On the basis of the premise that China, besides being a powerful civilization and state, is also a powerful discourse, this essay will set forth, as a preliminary analytical step, a plausible definition of the 'Chinese mind' by describing certain essential characteristics that have been forged in China's classical culture and thought. When placed in the more creative sphere of discourse construction, these essential characteristics become ideological compounds of the here theorized 'discourse called China', whose impact is weighed up as the focal analytical point in the discursive space of the PRC's foreign policy and diplomacy.