Bo Le is good at identifying Maxima, and he wants to train his son to become a master of Soma. So he gave his son a copy of the Horse Sutra and asked him to look for the Maxima according to the drawings drawn in the Horse Sutra.
Every time he encountered a horse, he carefully checked the patterns on the Horse Sutra to see if they matched the features painted in the book. But every time there are always some details that don't match the number. After looking for a year, I still couldn't find a horse exactly like the one painted in the book. He had to go back to tell his father in frustration. Bo Le advised him not to be discouraged and told him to go out and look for him.
Helplessly, the son embarked on a journey to find a maxima. Where to find it? He stroked the Book of Horses and sighed, not knowing what to do. The son walked aimlessly and aimlessly, and kept asking in his heart, "Maxima, where are you?" ”
In the midst of worry, a large toad "grunted" and jumped over. The son watched for half a day, and his heart suddenly "clucked": "Hey, isn't this..." He was overjoyed, turned around and ran home.
Before he could enter the house, his son shouted, "I've found Maxima!" I've found Maxima! Bo Le listened, rushed out and asked, "Tell me quickly, what kind of Maxima you found?" The son replied breathlessly, "I have seen many horses, and only this one is the most similar to the picture in the book." It also has a high head, deeply sunken orbits, and a shrunken back. There's just one thing — its hooves don't look like it. After listening to his son's words, Bo Le understood most of it in his heart, and he had to smile bitterly: "Child, although this 'horse' is good, but it is bouncing and jumping, how can people ride it up?" As soon as the words stopped, the smile on his son's face suddenly froze.
The son of Bo Le is wrong in taking books as immutable dogmas, and is not good at analyzing problems from a practical point of view, so how can he find Maxima?