The_Unknown said:
Testing the Tao is as pointless
as trying to do anything.
You will only accept the Tao when you completely realize this futility.
Oh yes, but I meant Taoism should be put to the test, not the Tao.
Poignant post as usual T_U. You can firmly slice through congealed concepts with ease. What other skills do you cultivate? Not by trying, but as a course of natural action?
windcarver said:
I guess I don't really have any doubts, persay, but there are parts of it that sort of confuse me. For example, i still haven't figured out how it is possible to have no desires, including the desire to have no desires. ?
Should something ever come up for you that Taoism is meant to address, i.e. be useful for, then that would be the time to put it to the test I guess. If there is not doubt but curiousity & confusion then exploration into this is always worth giving a go instead.
Do you meditate or spend time in silent contemplation? Not desiring not to have desires is an excellent time to start such a thing. Just a thought.
Master Vigil said:
I know what you mean. But then my Taoist master said to me once... Why is a rich, striving business man just as much of a Taoist than a Taoist monk? Because both are doing naturally what they do. If one looks at in the form of Wu Wei... It would be very difficult for the business man to be a Taoist monk, and would be very difficult for the Taoist monk to be a business man. If the business man tried to be a Taoist monk, give up everything, become non-attached, etc... It would in effect be going against Tao. And the same goes for the Taoist monk. That is how I understand it.
Yes I see that. I'm not sure how accepting things as they are and acting in accordance with Tao would be bad for business though. There is a Tao of business as well as a Tao of monastic life, and at some point they should connect up since otherwise there is disharmony. Since so many experience disharmony that would suggest there is much going against the Tao, in business as well as everything else.
Master Vigil said:
I try not to think of it as faith, but a BEingness. I am not putting faith in any practice, belief, or idea. I am just BEing who and what I am. I don't "know" who or what I am, nor do I have an idea of who or what I am. But if I can BE, then I don't need to know who or what I am. Does that make sense?
It makes sense, and is what I was trying to get at. As I see it if there is a faith when it comes to Taoism its not that things should be a certain way, but that the open way is revealed when we stop trying to make things a certain way. This is for me what needs to be put to the test. For instance, a typical view of mine would be this: Nowhere is the Tao to be found but a tenuous [Hsü] mind rests in it. A tenuous mind more clearly perceives the form/pattern [Li] of things and its content/substance [Chi]. Responding to this there is spontaneous action [Wu Wei] flowing with power/virtue [Te]. This power/virtue is capable of bringing harmony to the world.
This I need to put to the test because my hestitation and laziness in cultivating a tenuous mind reveals my doubts. I should clear them up. If Taoism works then I want to see it work
really well, not just within my comfort zone.