Mozi's ideological concept, that is, "simultaneous love" and "non-attack". Together, it means: love all people, deny all wars.

His ideas prevented the State of Chu from attacking the State of Song and avoided a war.
Mozi and his disciples are a group of lonely heroes with a chivalrous spirit, who have the virtue of "believing their words, taking fruit in their deeds, making promises to be sincere, and not loving their bodies". This kind of virtue, in the next two thousand years, also became part of Chinese culture, and it was always awe-inspiring.
In the Three People's Principles, Dr. Sun Yat-sen exalted Mozi as a Chinese grandmaster of "equality" and "fraternity". He wrote:
In ancient times, the word "love" was the most important thing than Mozi. Mozi's "simultaneous love" is the same as jesus' "fraternity."
Mr. Liang Qichao said in the Xinmin Cong Bao that if China wants to save its life, it must learn mozi. He also wrote "The Case of Mozi Studies", comparing Mozi with Aristotle, Bacon, and Muller in the West. He said that a comparison would tell who was lighter and who was heavier.