
thumb|200px|page=8|Pages from a printed edition, from the University of Washington Libraries thumb|200px|Guiguzi as illustrated in the book《仙佛奇踪》in AD 1602 Guiguzi (), also called Baihece (), is a collection of ancient Chinese texts compiled between the late Warring States period and the end of the Han dynasty. The work, between 6,000 and 7,000 Chinese characters, discusses techniques of rhetoric. Although originally associated with the School of Diplomacy, the Guiguzi was later integrated into the Daoist canon.
via Open Library
thumb|200px|page=8|Pages from a printed edition, from the University of Washington Libraries thumb|200px|Guiguzi as illustrated in the book《仙佛奇踪》in AD 1602 Guiguzi (), also called Baihece (), is a collection of ancient Chinese texts compiled between the late Warring States period and the end of the Han dynasty. The work, between 6,000 and 7,000 Chinese characters, discusses techniques of rhetoric. Although originally associated with the School of Diplomacy, the Guiguzi was later integrated into the Daoist canon.
The set of books is also sometimes called Benjing yinfu qishu ().
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).