Liang was born in Beijing. His family were ethnic Mongolians of
Guilin and
Guangxi origin. He was the son of a famous
intellectual who committed suicide apparently in despair at the state of the Chinese nation. He had a modern education and exposure to Western writings. Liang was always fascinated by
Buddhism, but never joined a monastery due to the opposition of his father. At the age of sixteen, he refused to allow his mother to discuss marriage on his behalf and at nineteen he became a
vegetarian, remaining so for the rest of his life. In 1917 he was recruited by
Cai Yuanpei to the philosophy department of
Beijing University, where he produced an influential book based on his lectures entitled
Eastern and Western Cultures and their Philosophies, which expounded some of the doctrines of a modern
Confucianism. He also displayed the influence of
Henri Bergson, then popular in China, as well as Buddhist
Yogachara philosophy. Although Liang had abandoned his determination to become a monk in 1920 and his celibacy in 1921, Buddhism influenced him for the rest of his life. Regarding
Western civilization as doomed to eventual failure, Liang did not advocate complete reform and adoption of Western institutions. He nonetheless believed that reform was needed to make China equal to the rest of the world. It was his view that the required prerequisites for these institutions did not exist in China, so they would not succeed if introduced. Instead, he pushed for change to socialism starting at the grassroots level. To this end, he founded the Shandong Rural Reconstruction Institute and helped to found the
China Democratic League. Liang was famous for his critique of
Marxist class theory, stating that, despite obvious disparities of wealth, Chinese rural society could not be unambiguously classified along class lines. One and the same family (particularly the large patriarchal
lineages found in many regions) would commonly have some members among the "haves" and others among the "have-nots". The class struggle advocated by the Maoists would necessitate kinsmen attacking each other. After the
Sino-Japanese War, he mediated disputes between the Communist and Nationalist parties. After the victory of the Communists in 1949, he was occasionally persecuted in ideological campaigns, but refused to admit any error. He died in Beijing. == Eastern and Western cultures and their philosophies ==