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Liu Xie (Chinese: 劉勰; pinyin: Liú Xié, ca. 465–522[1]), courtesy name Yanhe (彦和), was a Chinese monk, politician, and writer. He was the author of China's greatest work of literary aesthetics, The Literary Mind and the Carving of Dragons (文心雕龍). His biography is included in the Liangshu.

Life

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A native of today's Zhenjiang, Liu's traced his ancestry to Shandong.[2] He was orphaned in his youth and chose not to marry, either because of poverty or conviction (or both). Liu studied Buddhism with Sengyou and helped edit sutras at the Dinglin Monastery (定林寺) until his death during the Liang Dynasty.[2] It was during his time editing Buddhist scriptures that he wrote his The Literary Mind and the Carving of Dragons.[2]

He later became a private secretary to Xiao Hong, brother of the Liang emperor Xiao Yan.[2] He also did logistics for a military unit and was later promoted to county magistrate in Taimo (modern day Longyou county, Zhejiang province).[2] Eventually, he again worked as a secretary to the emperor's other sons, until he was later sent back to the monastery.[2] When the scripture editing project was finished, Liu decided to continue on at the monastery.[2]

Liu also wrote The Great Enlightenment (Hong Ming Ji) and On the World (Shijie Ji), both of which are lost.[2] He also wrote an essay entitled "Treatise on Refuting Falsehood" (Mie Huo Lun).[2]

Psychology experiment

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Liu Xie conducted a psychology experiment by asking his subjects to draw a circle on a piece of paper with one hand, while the other hand tried to simultaneously draw a square. This test was to measure the level of distraction that could be managed by his subjects. As Liu observed, his students, who were the subjects of his experiment, struggled to perform both tasks simultaneously. What Liu's experiment had demonstrated was that by doing two experiments at once will mean that neither experiment is done correctly.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Sun, Cecile Chu-chin (2011). The Poetics of Repetition in English and Chinese Lyric Poetry. University of Chicago Press. p. 92. ISBN 978-0-226-78020-7.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Zhao, Heping (1990). "Wen Xin Diao Long": An early Chinese rhetoric of written discourse. Purdue University.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ Zhang Houcan; Luo Fang (December 2020). "The Development of Psychological and Educational Measurement in China". Chinese/English Journal of Educational Measurement and Evaluation. 1: 56. doi:10.59863/BUAI8988. S2CID 235193971.
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