Fortune Telling Collection - Ziwei fortune-telling - On Yong's Academic Contribution

On Yong's Academic Contribution

Tan Xiyong was familiar with Qin, chess, calligraphy and painting, astrology and western Taoism since he was a child, and he was more familiar with the eight characters and Yi Li. Master Liu Huicang, who was sent from Zizhou, got his true story and carried it forward in Hong Kong. On the one hand, he accepted 40 disciples and established the Weizimen Society to engage in academic research. On the other hand, in Ming Pao and its columns, he also pointed out the problems and disadvantages of Reading in Wei Zi, which was circulated in Hong Kong at that time.

/kloc-The Wang Tingzhi School and the supplement of Ming Pao, which intellectuals loved to watch in the 1980s, have written a column of Talk for more than ten years, so ordinary citizens are more familiar with another identity of Tan Xiyong, "Wang Tingzhi". In this column, Wang Tingzhi often analyzes and discusses the disadvantages at that time. Among them are "Cantonese pronunciation problem" and the political development of Hong Kong at that time. After moving to Canada, he continued to publish a column in Toronto Sing Tao Daily.

In recent years, he initiated and organized the Sino-Tibetan Buddhism Research Association in North America, with more than 20 internationally renowned Buddhists participating, and jointly organized the Sino-Tibetan Buddhism Research Series and the Sino-Tibetan Buddhism Annual Meeting with the National College of Renmin University of China. He is currently a visiting professor at the National College of Renmin University of China, presiding over the Research Center of Sino-Tibetan Buddhism, and is committed to training young scholars to engage in Sino-Tibetan Buddhism research.