Composed by Li Ch\' an (Li Quan), a provincial military official who served in the middle T\'ang dynasty, the T\'ai-pai Yin-Ching revitalized the theoretical study of warfare in China.
It also continues to be the subject of conscious study as the PRC strives to develop "military science with unique Chinese characteristics.".
Highly regarded thereafter, the T\'ai-pai Yin-Ching stands at the beginning of the later military tradition in China and numerous chapters appear in the military compendia produced over the next thousand years.
The remaining seventy-five chapters, not translated here, briefly discuss important battle equipment and techniques before unfolding extensive material on sacrifices and arcane prognosticatory methods.
Instead of conquering through combat or achieving the fabled hundred victories in a hundred clashes, Li\'s aim was victory without combat so as to preserve the state rather than debilitate it in warfare.
Remarkably comprehensive, it first focuses upon the Human realm, devoting a quarter of its hundred chapters to the grand issues of government, warfare, Human society, ethical values, and man\'s orientation within the universe while pondering the more concrete problems of the nature of command, methods for evaluating men, the role of rewards and punishments, and the implementation of subversive measures.
Composed by Li Ch\' an (Li Quan), a provincial military official who served in the middle T\'ang dynasty, the T\'ai-pai Yin-Ching revitalized the theoretical study of warfare in China