on the five punishments, and the five religions are based on the Bi, which is expected to be governed."
Idiom usage
The combination is used as predicate, with commendatory meaning. Example in the Ming Dynasty, the punishment was in favor of the religion, and the Tao respected the old. (Tang Zhang's Ode to uprising Hall)
Idiom story
The feudal rulers of all dynasties know that there are two weapons to govern the country and the people: one is the warning function of punishment, the other is the enlightenment function of ethics. Furthermore, they complement each other and are indispensable. The difference is that, in different dynasties, the intensity of class struggle is different, and the rulers use these two hands first, then, which is more important.
integrate punishment with education
blot out the sky and cover the sun - zhē tiān gài rì
A lot of people talk to each other - zhòng kǒu xūn tiān
lofty mountains and high ranges - chóng shān fù lǐng
skillful in teaching and able to provide guidance - jiào dǎo yǒu fāng