Gallente
Jin-Mei
-9.82
Veritas Totient
Last Active:
10 months ago
Birthday:
Jan 17, 2016 (9 years old)
Next Birthday:
Jan 17, 2026 (128 days remaining)
Combat Metrics
Kills
6,384
Losses
60
Efficiency
99.1%
Danger Ratio
6.4%
ISK Metrics
ISK Killed
13061.06B ISK
ISK Lost
27.00B ISK
ISK Efficiency
99.8%
ISK Balance
13034.07B ISK
Solo Activity
Solo Kills
24
Solo Losses
12
Solo Kill Ratio
0.4%
Solo Efficiency
66.7%
Other Metrics
NPC Losses
3
NPC Loss Ratio
5.0
Avg. Kills/Day
1.8
Activity
Medium
Character Biography
孟子曰:“以力假仁者霸,霸必有大國,以德行仁者王,王不待大。湯以七十里,文王以百里。以力服人者,非心服也,力不贍也;以德服人者,中心悅而誠服也,如七十子之服孔子也。《詩》云:‘自西自東,自南自北,無思不服。’此之謂也。”
Mencius said, “One who relies on force but borrows humanity as a means will rule as a hegemon. A hegemon must possess a large state. But he who relies on virtue to put humanity into practice will rule as a True King, and a True King is not reliant upon his state being large. Tang’s state was a mere seventy miles square and King Wen’s but one hundred.
“When one relies on force to make others submit, submission does not come from their hearts; it is merely that their strength was not sufficient. When one relies on virtue to make others submit they feel pleased in the heart’s core to do so, and their submission is sincere, as the seventy disciples submitted to Confucius. It is this the Poetry means when it says:
From the West, from the East,
From the South, from the North,
None thought not to submit.”
Mencius said, “One who relies on force but borrows humanity as a means will rule as a hegemon. A hegemon must possess a large state. But he who relies on virtue to put humanity into practice will rule as a True King, and a True King is not reliant upon his state being large. Tang’s state was a mere seventy miles square and King Wen’s but one hundred.
“When one relies on force to make others submit, submission does not come from their hearts; it is merely that their strength was not sufficient. When one relies on virtue to make others submit they feel pleased in the heart’s core to do so, and their submission is sincere, as the seventy disciples submitted to Confucius. It is this the Poetry means when it says:
From the West, from the East,
From the South, from the North,
None thought not to submit.”