Runt
Well-Known Member
Chuang Tzu is known for the way he took Taoist principles and made them more accessable to the general public than the Tao Te Ching. Some excerpts for discussion include:
"The unity of the Way is something that virtue can never master; what understanding does not understand is something that debate can never encompass. To apply names... is to invite evil. The sea does not refuse the rivers and come flowing eastward into it---it is the perfection of greatness. The sage embraces all heaven and earth, and his bounty extends to the whole world, yet no one knows who he is or what family he belongs to..."
"There is a Holy Man living on the distant Ku-she Mountain, with skin like ice and snow... He does not eat the five grains, but sucks the wind, drinks the dew, mounts the clouds and mist, rides a flying dragon, and wanders beyond the four seas. By concentrating his spirit, he can protect creatures from sickness and plague and make the harvest plentiful."
What do you think these two passages reveal about Taoism?
"The unity of the Way is something that virtue can never master; what understanding does not understand is something that debate can never encompass. To apply names... is to invite evil. The sea does not refuse the rivers and come flowing eastward into it---it is the perfection of greatness. The sage embraces all heaven and earth, and his bounty extends to the whole world, yet no one knows who he is or what family he belongs to..."
"There is a Holy Man living on the distant Ku-she Mountain, with skin like ice and snow... He does not eat the five grains, but sucks the wind, drinks the dew, mounts the clouds and mist, rides a flying dragon, and wanders beyond the four seas. By concentrating his spirit, he can protect creatures from sickness and plague and make the harvest plentiful."
What do you think these two passages reveal about Taoism?