Talk:Heavenly Sovereign

Regarding translation
I have a sort of a disagreement with the translation of the sentence from the records of the grand historian "澹泊（自）無所施爲，而俗自化. ". The article cited the 1894 translation of j allen(19th century sinology was so inadequate compared to modern day translations), "living in retirement, state of inaction, converts from a busy world." which is honestly a bad translation. What kind of speak is that? Like 19th century english....living in retirement is a fair translation and I sort of see why he chose that, but state of inaction is not reflecting the nuance of the chinese hanzi 施 which often connotates a warm philanthrophy based contribution. It can also mean giving to the people as a soverign. Inaction sounds more of a neglect than a connotated implied influence of his good personality that would lead to his converts. Also he chose to say "busy world". More accurate translation is everyday life or "folk customs" or customs of the people.There is a lot of connotation of changing people's customs in classical chinese literature, and this is one of them. Thus I changed it.Waltzingmogumogupeach (talk) 12:55, 8 April 2022 (UTC)