At the beginning of each book, Buddhist scriptures are quoted, and at the end, Chen Daoming also said some Buddhist fate. But I really don't quite understand that the relationship between "Infinity" and "Dao", and the whole story, may just be cool-sounding names.
Let's understand it from the English translation, "Infernal" is Infernal, tentatively understood as "Uninterrupted Hell", "Dao" is "affairs", so maybe I should understand it as the black road and white road, all roads lead to the Roman road, not the tea ceremony The "Way" of Zen.
In this way, Infernal Affairs means "the way to hell". Maybe it can be understood as a philosophical and cool way of saying "the one who came out to mix". Black and white, walking in the rivers and lakes, hanging your life around your neck to make a necklace, that kind of chivalry.
There's a line in the scriptures that I don't quite understand, and I can't relate to the story. "Those who commit disobedience will fall into this world forever"
Who rebelled, and who rebelled?
Obviously not against the parents. Going against the rules of society or against your own humanity?
The elevator at the beginning of the third part is falling, and the Buddha is watching. This picture is still very shocking. It is a feeling of Buddha watching you fall.
In the middle, there is also a business in the treasure land of Feng Shui, and the Buddha is on the top, watching everyone.
In general, the plots of the three stories are very simple, and the Buddhist scriptures are interesting, but my understanding is not enough, and I can't find more connections between the stories and the morals of the scriptures. Who is the crime of disobedience? Should I suffer from endless karma? Everyone died very simply, and I didn't see a single person being punished by the endless hell.
Or, as long as there are people in the world, it is the boundless world? Where there are people, there are rivers and lakes.
Slowly experience the Buddhist scriptures
In the end, the lines that Chen Daoming said were a bit interesting. It was fate, and everything was fate. We are all suffering in this world slowly.
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