Chapter 6 <I don't know Sun Yat-sen at all>
A middle school teacher was teaching modern Chinese history to students, and asked a student a question: How did you know Sun Yat-sen?
The student actually replied: I don't know Sun Yat-sen at all.
The whole class burst into laughter after hearing this answer, and the teacher was also confused.
The knowledge of logic tells us that the same word can express different concepts in different contexts.The word cognition in the teacher's question expresses the concept of evaluation or understanding.
The meaning of the question is, after studying Sun Yat-sen's revolutionary thoughts and deeds, how should we evaluate Sun Yat-sen as a historical figure; and the word "knowledge" in the students' answers refers to seeing or interacting with him in person.The meaning of the answer is that I have never seen Sun Yat-sen with my own eyes.Obviously, the student's answer made the mistake of subverting the concept.If you deliberately answer this way because you haven't learned your homework well, it is pure sophistry.