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Chinese Glossary Terms

6 min read · updated Apr 2026

Chinese Glossary Terms

The language of Fun City draws deeply from Chinese philosophical, martial, and metaphysical traditions. These terms are not mere vocabulary — they are living concepts that inform the design of AI, community, education, and governance throughout the ecosystem.


Xīnshēng Shànniàn Ài Rénlèi (新生善念爱人类)

"Empower good, and love humanity"

The foundational behavioral principle of Fun City. It encompasses personality development (Dasha), empowerment of individuals, and the protocols of love that govern all interactions between humans and AI.


Xīnfǎ (心法)

"Method of the Heart" / Heart Protocols

The personal and collective alignment of the heart with universal wisdom. Xinfa is not taught in textbooks — it is remembered through practice, silence, beauty, and trust. This project comes from the heart without pride. Fun City embeds Xinfa into every protocol, ensuring that even intelligent systems reflect heart-aligned principles.

"The logical structure among Agents can clarify the logical structure of the human heart, leading to the mind method becoming science." — Chen Weixing


Shífǎ (实法)

"Action Method" / Practical Execution

A practical, action-oriented method focused on execution and real-world application. Shifa is the complement to Xinfa: where Xinfa is the heart's method, Shifa is the hand's method. Too much Shifa compared to Xinfa results in less human nurturing — execution without soul.


Shènjìng (慎敬)

"Reverence and Focus"

The guiding philosophy of belief and focused attention. Shenjing is the attitude of approaching every endeavor with both careful attention and sacred respect. It is the same principle that guides the first page of any application to Fun City.


Nèigōng (内功)

"Internal Power"

The cultivation of internal energy, strength, and control. Neigong focuses on breath, energy flow (Qi), and mental discipline — developing power from within rather than relying on brute force. In Fun City, this applies both to human development and to the internal architecture of AI systems.


Wàigōng (外功)

"External Power"

Physical strength, external techniques, and visible power developed through training, conditioning, and physical movement. Waigong is the outward expression of capability — the complement to Neigong's internal cultivation.


Tàijí Bāguà (太极八卦)

"Supreme Ultimate and Eight Trigrams"

A system of philosophical, martial, and energetic principles that integrate the Supreme Ultimate (universal balance) with the Eight Trigrams (patterns of change and movement). It represents the understanding of how Yin-Yang interacts with the I Ching's Eight Trigrams to explain cosmic transformation.


Jīntiān Àiyīn (金天爱因)

"Golden Celestial Love Frequency"

A state of alignment with higher consciousness, celestial wisdom, or the vibrational essence of the universe. In Daoist or metaphysical thought, it relates to harmonic balance, sound frequencies, or the principle that everything in existence resonates with a higher cosmic structure.


Xuánxué (宣学)

"Mysterious Learning" / Metaphysical Studies / Academy of Intelligence

The study of the deep, hidden principles that govern reality. In Fun City, Xuanxue represents the integration of ancient metaphysical knowledge with modern AI and computational thinking.


Xūnshà (勋纱)

"Mission Silk" — Mission, Vision, Values Empower the Heart

This term evokes a sense of purpose, honor, and refinement. Mission makes you feel pride and safety. Vision organizes people's attention on focus. The term symbolizes how one's principles and achievements wrap around and strengthen the heart, like silk reinforcing armor.


Lǐ Yīběn (理一本)

"One Fundamental Principle"

The idea that all things stem from a single fundamental principle or truth. This concept underlies Fun City's belief that Eastern and Western philosophies, when traced to their source, reveal the same universal laws.


Long (龙)

"Dragon"

The dragon spirit causes both separation and unity. In Fun City's philosophy, the Dragon Race represents collective intelligence, reverence for nature, and the capacity for profound internal cultivation paired with powerful external expression.


Chéngguà (成卦)

"Forming a Hexagram"

The process of forming a complete hexagram in the I Ching, representing the manifestation of a pattern, destiny, or insight. It symbolizes the realization of a cycle, the emergence of meaning from randomness, and the structured interpretation of change and transformation.


Qiántàijí (乾太极)

"Creative Supreme Ultimate"

A master of time, rhythm, and cosmic cycles, deeply attuned to the natural flow of energy and balance.


Jiang Ziya (姜子牙)

"Master of Strategy and Statecraft"

A legendary military strategist, philosopher, and political advisor during the late Shang and early Zhou Dynasty (circa 11th century BCE). He was instrumental in helping King Wen and King Wu overthrow the Shang Dynasty and establish the Zhou Dynasty. In Fun City's narrative, Jiang Ziya represents the archetype of the wise builder who establishes civilization's moral foundation before its political structures.

"Jiang Ziya's Investiture of the Gods culturally created a land of rites and righteousness for the Chinese nation. This is the era our Chinese nation is most proud of." — Chen Weixing


Historical Figures

Yándì (炎帝) — The Flame Emperor: Credited with teaching people how to cultivate crops, use herbal medicine, and develop agriculture. He invented the plow and irrigation techniques, enabling early civilizations to farm efficiently.

Huángdì (黄帝) — The Yellow Emperor: Traditionally regarded as the one who defined time, calendars, and cosmic order. Together with Yandi, the two emperors represent the foundation of Chinese civilization.


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