/kloc-on a sunny morning in Germany in the 0/8th century, a father and son were walking in the forest.
Tonamiyama is more hidden. At a corner, the father asked his son, "Son, what other sounds do you hear besides birdsong?"
The son squatted on the ground and listened. After a long time, he confidently replied, "I heard a carriage coming in the distance."
Father said, "Yes, it's an empty carriage."
The son asked his father in surprise, "We didn't see anything. How do you know it must be an empty carriage? "
The father replied, "You can tell from the sound whether the car is empty, because the more empty the car, the louder the noise."
The son thought about it, but he didn't quite understand. Then my father said, "Just like some people around us, they are always talking and showing off."
After a while, a carriage passed in front of the father and son. It was really an empty carriage, and my son admired his father's original ideas very much.
Father and son are Hegel's father and son. His son later became a representative of objective idealism philosophy in modern Germany, a political philosopher and a master of German classical philosophy, with encyclopedic richness. The Hegelian school he founded was at the peak of the whole bourgeois philosophy.
"The more empty the carriage, the louder the noise." This seemingly insignificant sentence influenced Hegel's life, and it was his father's way of teaching his son to be low-key.