Fāng Liángyǒng 方良永 (1461–1527), zì Shòuqīng 壽卿, posthumous shì Jiǎnsù 簡肅, of Pútián 莆田 (Xīnghuà, Fújiàn). Hóngzhì 3 / gēngxū (1490) jìnshì; rose to yòu fù dūyùshǐ (Right Vice Censor-in-Chief), serving as Fǔzhì Yúnyáng (Prefect Pacification, Yúnyáng); twice retired and recalled. Míngshǐ main biography. Famously memorialised against Zhū Níng 朱寧 (the Wǔ-zōng-era adopted-imperial-favourite); foresaw Prince Níng (Zhū Chénháo)‘s rebellion before the event, and after its suppression wrote to Wáng Yángmíng (王守仁) discussing the dìngluàn dàjì (settling-the-disorder great plan). His writings include explicit anti-Yáng-míng remarks — calling those who follow Lù Jiǔyuān’s xīnxué yōuMèng zhī wéi Sūn Shūáo (Yōu Mèng acting as Sūn Shūáo) — a Confucian satire on superficial xīnxué practitioners. His writings are gathered in the Fāng Jiǎnsù wénjí in 10 juǎn (KR4e0145). CBDB id 34612, 1461–1527.