I was just reading the Wikipedia of Li Zhi, a 16th century Neo-Confucian philosopher, and the philosophy really spoke to me, so I thought I would post this in case anyone else finds it interesting.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Li_Zhi_(philosopher)
The Childlike Heart-Mind (tĂłng xÄ«n; ç«„ćż)
Li Zhi wrote a considerable amount on the âchildlike heart-mindâ (tĂłng xÄ«n; ç«„ćż). Although someone of a childlike heart-mind was once considered to be someone ânaive, immature, and inexperienced in the ways of the worldâ â and thus âbound to come to a bad endâ â Li uses the term in a different sense, as evidenced by his reference to the 13th-century play The Western Chamber(Xixiang ji).[5] In this play, a scholar and a maiden develop a somewhat âforbiddenâ relationship, have a clandestine and passionate love affair, push through âtraditional barriersâ to their love, and finally marry. In the original telling (from the Tang Period, 7th-10th century CE), these same lovers have a short-lived, passionate romance which takes a sharp downward turn when the scholar decides to leave the maiden, leaving them both with no choice but to marry other people, although not out of âtrue loveâ.[5] In referencing this, Li argues for the ideals of the lovers in the Western Chamber, the âspontaneity, genuineness, abundance in feeling, and passionate desireâ.[5] These are all aspects of Li's childlike heart-mind.
Li's works on the childlike heart-mind are thought to be âinnovativeâ yet âmuddled and inconsistentâ.[5] Some regard his seemingly incompatible ideas on the heart-mind as a relativist ethical structure âwhere anything goes."[5][6] Pauline Lee, however, rejects this interpretation, arguing instead that Li's work is useful in allowing us to understand the cultural milieu in which he lived, and that his âphilosophical visionâ bears great âintrinsic value and powerâ.[5]
This concept of the childlike heart-mind is not unlike concepts of Li's contemporaries on similar subjects. In fact, Li may have even considered his contemporariesâ terms, namely the âoriginal heart-mindâ (ben xin), the âgenuine heart-mindâ (zhen xin), âpure knowingâ (liang zhi), and âthe infant heart-mindâ (chizi zhi xin).[5]
The term âben xinâ comes from a passage in the Mengzi that says that if a person acts in accordance with their âappetitive parts,â even if it is to save their own life and even if the decision is difficult for them, then they have âlost contactâ with their original heart-mind, something which Mengzi believed is a person's âgreatest moral resource."[5] Li Zhi makes a conscious decision not to use this term, preferring instead to use tong xin. This may be due in part to the fact that, while Mengzi believed that the heart-mind was something to be cultivated and nurtured, Li saw the heart-mind as something to be âpreserved,â since, in his view, it is innately perfect from birth. Mengzi also thought that there was a specific âpath of moral self-cultivationâ and that those who had followed this path correctly would all have the same ethical attitudes, whereas Li held that there were many different ways that one could cultivate the heart-mind, particularly through the reading of certain texts or engagement in certain practices.[5]
âZhen xinâ is found in the Buddhist text the Platform Sutra, in which it is said to be analogous to the âdeep concentration of oneness,â something to practice while also maintaining a lack of attachment to things.[5] However, the heart-mind, in this view, runs the risk of becoming enmeshed with the Dao if ever it lingers in anything, if it becomes too attached. Ultimately, the heart-mind in this conception is considered to be functioning properly if it is doing things with natural ease, rather than struggling against the natural way of things (or Dao). Self-cultivation plays a role in this idea of the heart-mind, as well, through deep concentration.
âLiang zhiâ comes from Wang Yangming's idea of the heart-mind as something that is known through a discovery-based self-cultivation method and as being âdirectly manifested in a faculty of âpure knowingââ (a term which Mengzi used but which Wang means differently).[5] Wang regarded pure knowing as something innately perfect, just like Li's heart-mind, but which was âclouded overâ at birth, akin to the sun being obstructed by clouds.[5] This âcloudingâ could be caused by one's qi if it had somehow become corrupted or soiled, so the aim was to have clear qi by exercising one's pure knowing, something which could be accomplished only through the will.
âChizi zhi xinâ is a term used by Luo Rufang meaning âinfant heart mindâ.[5] This idea held the âfree expression of one's natural desiresâ in high regard. Luo believed that a person's feelings âare [their] human nature,â and so the feelings should not be ârepressedâ in any way.[5] Spontaneous expression (expression without thinking about it) is also a part of the human nature, and as long as âartificial obstructionsâ (such as âfalse teachings or excessive meditationâ) do not interfere, the feelings can thrive.[5]
To Li, losing the genuine mind could result in losing the genuine self, and anyone who failed to be genuine would never recover their genuine heart-mind.[5] The childlike heart-mind is lost when anything from the outside â be those âaural and visual impressionsâ (even of the âPrinciples of the Wayâ), âknowledge and perceptions,â or the favor of a good reputation while masking a bad one â interferes with it.[5] Li also believed that if a person's childlike heart-mind was âobstructed,â then whatever that person said would not come from the childlike heart-mind, and so would lack âfoundationâ and would not be truthful. This is because, âwhen childlike heart-mind is obstructed, the Principles of the Way that come from outside the self become one's heart-mind."[5] This is a problem because, in this case, everything a person encounters and does with their physical senses is of the Principles of the Way, and so is not arising spontaneously from the childlike heart-mind. Words inspired by the Principles of the Way might sound nice or flow well, Li thought, but they wouldn't have anything to do with the person themselves. Their words would be âphonyâ and so the person themselves will be âphony,â and so too for everyone else until the whole world became like this, eventually leaving people unable to determine between âgoodâ and âbad."[5]
Li felt that the childlike heart-mind's âgenuine feelings and desires,â as well as the expression of these, could âconnect one to an abundant and powerful sourceâ which is too great for âphonyâ individuals to comprehend.[5] Because of this, such individuals would turn away from opportunities to deepen their spiritual "vision," and face instead a life of comfort and âblindness."[5]
Li notes that early sages had so securely preserved their heart-minds that, when they read and studied the moral teachings of the Principles of the Way, they were able to protect their heart-minds.[5] However, Li was concerned that many students would allow these same teachings to interfere with their heart-minds. This seems contradictory, given that it was the sages themselves who wrote the books of these teachings that, when read and studied, would cause the students to lose their childlike heart-mind. However, Li's justification for this reasoning is that the sagesâ teachings were specific to each student, not necessarily to be used universally. He likened the teachings to medicine, not only in that each one is tailored specifically to the âpatient'sâ needs, but also in that what helps one person might worsen the condition of another.[5]For Li, writings such as the Analects and the Six Classics were not to be understood as the âultimate standard for thousands of generations,â because, he proposed, these texts would not then be direct products of the childlike heart-mind.[5]
Although Li does say that the childlike heart-mind cannot return once it is lost, the aforementioned metaphor of âhealingâ might suggest that anyone is capable of recovering their childlike heart-mind, though perhaps not in its original condition.[5] This is partially because our phoniness is our own doing and our own decision, and therefore is not entirely out of our control.[5]The metaphor also reminds people that this particular kind of âhealth,â the recovery of the heart-mind, is relative. Each individual person has certain things that they need to do in order to remain healthy, and these practices are different from person to person.