Zhuangzi
Written by Zhuang Zhou during the Warring States period. The Hejaz recorded 52 articles, and the current preacher is the Jin Guo Xiangben, only 33 articles, which were renamed "Nanhua Jing" in the Tang Dynasty. Ancient notes include Sima Biao, Xiang Xiu, Guo Xiang, etc., as well as Cheng Xuanying Shu of the Tang Dynasty, Wang Xianqian of the Qing Dynasty, and Guo Qingfan. Most of his books should be similar to Lao Tzu, and the prose is unbridled and profound.
Zhuang Zhou, a native of the Song Kingdom during the Warring States Period, was born and died in an unknown year. He used to be a Mongolian lacquer garden official, so he was also called a Mongolian official, a Mengzhuang and a Mengsuo. At the same time as King Hui of Liang, King Xuan of Qi, Mencius, and Hui Shi. He also tasted seclusion in Nanhua Mountain, so Tang Xuanzong Tianbao Chu, the edict chased the number of Nanhua Zhenren, and called its book Nanhua Jing. Its outlook on life advocates natural inaction and leisure; The political outlook is reduced to the rule of inaction. He is also a master of Taoist thought and is the author of Zhuangzi.
(Source: Chinese Dictionary of the Ministry of Education)