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On Crime and Punishment in Russian Novels
I don't know if you are a middle school or a primary school.

Dostoevsky's novel Crime and Punishment tells a profound philosophy: the hero is poor and weak, dissatisfied with reality, and wants to kill a person and do what the strong do. He killed an old woman he thought was worth killing, thinking it was killing the people, but he finally turned himself in because of his conscience. Without God and faith, can a strong man kill with impunity?

Why do the so-called strong people in history, such as Napoleon and Temujin, kill people like hemp, but they are rarely condemned by their own morality after killing them? And ordinary people feel uneasy when they do bad things? What's the difference between the strong and the weak? What is a crime and what is punishment? Who should decide these?

For another example, China's Dream of Red Mansions and the beauty and elegance in the Grand View Garden are all based on the decadent and dirty Jia House. How to define clean and dirty?

There are so many such examples that it is easy to find the theme as long as you read a few famous books. But if you just read novels by Jing M.Guo and Annie Baby, it's hard to find philosophy.

Hmm. How interesting