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What is the famous saying about cultural confidence?

1. Culture has individuality and individuality, but for national culture, as Lu Xun said, "Only what is national is what is world-wide." Yes, for a nation to stand in the world, culture is the cornerstone, a symbol of a country's strength, and the source of confidence for every Chinese.

Lu Xun (formerly known as Zhou Zhangshou, later renamed Zhou Shuren, September 25, 1881 - October 19, 1936), formerly named Yushan, later renamed Hecai, was born in Shaoxing, Zhejiang, and is a famous literary figure. Writer, thinker, revolutionary, and democratic fighter, an important participant in the May Fourth New Culture Movement, and the founder of modern Chinese literature. His representative works include "The Scream" and "Wandering".

2. Today, China has become the second largest economic power in the world, and we have always adhered to the great goal of moving towards the socialist modernization process. "But if we want to have the follow-up power of socialist economic development, we must continue China's five thousand years of historical civilization and further enhance cultural confidence." - Xu Ping

Xu Ping, male, Han nationality, 1957 Born in January, Chaohu, Anhui, joined the Communist Party of China in October 1987, started working in February 1982, graduated from the Department of Electrical Engineering, Hefei University of Technology, majoring in power generation and power systems, university degree, Bachelor of Engineering, Business Administration of Tsinghua University Master, researcher-level senior engineer.

He is currently a member of the Social and Legal Affairs Committee of the 13th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference and an external director of China General Technology (Group) Holdings Co., Ltd.

3. Knowledge is the crystallization of wisdom, and culture is the luster of gems. ——[Indian] Rabindranath Tagore

Rabindranath Tagore (May 7, 1861 - August 7, 1941), Indian poet, writer, social activist, Philosopher and Indian nationalist. His representative works include "Gitanjali", "Birds", "Sand in the Eyes", "Four People", "Family and the World", "The Gardener", "New Moon", "The Last Psalm", "Gola", "Crisis of Civilization", etc.

4. Although culture is not as widespread as civilization, it has a deeper connection with the joy, anger, sorrow and joy of everyone in each country. ——Masayoshi Moritani

Masayoshi Moritani, a Japanese scholar of comparative technology, was born in South Korea. He graduated from the Department of Engineering, University of Tokyo in 1960 with a major in naval engineering. He later worked at Hitachi Zosen Co., Ltd. An assistant professor in the Atomic Energy Engineering Department of the University's Department of Engineering, he joined Nomura Research Institute Co., Ltd. in 1967 and engaged in research on technology development. After 1980, he served as the chief researcher of the Special Research Department of the institute and made significant contributions to comparative technology theory. His major works include: "Japan's Technological Power", "The Battle for Technological Development between Japan, the United States and Europe", "Japan's Technology", and "Comparison of Industrial Technology in Japan, China and South Korea: A Preliminary Theory of Comparative Technology".

5. The vision of culture goes beyond machinery, culture hates hatred; culture has a great passion, the passion for pursuing harmony, beauty and light. ——Matthew Arnold

From 1857 to 1867, he served as professor of literature at Oxford University. In his works, although he reveals a pessimistic attitude towards life, democratic ideas always dominate. Arnold's literary criticism touches on many important issues and can also give us a lot of inspiration in research methods.