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In an essay called The Hedgehog and the Fox, British Social Theorist Isaiah Berlin divided the world's thinkers into two categories, using as his guide an enigmatic fragment from the Greek poet Archilochus: "The fox knows many things; the hedgehog knows one big thing." Mao was quintessential hedgehog, a visionary with one organizing determinist principle to which he insisted the great diverse Chinese reality must conform. Hedgehogs like totalitarian worlds. Foxes can tolerate diversity, variety, change, disorder, the sheer plurality of life. It may be fateful for China's future that Teng Hsiao-p'ing, who languished for years in the shadow of China's hedgehog, is most certainly a fox. -
* The first eight categories being the other loathsome characters to be got rid of: renegades, spies, capitalist readers, landlords, rich peasants, counterrevolutionaries, bad people, rightists.
