Early-Qīng Buddhist layman writing under the Daoist-flavoured sobriquet Wúshì dàorén 無是道人 (“Way-Person Without Affirmation”). Real name not preserved (DILA: 否, “not a monk”). Sole extant work the Jīngāng jīng rúshì jiě 金剛經如是解 (KR6c0073, X25 no. 485), prefaced in 1657 (順治丁酉) by Tán Zhēnmò 譚貞默 (Dàoyī jūshì 道一居士, 1590–1665) of Jiāxīng, and again in 1650 (順治庚寅) by Wáng Duó 王鐸 (1592–1652), the famous calligrapher, in his last years. The Wáng Duó preface refers to the author as “xiàn zǎiguān shēn” 現宰官身 (“manifesting in the body of an official-administrator”), suggesting he was an ex- or current Míng official; his style as Wúshì (“not-affirming”) may signal Míng-loyalist withdrawal in the early-Qīng dynastic transition years.