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智慧谚语
1. A man’s wisdom is his best friend; folly his worst enemy. –William Temple
2. A short saying often contains much wisdom. –Sophocles
3. A clever person cannot be clever in every affair.
4. A genius is a man who does unique things of which nobody would expect him to be capable. -- E. V. Lucas
5. A fool may sometimes give a wise man counsel.
6. A man’s wisdom is the source of pleasure. – Boccaccio
7. A still tongue makes a wise head.
8. A man never reaches that dizzy height of wisdom that he can no longer be led by the nose.
–Mark Twain
9. A well-bred person can wisely treat the criticism.
10. A prudent question is one-half of wisdom. – Francis Bacon
11. A spoon does not know the taste of soup, nor a learned fool the taste of wisdom.
—Welsh Proverb
12. A word to the wise is enough.
13. A really intelligent man feels what other men only know.
--Motesquieu
14. A wise man changes his mind sometimes, a fool never.
--Jonathan Swift
15. A wise man gets more out of his enemies than a fool gets out of his friend.
-- African Proverb
16. A wise man hears one word and understand two.
--Yiddish Proverb
17. A wise man never loses anything if he has himself.
-- Friedrich Nietzsche
18. A wise man never knows all, only fools know everything.
--African Proverb
19. A wise man knows his own ignorance; a fool thinks he knows everything.
-- C. Simmons
20. A wise man never attempts impossibilities.
-- Philip Massinger
21. As a solid rock is not shaken by a strong gale, so wise person remains unaffected by praise or censure. --- Buddha
22. A wise man’s question contains half the answer. – Ibn Gabirol
23. A wise man sees as much as he ought, not as much as he can.
-- Michel de Montaigne
24. A wise man thinks all that he says, a fool says all that he thinks.
25. A wise man will make more opportunities than he finds. – Francis Bacon
26. All human wisdom is summed up in two words—wait and hope.
-- Alexandre Dumas
27. All is but lip-wisdom which wants experience. –Philip Sidney
28. Adversity reveals genius; fortune conceals it. – Horace
29. Any fool can carry on, but only the wise man knows how to shorten sail. – Joseph Conrad
30. Be swift to hear, slow to speak.
31. Be wiser than other people if you can, but do not tell them so. – Philip Chesterfield
32. Be wisely worldly, be not worldly wise. – Edgar Howe
33. Brevity is the soul of wit.
34. Clever men are the tools with which bad men work. –William Hazlitt
35. Cato used to assert that wise men profited more by fools, than fools by wise men; for that wise men avoided the faults of fools, examples of wise men. –Plutarch{中国谚语的管理智慧}.
36. Cunning…is but the low mimic of wisdom. –Henry Bolingbroke
37. Cleverness is better than force. –Rabelais
38. Cleverness is serviceable for everything, sufficient for nothing.
39. Circumstances are the rulers of the weak; they are but the instruments of the wise.
-- Samuel Lover
40. Common sense in an uncommon degree is what the world calls wisdom. –Samuel Coleridge
41. Deliberate often—decide once. –Latin Proverb
42. Even though you know a thousand things, ask the man who knows one.—Turkish Proverb
43. Even from a foe a man may learn wisdom.—Greek Proverb
44. Everyone is a genius at least once a year; a real genius has his original ideas closer together. --G. C. Lichtenberg
45. Experience is the fool’s master, reason the wise man’s. –Euripides
46. Experience is the mother of wisdom.
47. Experience makes even fools wise.—Saint Augustine
48. Folly is most incurable disease. –Khalil Gibran
49. Fools and wise men are equally harmless. It is the half-fools and the half-wise that are dangerous. –Goethe
50. Fools have their hearts in their mouths, but wise men keep their mouths in their hearts.
51. From listening comes wisdom, and from speaking repentance. –Italian Proverb
52. From the errors of others a wise man corrects his own. –Publius Syrus
53. Genius is one per cent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration. –Thomas Edison
54. Genius only means hard-working all one’s life. –Mendeleev
55. Get rid of petty cleverness and great wisdom will come out. –Zhuang Zhou
56. Gray hair is a sign of age, not of wisdom. –Greek Proverb
57. He dares to be a fool, and that is the first step in the direction of wisdom.—James Gibbons Huneker
58. He’s a fool that cannot conceal his wisdom. –Benjamin Franklin
59. He who can understand other person’s capability is a capable man.
60. He knows useful things, not many things, is wise.
61. He is the wisest man who does not think himself so.
62. He who is virtuous is wise; and he who is wise is good; and he who is good is happy. –Boethius
63. He who knows others is learned, and he who knows himself is wise. –Lao Zi
64. He who recognizes his folly is on the road to wisdom.
65. How prone to doubt, how caution is the wise. –Homer
66. Ignorance is the mother of superstition.—Honore de Balzac
67. I am not only witty in myself, but the cause that wit is in other men. –William Shakespeare
68. I do not believe in the collective wisdom of individual ignorance. –Thomas Carlyle
69. I do not think much of a man who is not wiser today than he was yesterday.—Abraham Lincoln
70. I know no such things as genius; it is nothing but labour and diligence. –Hogarth
71. I prefer the folly of enthusiasm to the indifference of wisdom. –Anatole France
72. If you have wit and learning, add to it wisdom and modesty.
73. If one talks so much that it makes people unable to realize what he really means, he must be foolish man.
74. It is easy to be wiser after the event. –Proverb
75. Intellect is invisible to the man who has none.—Arthur Schopenhauer
76. Intelligence is quickness in seeing things as they are. –George Santayana
77. Intelligence is not to make no mistakes, but quickly to see how to make them good. –Bertolt Brecht
78. It is costly wisdom that is bought by experience. –Roger Ascham
79. It is a characteristic of wisdom not to do desperate things. –Henry Thoreau
80. It is always wise to look ahead, but difficult to look farther than you can see. –Winston Churchill
81. It is easier to be wise for others than for ourselves. –Francois de la Rochefoucauld
82. It is better to speak wisdom foolishly, like the saints, rather than to speak folly wisely, like the dons. –Gilbert Chesterton
83. It is easier to be original and foolish than original and wise. –Gottfried Leibniz
84. It is human nature to think wisely and act foolishly. –Anatole France
85. It is the nature of every man to err, but only the fool perseveres in the error. –Cicero
86. It is the nature of folly to see the faults of others and forget his own. –Oscar Wilde
87. It is the province of knowledge to speak, and it is the privilege of wisdom to listen.—Oliver Holmes
88. It is the essence of genius to make use of the simplest ideas. –Charles Peguy
89. It may serve as a comfort to us, in all our calamities and afflictions, that he that loses anything and gets wisdom by it is a gainer by the loss. –Sir Roger L’Estrange
90. It things were to be done twice, all would be wise.
91. Knowledge comes, but wisdom lingers. –Alfred Tennyson
92. Knowledge begins with learning; understanding, with experience; wisdom, with reflection: all of which the brain integrates into an organic whole. He who possesses all three is a perfect man. –An Arabian Nights Confection
93. Knowledge without wisdom is double folly. –Balthasar Gracian
94. Knowledge comes by taking things apart: analysis. But wisdom comes by putting things together. –John Morrison
95. Knowledge is proud that he has learned so much; wisdom is humble that he knows no more. –William Cowper
96. Knowledge makes an erudite scholar, but only wisdom can make a wise man. –Michel de Montaigne
97. Knowledge which is divorced from justice, may be called cunning rather than wisdom. –Cicero
98. Knowledge can be communicated, but not wisdom. One can find it, live it, be fortified by it, do wonders through it, but one cannot communicate and teach it. –Hermann Hesse
99. Knowledge without without wisdom is load of book on the back of an ass. –Japanese Proverb
100. Many would be wise if they did not think themselves wise. –Baltasar Gracian
101. Make wisdom your provision for the journey from youth to old age, for it is a more certain support than all other possessions. –Diogenes Laertius
102. Man is wise only in search of wisdom; when he imagines he has attained it, he is a fool. --Ibn Gabirol
103. Misfortunes make us wise.
104. Many have original minds who do not think it—they are led away by custom. –John Keats 105. None but a wise man can employ leisure well.
106. Much wisdom often goes with fewer words. –Sophocles
107. Men of genius are meteors destined to be consumed in lighting up their centrury.—Bonaparte Napoleon
108. Most things have two handles; and a wise man take hold of the best.
109. Nine tenths of wisdom is being wise in time. –Theodore Roosevelt
110. No man is the wiser for his learning; it may administer matter to work in, or objects to work upon, but wit and wisdom are born with a man. –John Selden
111. No one can arrive from being talented alone. God gives talent; work transforms talent into genius. –Anna Pavlova
112. One good head is better than a hundred strong hands.
113. Out of wisdom come the following three virtues: profound thought, meritorious speech, and appropriate action. –Democritus
114. Patience is the companion of wisdom. –Saint Augustine
115. Prudence is a good thing; Forethought is wisdom.
116. Property may derive from wisdom, but you cannot buy it.
117. Practical wisdom is only to be learned in the school of experience. Precepts and instruction are useful so far as they go, but, without the discipline of real life, they remain of the nature of theory only. –Samuel Smiles
118. Rightly defined philosophy is simply the love of wisdom. –Cicero
119. Rivalry of scholars advances wisdom. –Hebrew Proverb
120. Self-reflection is the school of wisdom. –Balthasar Gracian
121. Silence is not a sign of wisdom, but babbling is ever a folly. –Benjamin Franklin
122. Silence is a fence around wisdom. –Hebrew Proverb
123. Speak as a common people do, think as wise men do. –Aristotle
124. Such is the nature of men, that howsoever they may acknowledge many others to be more witty, or more eloquent, or more learned; yet they will hardly believe there be many so wise as themselves. –Thomas Hobbes
125. That man is wise who neither hopes nor fears anything from the uncertain events of the future. –Anatole France
126. The art of being wise is the art of knowing what to overlook. –William James{中国谚语的管理智慧}.
127. The beginning of wisdom is the definition of terms –Socrates
128. The doors of wisdom are never shut. –Benjamin Franklin
129. The first stage of folly is to think oneself wise.
130. The fool doth think he is wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool. –William Shakespears
131. The fool wanders, the wise man travels. –Thomas Fuller
132. The function of genius is not to give new answers, but pose new questions which time and mediocrity can resolve. –H. R. Treror Poper
133. The heart of the wise man seeks wisdom. –Anna Sophie
134. The invariable mark of wisdom is to see the miraculous in the common. –Ralph Emerson 135. The growth of wisdom may be gauged accurately by the decline of ill temper. –Friedrich Nietzsche
136. The great creative individual…is capable of more wisdom and virture than collective man ever can be. –John Mill
137. The height of human wisdom is to bring our tempers down to our circumstances, and to make a calm within, under the weight of the greatest storm without. –Daniel Defoe
138. The only competition worthy of a wise man is with himself.
139. The more you try to hide the wisdom, the brighter it shines. It is like a beauty that hidden behind a black veil. –William Shakespeare
140. The mind is found most acute and most uneasy in the morning. Uneasiness is, indeed, a species of sagacity-a passive sagacity. Fools are never uneasy. –Johann von Goethe
141. The price of wisdom is above rubies. –Charles Prestwich Scott
142. The pleasures of the intellect are permanent, the pleasures of the heart are transitory. –Henry Thoreau
143. The wise knows most and says the least.
144. The steadfastness of the wise is but the art of keeping their agitation locked in their hearts. --Francois de la Rochefoucauld
145. The sum of wisdom is that the time is never lost that is devoted to work.
--Ralph Waldo Emerson
146. The mark of wisdom is the ability to judge the hour, size up the situation, and act according to circumstance. –Homer
147. The truest greatness lies in being kind, the truest wisdom in happy mind. –Ella Wilcox
148. The two powers which in my opinion constitute a wise man are those of bearing and forbearing. –Epictetus
149. The very specially of genius is not wisdom but thought and creation.
150. The wisdom of the wise is an uncommon degree of common sense. –W.R. Inge
151. The wisdom of the wise and the experience of ages may be preserved by quotation. – Benjamin Disraeli
152. The wise man is always a good listener.
153. The wise man, before beginning an action, looks carefully to the end.
154. The wise man is deceived but once, the fool twice.
155. The wise man must remember that while he is a descendant of the past, he is a parent of the future. –Herbert Spencer
156. The wise man will want to be ever with him who is better than himself. –Plato
157. The wise through excess of wisdom is made a fool. –Ralph Emerson
158. The world wants geniuses, but it wants them to behave just like other people. –G. Moore
企业管理谚语俗语大全
企业管理谚语俗语大全
1、 “两个车轮” —— 指管理与技术。
2、 “工业工程”—— 指联结这两只车轮之间的车轴。
3、 “放之四海而皆准”的管理方法不存在。
4、 “未雨绸缪” “防患于未然”—— 指前馈控制。
5、 “亡羊补牢” ——指反馈控制。
6、 “金字塔”状—— 指组织层次的能级图。
7、“一技之长”、“才重一技”、“隔行如隔山”、“不熟不做”——指管理人员的技术技能。{中国谚语的管理智慧}.
8、“预则立,不预则废” ——是计划工作。
9、 “造势”——— 指管理活动中的领导职能。
10、 “十根筷子折不断” “众人摇浆划大船”———指协调的作用,会产生1+1>2的效果。
11、“双赢”——指泰罗所倡导的劳资合作。
12、“胡萝卜加大棒”———指泰罗制。
13、“机械式组织”——比喻韦伯所称的行政组织。
14、“机器人”———指古典管理理论将人视为机器,构成了“无人的组织”。
15、 “封闭系统”———指古典管理理论,忽视组织与外部环境的关系。
16、“没有最好,只有更好”所依据的是满意原则。
17、“众人拾柴火焰高”———指决策的拟定方案时,应群策群力,形成尽可能多的可行方案。
18、“一盘棋”思想———指决策中要统筹兼顾。亦指组织在工作轮换进行培训的作用。
19、“牵一发而动全身”———用来形容目标的相关性。
20、“一只羊放,二只羊也是放”———指下属工作相似,管理幅度大。
21、“不要越权”“不要篡权”——指下确发挥参谋的作用。
22、“上边多头多脑,下边昏头昏脑”———指职能制造成的多头领导的弊端。
23、“斯隆模型”或“联邦分权化”———指事业部制。
24、“近亲繁殖”———指内部提拔人才的弊端。
25、“金无足赤,人无完人”,组织结构亦然!
26、“枪打出头鸟” “出头的椽子先烂”——指组织变革时遇到外部环境的阻力。{中国谚语的管理智慧}.
27、“帝王相”———指领导素质论。
28、“上下同欲者胜”——指激励的重要性。
29、“沉默是金”“无为而治”———指强化理论中的自然消退方法
30、 “越俎代疱”和“袖手旁观”———指管理中,参谋的作用没有正确发挥而出现的情况。
31、 “重赏之下,必有勇夫”———体现了激励工作的有效性,但过于简单化。(期望理论)
32、 “凡事预则立,不预则废”———恰当地体现了计划职能。
33、“士为知己者死”———说明了有效的领导始于了解下属的欲望和需要。
34、 “杀鸡给猴看”———是一种负强化。
35、 “仓廪实而知礼节”———符合马斯洛的需求层次理论。
36、 “一个和尚一座庙”———反映了组织设计中的因事设职的原则。
37、“三个和尚没水喝”———是基于X理论,反应了要素组合的低效方式,使得整体的力量反而削减。
38、 “一分钟管理”———指及时的奖励,惩罚能达到极佳的效果。
39、“一管就死,一放就乱”———用权变理论中的领导生命周期理论可以合理解释。
40、“公平理论”合理解释。
41、“用人勿疑,疑人勿用”———指大胆启用人才,又注意不给他犯错误的机会。
42、“走一步,看一步,摸着石头过河”———指工作中缺乏计划性。
43、“空心公司”———是指一个以某小公司为核心的网络组织结构。
44、“要我这样干”———是指科学管理的逻辑。
45、“我要这样干”———是指文化管理的逻辑。
46、“以不变应万变”———指经验管理的片面性,应重视权变思想。
47、“计划跟不上变化”———指计划缺乏灵活性、指导性。
48 、“蠢才是放错地方的人才”一一指应人尽其才,因人设职与因事设职相平衡。
49、“无商不奸”——指人性理论中的“X理论”。
50、“棍棒下面出孝子”——反映了“X理论”的片面性。
51、“罗斯福曾说“要使人避免恐惧”——指马斯洛的层次理论中的安全需要。
52、“58岁现象”——反映了经理职位工资和付出不符,产生的心理不平衡,想在退休之前“捞一把”的心理和行为。符合公平理论。
53、“公平理论”——合理解释。
54、“用人勿疑,疑人勿用”——指大胆启用人才,又注意不给他犯错误的机会。
55、“将在外,君命有所不受”——反映了集权和分权的一个正确观念。
56、“三个臭皮匠,赛过诸葛亮”——反映了管理工作中协调的作用。
57、“家长制”、“一言堂”、“一刀切”——反映了专制式、粗放式领导方式。
58、“酒香不怕巷子深”——反映了“生产观念” “产品观念”的落后性。
59、 “盘人”——指管理工作的主要内容是对人实施管理。
60、“只有糟糕的将军,没有糟糕的士兵”——体现了领导的指挥作用,亦指领导才能是成功的关键。
61、“警(懂)匪一家”——反映了管理上监督检查,控制工作的不到位。
62、“摸着石头过河”——指企业缺乏战略管理,或者企业战略不清晰。
63、“狗拿耗子,多管闲事”——反映了管理工作中的组织与控制问题。
64、“买东西要货比三家”——买东西追求的是性价比,通过多家的比较,可以得到最满意的产品。
65、“热的时候泼冷水,冷的时候添把柴,逆水行舟,熨平波动”——指政(你懂的)府作为“看得见的手”应该而且可以影响经济环境。
66、“出其不意、攻其不备,乃取胜之道”、“以正合,以奇胜”——企业经营中的超常战略,或者叫创新经营。
67、“出水才看两腿泥”——企业绩效管理中的硬考核指标。
68、“听其言而观其行”、“别在一颗树上吊死” ——人力资源管理。
69、“种瓜得瓜,种豆得豆”——企业行为管理理论。
70、“害人之心不可有,防人之心不可无”——商业伦理,商道。
谚语与企业管理
谚语与企业管理:
由南京尚一企业管理顾问整理发布谚语与企业管理:
1、"未雨绸缪"、"防患于未然"--指前馈控制。
2、"亡羊补牢"一-指反馈控制。
3、"一技之长"、"才重一技"、"隔行如隔山"、"不熟不做"--指管理人员的技术技能。
4、"预则立,不预则废""一年之计在于春,一天之计在于晨"--是计划工作。
5、"十根筷子折不断"、"众人摇浆划大船"--指团队管理、协调管理,会产生1+12的效果。
6、"胡萝卜加大棒"--指泰罗制。
7、"没有最好,只有更好"--所依据的是满意原则。
8、"众人拾柴火焰高"--指决策的拟定方案时,应群策群力,形成尽可能多的可行方案。
9、"造势"--指管理活动中的领导职能。
10、"牵一发而动全身"--用来形容目标的相关性。
11、"双赢"--指泰罗所倡导的劳资合作。
12、"一只羊放,二只羊也是放"--指下属工作相似,管理幅度大。
13、"机械式组织"--比喻韦伯所称的行政组织。
14、"机器人"--指古典管理理论将人视为机器,构成了"无人的组织"。
15、"金无足赤,人无完人",组织结构亦然!
16、"上边多头多脑,下边昏头昏脑"--指职能制造成的多头领导的弊端。
17、"枪打出头鸟"、"出头的椽子先烂"-一指组织变革时遇到外部环境的阻力。
18、"一盘棋"思想--指决策中要统筹兼顾。亦指组织在工作轮换进行培训的作用。
19、"沉默是金""无为而治"一-指强化理论中的自然消退方法
20、"越俎代疱"和"袖手旁观"--指管理中,参谋的作用没有正确发挥而出现的情况。
21、"不要越权""不要篡权"--指下属发挥参谋的作用。
22、"重赏之下,必有勇夫"--体现了激励工作的有效性,但过于简单化。(期望理论)
23、"凡事预则立,不预则废"--恰当地体现了计划职能。
24、"士为知己者死"--说明了有效的领导始于了解下属的欲望和需要。
25、"杀鸡给猴看"--是一种负强化。
26、"仓廪实而知礼节"--符合马斯洛的需求层次理论。
27、"一个和尚一座庙"--反映了组织设计中的因事设职的原则。
28、"三个和尚没水喝"--是基于X理论,反应了要素组合的低效方式,使得整体的力量反而削减。
29"蠢才是放错地方的人才"一一指应人尽其才,因人设职与因事设职相平衡。
30、"近亲繁殖"--指内部提拔人才的弊端。
31、"上下同欲者胜"--指激励的重要性。
32、"无商不奸"--指人性理论中的"X理论"。
33、"棍棒下面出孝子"--反映了"X理论"的片面性。
34、"罗斯福曾说"要使人避免恐惧"--指马斯洛的层次理论中的安全需要。
35、"帝王相"--指领导素质论。
36、"计划跟不上变化"一一指计划缺乏灵活性、指导性。
37、"以不变应万变"--指经验管理的片面性,应重视权变思想。
38、"58岁现象"--反映了经理职位工资和付出不符,产生的心理不平衡,想在退休之前"捞一把"的心理和行为。符合公平理论。
39、"一管就死,一放就乱"--用权变理论中的领导生命周期理论可以合理解释。
40"公平理论"--合理解释。
41、"用人勿疑,疑人勿用"--指大胆启用人才,又注意不给他犯错误的机会。
42、"走一步,看一步,摸着石头过河"--指工作中缺乏计划性。
43、"将在外,君命有所不受"--反映了集权和分权的一个正确观念。
44、"三个臭皮匠,赛过诸葛亮"--反映了管理工作中协调的作用。
45、"家长制"、"一言堂"、"一刀切"--反映了专制式、粗放式领导方式。
46、"酒香不怕巷子深"--反映了"生产观念""产品观念"的落后性。
47、"盘人"--指管理工作的主要内容是对人实施管理。
48、"只有糟糕的将军,没有糟糕的士兵"--体现了领导的指挥作用,亦指领导才能是成功的关键。
中国古今谚语大全
000. 事理、修养篇
事理、修养篇佚名一有理走遍天下,无理寸步难行。正理一条,歪理千条。好话不在多说,有理不用高声。雷响天下明,水落石头现。强扭的瓜不甜。十个指头有长短,山林树木有高低。真的假不了,公道归分道。桥归桥,路归路。树老根须多,人老见识多。不听老人言,吃亏在眼前。出门看天气,进门看脸色。人难欺,马难骑,勿笑穷人穿破衣。船到江心补漏迟。瞒天瞒地,瞒不得隔壁邻舍。不怕明
001. 关于虎的谚语
关于虎的谚语佚名谚语,有人说它是“智慧的花朵”。以十二生肖为内容的谚语数量众多,流传广泛,是广大群众所创造并喜闻乐见的富有气息和情趣的语言表达形式。如“龙生龙,凤生凤,老鼠生儿会打洞”、“牛不喝水不能强摁头”、“兔子不吃窝边草”„„等等。与老虎有关的谚语也十分丰富,这些谚语有的反映了虎的性格特征勇猛、威武、凶暴以至使人望而生畏,不敢亲近,就如同在“帝王”或者权威的面前。如封建社会中那些
002. 关于马的谚语
关于马的谚语佚名一马不跨双鞍。人有错手,马有失蹄人奔家乡马奔草。人怕理,马怕鞭,蚊早怕火烟。人要炼,马要骑。人是衣裳马是鞍。小马儿乍行嫌路窄。千里骡马一处牛。马上不知马下苦,饱汉不知饿汉饥。马上摔死英雄汉,河中淹死会水人。马不打不奔,
不人激不发。马至滩,不加鞭。马行十步九回头。马屁拍在马腿上。马看牙板,树看年轮。马群奔驰靠头马
003. 养生保健谚语
养生保健谚语佚名谚语是人民群众在生活实践中的经验、教训和取得的知识的总结。这里谈及的养生保健谚语,通过流传、成了人们长寿之道的宝贵财富。如“饭前洗手,饭后漱口”。“预防肠胃病,饮食要干净”。“吃了省钱瓜,害了绞肠癌”。———它们从不同角度,提醒人们注意饮食卫生,防止病从口入。又如“少吃多滋味,多吃坏肚皮”。“贪吃贪睡,添病减岁”。“饭吃八成饱,到老肠胃好”。“早饭要好,午饭要饱
004. 养生谚语
养生谚语佚名谚语是在人民群众中广泛流传的固定语句,是人民群众在长期生活实践中总结出来的经验和教训的结晶。谚语虽然简单通俗,但反映的道理却非常深刻。其中养生谚语是健康长寿的金玉良言、不二法则,时时吟读,常常照做,就会少生疾病,健康长寿,获益匪浅。运动健身方面的养生谚语 “运动好比灵芝草,何必苦把仙方找” “拍打足三里(保健要穴),胜吃老母鸡” “竹从叶上枯,人从脚上老,天天千步
005. 写作谚语
写作谚语耀昌人不学要落后,刀不磨要生锈。天才在于勤奋,知识在于积累。要学蜜蜂采蜜,不学蜻蜓点水。笔勤能使手快,多练能使手巧。思想模糊不清,文章中心不明。宁写一句实话,不凑百言浮夸。实话三言两语,胜过虚话千句。百遍锤炼成字,千遍推敲成句。树木不剪不成材,文章不改不精练。千金难买回头看,
006. 农业谚语
农业谚语佚名春光一刻值千斤,廿四个节气勿等人。春打六九头,穷人苦出头。只有自踏车,没有白削花。若要花,霉里扒。黄花见白花,四十五日上轧车。东北风,雨祖宗。吃了端午粽,还要冻三冻。床上困勿得,田里了勿得。六月初一雷个响,棉花便个梗。六月六,晒得鸭蛋熟。六月里盖被,十二月里无米。白露身勿露,赤膊当猪猡。白露前后一场风,乡下人做个空。白露白
007. 农事时令谚语
农事时令谚语佚名麦吃三月雨,还得二月下。枣芽发,种棉花。三月清明榆不名.二月清明老了榆。(榆:指榆钱)麦收八、十、三月雨。三判无三卯,田间米不饱。春雨来得早,粮食吃不了。一年两头春,带角贵似金。春雨贵如油,有雨人不愁。清明早,立夏迟,谷雨种棉正适时。麦到芒种谷到秋,寒露以后刨红薯。清明前后,种瓜点豆。小满耩花(棉花),十年九瞎。四月芒种前
008. 天气谚语
天气谚语佚名天气谚语是以成语或歌谣形式在民间流传的有关天气变化的经验。我国天气谚语历史悠久、地域广阔、内容丰富,其中很多可以用来制做长、中、短期天气预报。由于我国地域辽阔,各地天气气候有所差异,因此天气谚语流传于全国各地,北起黑龙江南至南海诸岛,东起东海西至新疆、西藏,到处都有天气谚语。例如黑龙江有“初冬寒春雨多”;南海的西沙群岛有不少关于台风的天气谚语,如“古龙晒太阳,不久台风狂{中国谚语的管理智慧}.
009. 天气谚语四则
天气谚语四则佚名一、看云识天气天上钩钩云,地上雨淋淋。天有城堡云,地上雷雨临。天上扫帚云,三天雨降淋。早晨棉絮云,午后必雨淋。早晨东云长,有雨不过晌。早晨云挡坝,三天有雨下。早晨浮云走,午后晒死狗。早雨一日晴,晚雨到天明。今晚花花云,明天晒死人。空中鱼鳞天,不雨也风颠。天上豆荚云,不久雨将临。天上铁砧云,很快大雨淋。老云结了驾,不阴也
010. 妙趣横生的谚语接龙
妙趣横生的谚语接龙佚名谚语接龙,是一种智力游戏。它的游戏规则就是后一个句子的前一个字与前一个句子的最后一个字相同或者谐音。这种游戏有助于学生加强对谚语的掌握,丰富写作词汇,开发智力。笔者曾经作过尝试,下面照录于下,请大家一起参与。挨
过烫的孩子怕火——火烧芭蕉不死心——心病要用心药医——衣是人的脸,衣是人之威——威风一顶帽,精干一双手——手艺多了没特长——长江后浪推前浪,一代更比一代
011. 安全生产谚语选
安全生产谚语选佚名 1.安全是幸福的花,全家浇灌美如画。安全多下及时雨,教育少放马后炮。 2.安全保健康,千斤及不上。安全好,烦恼少,全家幸福乐陶陶。 3.安全给尊章者胸前佩戴红花,事故给蛮干者留下终身痛苦。 4.护士安全求高产,好比杀鸡去取卵。宝剑锋从磨砺出,安全好从严中来。 5.事故教训是镜子,安全经验是明灯。一人把关一处安,众人把关稳如山。 6.秤砣不大压千斤,安全帽小救
012. 日暖夜寒,东海也干
日暖夜寒,东海也干佚名这是一条以气温日较差来预测天气的谚语。意思是白天炎热、夜晚凉爽的天气现象,预兆着未来天气将有干旱出现。这条谚语适合于盛夏我国东南沿海地区。据统计,日间和夜间温度相差10℃以上,将会有一段较长时间无雨天气而出现干旱。原因是,日暖夜寒一般是由西北太平洋副热带高气压天气系统控制而引起的,通常夏季副热带高气压内有下沉气流,天气晴朗,风力微弱。白天,太阳辐射热量较强,气
中国文化与中国式管理智慧
中国文化与中国式管理智慧
《中国文化与中国式管理智慧》可在网上看!直接搜索《中国文化与中国式管理智慧》即可,内容和我们讲话时的差不多。谢谢。
时间:2011年1月22日
主讲:广东石油化工学院思政部副主任 唐少莲
陈实:各位街坊、各位听众,亲爱的朋友们,“岭南大讲坛·文化论坛”第六十九讲现在开始!今天的主讲嘉宾是广东石油化工学院思政部副主任唐少莲博士,他演讲的题目是《中国文化与中国式管理智慧》。说起中国文化我想我们要记住有一个近代文化大师,他叫做辜鸿铭,是一个很怪的老人,生在南洋,学在西洋,结婚在东洋,干活在北洋。他讲过一句话,他说“美国人博大纯朴,但是不深沉;英国人深沉纯朴,但是不博大;德国人博大又深沉,但是不纯朴;法国人没有德国文化那么深沉,也没有美国文化博大,也没有英国文化纯朴,但是它比这三个民族都灵敏;只有中国文化四者兼备,既博大深沉,又纯朴灵敏。这是辜鸿铭对中国文化的理解,我很欣赏这个怪老子的讲法。今天唐博士他把中国文化和西方文化进行了对比,他在对比的过程中他认为中国文化是一个含蓄的内敛的阴柔文化,他是一个讲人情,讲面子的情感文化,是一个整体本位的宗法文化,重视家、国和整体,是一个阴阳协调的和谐文化,是一个“内圣外王”的伦理文化,同时他是一个重视经验和直觉的悟性文化。
由于有了中国文化这样的一些特点,所以就形成了中国式的这种管理智慧,管理智慧里面唐博士给了我们6个特点,第一叫“和而不同”;第二叫做“以人为本”;第三叫做“道德齐礼”,“导之以德”,“齐之以礼;第四个是基本路径,叫做“中庸之道”;《三字经》里面讲中不偏,庸不易;第五就是因变制胜;第六是“无为而治”,这是中国管理的最高境界,这就是今天唐博士演讲的主要内容。
唐博士是70后的,在我们这个论坛上算是比较少的,他是湖南双峰人,曾国藩的老乡,双峰出了很多人物,网上是这样来描写他的,“这个家伙履历比较长,听他自己说自己以前是中专毕业教小学,后来又考本,考研,读研究生,又考博,读博士生,厉害”。他有两个大的特点,除了高中没有上过,什么学都上过,小学、中学、中专、本科、研究生、博士生都上过。第二他什么课都教过,小学、中学、大学、培训、MBA之类的都教过。所以,他讲课的特点是见多识广,干练洒脱,声音宏亮,用词精当,很善于把深奥的东西讲浅,也很善于把浅的东西讲深奥,因为他会把股票什么统统搬到课堂上来。所以他会在轻松、幽默、生动活泼之中,让你忘记那些无风的夏天,或者多雪的冬天。有请唐博士!
唐少莲:大家好!很高兴也很荣幸有此机会与大家共同探讨中国文化与中国式管理智慧。选择这样一个课题,乃是基于对两个问题的追问:第一是作为五千年未曾中断的文明,中国文化与西方文化在基本的价值取向、思维方式、行为准则和精神追求上到底有着怎样的区别?受中华文化哺育和浸染的我们又究竟体现了怎样的不同于西方人的国民性格与民族精神?第二是随着国学热的兴起,中国管理智慧亦日益受到广泛的关注。一度对西方管理理论趋之若鹜的中国人蓦然回首时,却发现我们自己的老祖宗其实也给我们留下了弥足珍贵的管理思想资源。那么,我们应该
如何实现这种中国式的管理智慧在当代社会的价值转化,从而构建具有中国特色与中国气派的管理思想体系呢?
所以,今天要和大家交流两个方面的内容:一是中国文化与中国人的行为方式,二是中国式管理智慧如何可能。
一、中国文化与中国人的行为方式
有这么一个故事:说有几个不同国家的人同在咖啡馆喝咖啡,却发现杯子里有一只苍蝇。首先发现苍蝇的是一个英国人。他很惊讶,当然也很生气。但英国人讲究绅士风度,觉得不好意思在公众场合发作,就把钱掏出来压在咖啡杯下,生气但一声不吭地走了。第二个发现的是日本人,日本人可不管三七二十一,“啪”地把咖啡杯砸得山响,“八格呀噜”地一顿狂吼,把服务员一顿臭骂。第三个是个美国人,他发现了那只可怜的苍蝇,微笑着把服务员小姐叫过来说:“亲爱的小姐,在我们美国喝咖啡不是这样的。在美国喝咖啡,边上会有一小罐牛奶、一小碟方糖,外加一小碟苍蝇。当然,糖和苍蝇是由顾客自己决定放不放的,他想放多少就放多少。”故事讲到这里,我想向朋友们提出了一个问题:假设是一个中国人在喝咖啡时发现了苍蝇,他会怎么样? 答案或许会见仁见智。但有一点可以确认:无论你的回答是什么,你所认定并确信的那个答案一定体现了中国文化和中国人的基本特质。
那么,在一种文化比较的视野中,中国文化与中国人到底具有哪些与西方文化和西方人不一样的特质呢?
1.中国文化是含蓄内敛的阴柔文化
关于中国文化阴柔或是阳刚的特质,相信有朋友会援引《周易•乾卦》的名言“天行健,君子以自强不息”或是孟子的“富贵不能淫,贫贱不能移,威武不能屈”等作为论据,来论证中国文化与中华民族生生不息、刚强不屈的阳刚之气。此固然不错,因为中国文化本就是刚柔相济的文化。但今天我所讲的中国文化特质是在一个中西文化比较的视野中提炼出来的。也就是说,相较于开放、张扬的西方文化而言,中国文化更具有含蓄内敛的阴柔特质。
中国文化的阴柔特质首先就表现在中国人对含蓄与意境的追寻。有个故事:相传纪晓岚刚进翰林院时并不引人注意,连太监总管都不认识他。某次,太监总管见他身穿蟒袍,手拿折扇,觉得有点意思,便出了一上联:
小翰林,穿冬衣,持夏扇,一部春秋曾读否?
这上联不算太俗,嵌有春夏秋冬四季。纪晓岚也觉得蛮有意思,刚好老太监说的是南方口音,便脱口而出:
老总管,生南方,来北地,那个东西还在吗?
对句不仅道出了东西南北,还巧妙地调笑了老太监的那个“东西”早就被阉割了。众所周知,“东西”是个万能词汇,但却能在特定的语境中含蓄地表达特定的对象。
在中国文化中,含蓄和意境都是一种美,它渗入中国人的文化血脉,成为一种艺术态度和生活自觉。在日常生活中,这种对含蓄与意境的追寻可谓无处不在。例如,我们过去把“上厕所”叫做出恭、登东,现在一般也说成方便、解手;男女之事,西方人说“make love”,我们则叫“巫山云雨”,更给人增添如梦似幻和神奇瑰丽的遐想。在我们的文化传统中,“余音绕梁、余味无穷”,一直是艺术追求的最高境界。在某种意义上,中国文化是“饺子”文化,把好东西包在里面,需要细细品味;西方文化则是“匹萨饼”文化,把漂亮东西都摆在外面,更加一目了然。 中国文化的阴柔特质还表现在中国人的谦虚和内敛。“鄙人”、“在下”、“贱内”、“拙荆”、“犬子”、“斧正”、“哪里哪里”等自谦用语比比皆是。中国人在外人面前习惯于贬低自己,把成绩和功劳归功于上级和同事;而外国人则更强调自己的努力和优势。一个最典型的例子是,当中国人在竞选或是竞聘某一岗位时,往往要谦虚地说:在上级领导的亲切关怀下,在同
志们的无私帮助下,我取得了一点点微不足道的成绩„„这些话在乐于表现自己的西方人那里就愣是闹不