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In page Qi:

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Xun Zi, another Confucian scholar of the Jixia Academy, followed in later years. At 9:69/127[citation needed], Xun Zi says, "Fire and water have qi but do not have life. Grasses and trees have life but do not have perceptivity. Fowl and beasts have perceptivity but do not have yi (sense of right and wrong, duty, justice). Men have qi, life, perceptivity, and yi." Chinese people at such an early time had no concept of radiant energy, but they were aware that one can be heated by a campfire from a distance away from the fire. They accounted for this phenomenon by claiming "qi" radiated from fire. At 18:62/122[citation needed], he also uses "qi" to refer to the vital forces of the body that decline with advanced age.