MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/related; boundary="----=_NextPart_01C7D172.784C1F00" Este documento es una página Web de un solo archivo, también conocido como archivo de almacenamiento Web. Si está viendo este mensaje, su explorador o editor no admite archivos de almacenamiento Web. Descargue un explorador que admita este tipo de archivos, como Microsoft Internet Explorer. ------=_NextPart_01C7D172.784C1F00 Content-Location: file:///C:/658AC48C/Dao_for_Journal.htm Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Content-Type: text/html; charset="us-ascii" The Philosophy of the Daodejing

The Philosophy of the Daodejing=

&c= opy; Kile Jones 2007

 

For those of us still stuck in the spiritually backward perspective of trying to ‘make sense’ of the text, the Daodejing presents numerous paradoxes.[1]=

            = Philip Ivanhoe hit the nail on the head regarding the difficulties facing Western scholarship in its attempt to ‘make sense’ out of the Daodejing.  This ancient Eastern text does not contain the Western philosophical categories employed by the Greeks, Neo-Platonists, Medieval’s, Enlightenment thinkers, and contemporary European and American philosophers and thus finds itself landing on confused and sometimes calloused minds.  This is why when the Daodejing says = things like “what is there arises from what is not there”,[2] “without go= ing out the door, one can know the whole world”,[3] and “straightforward words seem paradoxical”,[4] a baffled look co= mes across the faces of Western scholars.  Most Western scholars in the tradition of Wittgenstein, Russell, and Frege would dissect these sentences into truth value, internal consistency,= and propositional attitude which are a far cry, methodologically speaking, from what the Daodejing was meant fo= r and concerned with; therefore, approaching the philosophy of this text as a Western-minded individual places me in the humbling position of wrestling through this ancient book and searching for its meaning.        =     

Methodological Con= cerns

<= span lang=3DEN-US style=3D'font-size:12.0pt;line-height:200%'>Since it is obviou= s that the methodology of the West and the East differs so radically a few comments are in order about the way in which this paper will be structured.  Rather then approaching this text = as an ‘other’ that needs to be opposed and eventually refuted, I will= attempt to lay out what I feel the Daodejin= g itself considers primary.  Upon reading this text it becomes apparent that a few concepts are extremely important, not just for Western concerns, but for the concerns of the write= r(s) themselves.  These few concept= s are the Dao, the One, the nature of Paradox, Ziran, and Wu Wei.  Of course there are many more teac= hings which the Daodejing promotes, specifically regarding politics and social history that will be left out; t= his is more due to time and space than anything, especially considering that ma= ny great scholars have tackled these issues with immense detail. 

The Dao=

        &= nbsp;   Of central concern= to the Daodejing is the concept of the dao, which is usually translated as “Way”, “Path”, or “Method.”  The Daodejing describes the dao as an “= empty vessel”;[5] as “vague a= nd elusive”;[6] and as the “= ;mother of heaven and earth”;[7] yet ironically th= e dao is “forever namelessR= 21;[8] and “without name.”[9]  As a psychological definition, LaF= argue describes the dao as a “hypostatized internal presence”, “force”, or “power”, which has the ability to “bring people a true understanding of things”,[10]<= /a> and as a cosmolog= ical definition Wong describes the dao as “an impersonal and unnamed force behind the workings of the universe.”[11]<= /a>  Alan Chan concludes that the dao is thought of as “the so= urce of all being” yet that “it cannot be itself a being”, for then “the problem of infinite regress cannot be overcome.”[12]  Each of these definitions, though = fair to the Daodejing and Taoism in general, are only able to give partially definitive and denotative surety d= ue to the elusive nature of the dao and the inability of language to penetrate its true essence.  This is true of all definitions, y= et, as was shown earlier, the Daodejing makes many attempts at doing so. 

<= span lang=3DEN-US style=3D'font-size:12.0pt;line-height:200%'>Therefore, the next question we must ask is whether or not we can make any philosophical sense = out of the concept of the dao, or attribute to it any positive predicate.&nb= sp; Is the dao a being, enti= ty, thing, or have any ontological predicates at all?  Or is it a non-being, abstraction,= or phantasm?  Could we liken it to Hegel’s Zeitgeist, Emerson’s Over-soul, or the Hindu Brahman?  All of these questions reveal the difficulty of defining the dao,= and should place any scholar in a place of careful study.  What is known is that the Daodejing thinks of the dao as the greatest principle, whe= ther internal or external, psychological or cosmological, that people should ali= gn themselves with in order to see things as they truly are.  This is why there is such a strong emphasis on the dao in the Daodejing, for the impetus towards= it is the impetus towards self discovery, knowledge, and ultimate reality. 

Psychological Dao<= o:p>

        &= nbsp;   One of the many wa= ys in which the dao can be thought of= is as a psychological force that produces and is reached by self-cultivation, meditation, health, and various other mental states.  This way of looking at the dao is sometimes referred to as ‘practical’, ‘alchemical’, or ‘earthly Taoism’, for it focuses more on the ways in which individuals interact with the dao then any kind of g= rand scale Meta-narrative of the cosmos.  Thus we have the Daodejing saying, in regard to personal piety and self-cultivation, that “only = the dao is good at providing [for pers= ons] and completing [persons];”[13]<= /a> that there “= ;were those good at practicing the dao;”[14] and to “emb= ody the dao is to be long lived.”[15]  The Psychological dao would visualized as such:

          Dao

<= !--[if gte vml 1]><= span style=3D'mso-ignore:vglayout;position:absolute;z-index:11;left:0px;margin-l= eft: 252px;margin-top:8px;width:28px;height:2px'>        =             &nb= sp;            =    Dao           Individual        =     Dao

        =     Dao<= /b>

<= span lang=3DEN-US style=3D'font-size:12.0pt;line-height:200%'>These and many more passages seem to speak of the dao as something that should be followed and entered into.  This way of viewing the dao is similar to the Christian= 217;s view of the Holy Spirit and the Cabbalist’s view of the Serifot, where the higher spirit, force, or principle is to be followed for the sake of material and spiritual blessings.  There is conflict, however, between this emphasis in the Daodejing and other passages which promote non-action (wu-wei) and emphasize the unattainable nature of the dao.[16]  Yet, without being taken to extrem= es, the Daodejing could be interpre= ted as promoting action and striving in one sense and time and promoting its oppos= ite (wu-wei) in another sense and time.     

Cosmological Dao

        &= nbsp;   Another way in whi= ch the Daodejing describes the dao is as a cosmological force inv= olved in creating and sustaining the universe.&n= bsp; Such is the idea when the Da= odejing says, “The dao produces t= he One.  The One produces the two= .  Two produces three.  Three produces the myriad creatures.”[17]<= /a>  This cosmological framework would = look something like what follows:

           Dao

        =     One

    &= nbsp;           &nbs= p;            &= nbsp;           &nbs= p;            &= nbsp;           &nbs= p;      

        =      Yin-Yang

<= /td> <= /td> <= /td>
 


            =             &nb= sp;            =             &nb= sp;               One   Two Three

 

        =      Cosmos

        =    

Not only is the world produced = by the dao; it runs towards it: “streams and torrents flow into rivers and oceans, just as the world flows into the dao.”[18]  Likewise, the dao providentially upholds the cosmos; “the myriad creatu= res rely upon it [dao] for lifeR= 21;[19] and “it [dao] takes from what has excess; it augments what is deficient.”[20]<= /a>  Here we have the dao revealed in strikingly theistic terms, yet one should not t= hink of the dao as a transcendent de= ity, but as Huston Smith wisely put it, as the “above all, behind all, ben= eath all…Womb from which all life springs and to which it returns.”<= /span>[21]  The dao, according to Liu Xiaogan, “is God but without an active and defining consciousness to it”, for the dao is “void and indefinitely open” whereas God is “full and definite.”[22]<= /a>

The One=

        &= nbsp;   Similar to the con= cept of the dao is, though of less importance, is the idea of the “One.”  As was noted earlier, the Daodejing speaks of how the dao “produced the One”= and that from this “One” came the multiplicity of the cosmos.  From a linear time-based model it = would seem that the dao created the O= ne and the One created the two in a discursive, chronological, and ontological sense.  If uncritical, we migh= t be lead to think of the dao and as= a ‘thing’ or ‘substance’ which would not be consistent with it being describes as “empty.”  We must always remember that the dao is non-being, negation, and nothingness, and therefore cannot be categorized in ontological terms.  The question now arises whether th= e One, which was produced by the dao, = is a substance?  There are really t= wo ways to answer this question.  The first is to believe that the non-being (dao) produced a being (One) and that from this original unified substance came a= ll of the diverse objects in the universe.&nb= sp; The second is to think that the difference between the dao and the One is only conceptual= and not ontological.  <= /span>

 &nb= sp;          The first explanat= ion aligns itself with proto-typical religious cosmology, the only difference b= eing an Eastern being-from-non-being model.&nbs= p; Under this model the ‘One’ is the unified cradle of life= in which the yin and yang forces operate and in which all life lives and moves= .  While discussing Ho-shang-kungR= 17;s (179-59 B.C.E.) commentary on the D= aodejing, Alan Chan describes the One as the “original substance of life itself, energy in its most pure and potent form” since it is considered the “vital essence of the Tao.”[23]<= /a>  The second way in which the One is thought of is as another concept of the dao itself, only put in a different manner.&nb= sp; The famous ancient commentator on the Daodejing and the I Chi= ng, Wang Pi (226-49 C.E.), thinks that the concept of the One ultimately falls = back into non-being, since the One is only a metaphor for a concept and not be understood univocally.  Chan l= ikewise comments on Wang Pi’s thought:

 

For Wang Pi the question of beginning cannot be resolved unless the absolute otherness of Tao is taken seriously.  Dialectically understood, the concept of “One” ultimately rejoins that of nonbeing.  Cosmological interpretations in general and Ho-shang-kung’s in particular are thus philosophically untenable, for they project a false ima= ge of “nonbeing.”  It= is entirely appropriate to portray Tao conceptually and metaphorically as “beginning,” “One,” or the “root” of all beings; but serious misunderstanding arises when what is conceptual and metaphoric is misread literally to represent a kind of original substance or energy.[24]    

&nbs= p;

Thus we have two ways of looking at the concept of the One: it could be understo= od as the original substance and energy from which all life came, or it can be thought of as another symbol for the dao and thus non-being.

The Nature of Para= dox

        &= nbsp;   A third primary ph= ilosophy in the Daodejing can rightly be= called paradox.  In the Daodejing there are numerous occas= ions in which linguistic and epistemic paradoxes occur and how one explains them= is ultimately how one interprets the text itself.  Some scholars feel that the Daodejing contains outright contradictions (Kaltenmark); other feel that it uses paradoxes to reveal the limits of language (Hansen); and still others think that the paradoxes reve= al the Taoist focus on balancing opposites, much like its yin/yang philosophy (Hall, Ames).  The reactionary= and satirical nature of the Daodejing makes one ask which of these ways best answers its paradoxical statements a= nd thus reveals what meaning the text is attempting to convey.  Therefore, I will start off by explaining the difference between paradox and contradiction in the Daodejing, then comment on the Daodejing’s philosophy of la= nguage and finally, give a few notes on the thesis that connects paradox with the philosophy of yin/yang.

<= span lang=3DEN-US style=3D'font-size:12.0pt;line-height:200%'>First and foremost= it must be said that paradoxes and contradictions are completely different things.<= span style=3D'mso-spacerun:yes'>  To say that A is –A in the s= ame time and in the same way is a contradiction; to say that A is –A at a different time and in a different way may seem paradoxical but it is not a contradiction; the latter proposition takes into account time, change, and perspective.  For instance, if= I were to say that a caterpillar is physically identical with a butterfly alw= ays and in the same way, I would be contradicting myself; yet if I were to simp= ly state that a caterpillar and a butterfly are ‘the same thing’, = it would sound as if I had contradicted myself, yet under further inspection w= hat I actually mean is that a caterpillar and a butterfly are ‘the same thing, but one changes into the other over time”, I would not be cont= radicting myself.  Thus when we look at = the apparent contradictions in the Daod= ejing we must take into account this distinction, even if at the end of the day we feel that the text deliberately contradicts itself. 

            = We see a paradox right in the first chapter of the Daodejing when describing cosmology it states: “Nameless,= it is the beginning of heaven and earth.”[25]  At this point we might ask, “Isn’t calling something ‘Nameless’ naming it?”  Strictly speaking = one might say that this is a contradiction: for thesis (A) would be ‘the beginning of heaven and earth is Nameless’, and its antithesis (-A) w= ould be, ‘I just named the Nameless.’  Yet in a more semantic and context= ual manner, it seems that this way of looking at the text is too obvious.  Of course naming the unnamable is a contradiction, this is not something new and it misses the point completely.  The question we s= hould ask is not ‘what does the text literally and mathematically say’= ;, as if interpreting the Daodejing is like adding numbers, but rather ‘what does the text mean?’  Unde= r this question we can easily note that this passage in chapter 1 means that the beginning of heaven and earth cannot be restricted, or reducible to, any si= ngle name.  This semantic/contextual hermeneutic ties perfectly into the Daodejing’s overall philosophy of language, which will now be commented on.

<= span lang=3DEN-US style=3D'font-size:12.0pt;line-height:200%'>The philosophy of = language explicated by the Daodejing is overtly anti-conventional and denotative.&= nbsp; Some have even titled the Da= odejing’s philosophy of language as relative, skeptical, or even nihilistic.  In all of this it can easily be sa= id that the Daodejing claims that ultimate reality (dao) is beyond language and that once we try to contain the dao with language we lose it.&= nbsp; Edward Ch’ine, while commenting on the Taoist and Buddhist use= of paradox, notes that,

Neither the Buddhists nor the Taoists did away with language entirely.  To say that the ult= imate reality is unsayable is already a form of saying.   In   fact, Lao   Tzu, Chuang   Tzu   and Virnalakirti all said a = good deal more than that. In doing   so,  however,  they  were   not  necessarily contradicting  themselves, for…the mode of language  that they  each used and affirmed  not only  is consistent  with but actually articulates their linguistically  skeptical belief that the ultimate  reality is ineffable.= [26]&n= bsp; 

&nbs= p;

What Ch’ine is aware of, = is that given the overall worldview of Taoism, saying that the dao is ineffable is entirely consi= stent, specifically regarding its philosophy of language.  We may, according to the Daodejing, speak about the dao, but that speaking is only a tentative symbol which points towards the object, and not any essential denotation.  Thus we have a connection between an ancient Eastern text (Daodejing) and modern Western philosophy of language which begun under Wittgenstein’s critique of denotation and continues in Putnam and Kripke. 

            = The final interpretation of the Daodeji= ng’s philosophy of language is one which sees there use of paradox as connec= ted to their view of yin/yang.  Th= is theory thinks that the Taoist emphasis on polarity, opposites, and paradox = is an attempt to put into language a cosmological doctrine of complimenting forces.  This interpretation s= ees the thesis/antithesis put forward in the Daodejing not as contradictions but as complimentary, symbiotic propositions which reflect macro-cosmic movements.  This theory is highly plausible, for the yin/yang philosophy permeat= es the whole text of the Daodejing; from cosmology, to anthropology, and ending in philosophy of language.

Ziran

            = In the ideas of th= e dao, the One, and yin/yang lies the idea of Ziran, most often translated as ‘naturalness’, but also containing the ideas of spontaneity and self-unfolding.  The literal translation of Ziran is ‘self-so’, basically meaning ‘the self [or any other object] as it is naturally.’[27]  This concept is most often associa= ted with the natural ways in which the world and the people within it move.  There are really three ways in whi= ch one could analyze this concept: firstly, it can be thought of cosmologically, w= here the cosmos are described as naturally unfolding; secondly, it can be descri= bed politically, where the ruler of the people stops trying to fight against the natural order of the world; and thirdly, it can be viewed as an ethical admonishment towards peace, tranquility, and serenity, when an individual recognizes her or his place within the world.  I will take this order and describ= e what the Daodejing says concerning Ziran in these various contexts. =

            = Firstly, and probably most importantly, the Daodejing describes Ziran in terms the natural operation of the world.  The Daodejing says that “the dao models itself on what is natural [Zir= an]; and that “the dao<= span style=3D'mso-bidi-font-style:italic'> is revered and Virtue honored…b= ecause it is natural [Ziran].”[28]  What these passages indicate is th= at Ziran is considered some sort of law, not a law in the strict and determina= tive sense, but as the way things operate naturally.  Thus even the unnamable and enigma= tic dao follows the dao of Ziran (way of naturalness).  Moeller describ= es the concept of Ziran in juxtaposition to a classical theistic worldview which s= ees God as sovereignty controlling the universe: “The Dao does not create= the world or manage it.  And it do= es not invent a species of “assistant managers.”  Quite the opposite is the case: th= e Dao lets things happen “self-so,”[Ziran] and if human beings want to succeed, then, according to the Laozi, they should try to follow its “non-creative” way.”= [29]  This natural order is to be consid= ered non-teleological and determined, for Ziran is the way things are in and of themselves, not as they are in relationship to something divine beyond themselves.  This gives inhere= nt worth to the cosmos as they conform to the natural ways in which they are constituted, a constitution that Lau and Ames call “unique, processional, and boundless.”[30]

<= span lang=3DEN-US style=3D'font-size:12.0pt;line-height:200%;mso-bidi-font-style= :italic'>Secondly, the concept of Ziran has political ramifications.  It is commonly agreed upon that th= e Daodejing is a text seeking to countera= ct the seemingly despotic and ‘unnatural’ ways in which the Empero= rs ruled ancient mainland China.  In the Daod= ejing the rulers are described as a “shadowy presence”,[31] the military is associated with “the rites of mourning”, [32] and the multiplication of laws is considered the cause of there being more “thieves and robbers.”[33]  All that to say, the Daoist concep= t of Ziran implies a movement away from the vices of the state to a Rousseau-like ‘return to nature’ where small communities govern themselves by= the virtues naturally inherent within them.&nb= sp; It may be likened to a lasses-faire political and economic philosophy with a few exceptions.  Firstl= y, the Daoist not only desires to flee the problems of the state by journeying to = the country, she also desires political change within the already established b= ureaucratic systems.  In this sense the Da= oist is not lasses-faire.  Secondly= , the Daodejing is not as radically excited a= bout political revolution as the Communist Manifesto.  It realizes that the state is established, and though it is considered the source of many of our troubles= , it nonetheless has a place as long as the rulers conform their actions to Zira= n.

<= span lang=3DEN-US style=3D'font-size:12.0pt;line-height:200%;mso-bidi-font-style= :italic'>Thirdly, the concept of Ziran has ethical implications.  Because there is, from the assumpt= ions of the writers of the Daodejing, a natural order to the world which balances itself, we must not seek to fig= ht against it but embrace the ever-changing readjustments of the world.  If there is something ‘natural’ then there is something ‘unnatural’ which= the Daodejing strongly fights against.  These tendencies to = be unnatural, if followed, result in strife, injustice, stress, unrest, and eventual social entropy, for they are centered upon the desire of an indivi= dual to get more of everything.  Mo= ney, social hierarchy, big business, unjust distribution of wealth and benefits, excessive material goods, and ecological destruction are seen as the negati= ve effects of the state which should be counteracted by a return to simplicity, small community, and an open understanding to the differences between people.  All of these ethical encouragements tie in closely to the next philosophical concept of this pap= er, Wu Wei. 

Wu Wei

        &= nbsp;   Once we have understood that according to the Daod= ejing the “self-so” character of reality is ideal, we can then better comprehend the ethical doctrine of Wu Wei.=   Wu Wei translated literally means “does not exist (wu)- for the sake of (wei).”  This id= ea can be explained in a couple of different ways.  Wu Wei can imply not doing any acti= on for any specific purpose or it can imply “non-action” and other for= ms of passivism.  Thus in the Daodejing we have praises for Wu Wei; t= he great sages are said to “abide in non-action” (wu-wei), to “enact non-action” (wu-wei), for they realize the “advant= ages of non-action” (wu-wei).[34]  Wu Wei can also imply spontaneous action; J.J. Clarke comments:

It [wu wei] literally means ‘not doing’, but as a philosophical concept it is used to characterize spontaneity and naturalness of action devoid of conscious premeditation, and implies non-intervention in the natural flow of things.[35] 

 

Thus Wu Wei is characteristic of spontaneous, uncontrived, natural, non premeditated action.  The question we must now ask is ho= w this ethical philosophy actually works.  Does the Daodejing actually promote not doing anything?  Or is Wu Wei concerned more with intention than utility?

<= span lang=3DEN-US style=3D'font-size:12.0pt;line-height:200%'>Firstly, it must b= e noted that on a practical level the Daodejing does not advocate complete literal non-action.  This is j= ust too impractical for any classical Chinese philosophy.  It is obvious upon reading the = Daodejing that the ideal for humanity is small communities who govern themselves by simple and practical ethics.  = This is the difference between Daoism and extreme forms of Buddhism and Chinese asceticism.  This being the ca= se, what exactly does Wu Wei imply?  Wu Wei certainly cannot mean continuing action in the Confusion ritualism, for this is what the text is aiming against.&n= bsp; This being the case, we must determine some of the distinctive characteristics of Wu Wei in order to clarify its meaning and goal.

<= span lang=3DEN-US style=3D'font-size:12.0pt;line-height:200%'>Firstly, Wu Wei sh= ould be seen as juxtaposed to Confucian ritualism.=   In ancient China Confucius has established a system of ritual and et= hics that held an iron tight hold on the masses.  There were proper ways to honor bi= rth, marriage, death, and family.  = These actions eventually became formulas for appropriate ways of acting within the family and within the society.  The problem that this system had, as with all other ritualistic systems that ha= ve hegemony within any society, is that they leave no room for emotive and situational spontaneous action.  Instead of the heart, they have manuals; instead of freedom, there is duty; and instead of progress, there is tradition.  This is the social atmosphere that= the writer(s) of the Daodejing found themselves christened into.  Thus we have the strong reaction contained within it, which finds its zenith in the doctrine of Wu Wei.=

<= span lang=3DEN-US style=3D'font-size:12.0pt;line-height:200%'>For the writer(s) = of the Daodejing ritualism takes the place of true heart-felt action and stifles the natural changing processes of the created order.&n= bsp; That is why “those who us it [the world] ruin it.  Those who grab hold of it lose it.”[36]<= /a>  All action, according to the Da= odejing, must be done with meekness, acceptance, passivity, and embrace of the da= o.  To this Nietzsche and Rand would be quite upset.  We should not, a= s they taught, use the world for our own aims by strength and fortitude, but accept the changing world as it is.  = This comes back to our earlier troubles.  Because one is to ‘accept’ the nature of the world ̵= 6;as it is’, does not mean that one simply does nothing.  Clearly the Daodejing itself is doing something by fighting against the rigid social ethics of the Confucians.  With this in mind, it seems to me = that the idea of Wu Wei is an attack on power, manipulation, and strife, yet balanced with a humble, communal ethic that desires free choices and, as the famed bumper sticker says, ‘random acts of kindness.”=

        &= nbsp;   This is indeed a nice and friendly definition of Wu Wei, free of criticism and attack.  There are other Weste= rn scholars who would have a divergent methodology.  They would attempt the reduction ad absurdum pertaining to Wu Wei, concluding that this ethical theory leaves individuals immorally sitting back on the sidelines watching injustice happen.  They would note that ‘to do nothing’ leads to acceptance of injustice and all other forms of vices.  This method, I feel, i= s the problem of applying Western forms of analysis to Eastern texts.  As was mentioned before, the Daodejing should not be read as a mathematics textbook, but as a whole philosophy of life which is tempered b= y an understanding of balance.  Thi= s is not to say that there are not difficulties with this ethical theory, as with all others, yet Wu Wei is not to be misconstrued as a creedal dogma closed = off to revision, but as an ethical theory which balances the extremes of voluntarism and nihilism, which sought to rebuke the rigidity of Confucian ritualism and the power hungry politicians in the totalitarian house of the Emperor.

Conclusion

        &= nbsp;   In conclusion, we have seen only a minute and brief account of the philosophy = of the Daodejing.  Each one of these philosophical co= ncepts could be analyzed infinitum <= /i>and have been done so by many gifted scholars of the field.  From the perspective of the Western analytic tradition, Daoism, specifically explicated in the Daodejing, is still fighting for a plac= e of consideration.  The West, specifically since Locke, Hume, and Russell, has been primarily concerned w= ith issues of epistemology, logical analysis, and the scientific method, all of which are not clearly addressed in Eastern texts like the Daodejing.  Thus, there has been a great disco= nnect between the philosophy of the East and West.  Yet times are changing.  There has been a Western interest = in Eastern philosophy since Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, Hegel, and Heidegger, whi= ch has blossomed primarily in the now cultivated field of Philosophy of Religion.  There are now many Western thinkers who give texts like the Daod= ejing a noteworthy place in the history of philosophy.  They have realized that the Easter= n emphasis on ethics, politics, and meaning are not only significant philosophically, = but also practically.  =

        &= nbsp;   In light of this progress, the = Daodejing should be viewed not as an awkward looking foreigner, but as a fellow comra= de in the long legacy of the history of ideas.  From the concept of the dao to Wu Wei, the Daoejing presents us with a unique perspective on life and its apparent meaning.  It promotes a serene and tranquil self-cultivation with the passivism of a Gandhi and the spontaneity of a Dadaist.  Rarely have scholars= ever seen such a text; one which balances ethical rigor and free decision making, action and non-action, embrace of and distaste for the situation of the wor= ld, and optimism and nihilism.  Th= is may be seen as the Daodejing’s attempt to balance opposites in an ever polarizing and dogmatizing philosophical landscape.  Yet = as with all philosophical and religious texts, there are those who are critical and apologetic.  I can underst= and this position, for rational thinking and reasoning should be employed by all who are on the quest of philosophy.  Yet, it is of my opinion that sometimes this mentality can lead one = to close off from the gold mine of a different and alien text.  There must be the admonishment to = both think and learn critically while investigating any particular text; and if = one chooses to attempt this with the Daodejing, it is my opinion that such a person is in for a challenging philosophical treat.           

<= span lang=3DEN-US style=3D'font-size:12.0pt;line-height:200%'> <= /span>

 

 

 

 



[1] Ivanhoe, Philip, The Daodejing of Laozi, Hackett Publishing: Indianapolis, 2002, Introduction, pg 27=

[2] Ibid, chapter 40, pg 43

[3] Ibid, chapter 47, pg 50

[4] Ibid, chapter 78, pg 81

[5] Ibid, chapter 4, pg 4

[6] Ibid, chapter 21, pg 21

[7] Ibid, chapter 25, pg 25

[8] Ibid, chapter 32, pg 32

[9] Ibid, chapter 41, pg 44

[10] LaFargue, Michael, Ta= o and Method, State University of New York Press: New York, 1994, pg 222

[11] Wong, Eva, The Shambh= ala Guide to Taoism, Shambhala Publications: Boston, 1997, pg 23 

[12] Chan, Alan, under “Laozi” in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2001, article found at: http://plato.stanford.edu/ent= ries/laozi/#5

[13] Ivanhoe, Philip, The Daodejing of Laozi, Hackett Publishing: Indianapolis, 2002, chapter 41, pg 44

[14] Ibid, chapter 65, pg 68

[15] Ibid, chapter 16, pg 16

[16] Such as the “embellishment of the dao” (chapter 38).

[17] Ibid, chapter 42, pg 45

[18] Ibid, chapter 32, pg 32

[19] Ibid, chapter 34, pg 34

[20] Ibid, chapter 77, pg 80

[21] Smith, Huston, The World’s Religions, Harper Publishing: San Francisco, 1991, pg 198.  I would add to Smith’s defin= ition ‘in all’, for, according to the Daodejing, the dao permeates all of creati= on and all of its inhabitants.

[22] Kohn and LaFargue, La= o-Tzu and the Tao-te-ching, State University of New York Press: New York, 1998, pg 215

[23] Chan, Alan, A Tale of= Two Commentaries in Lao-tzu and the Tao-te-ching, State University of New York Press: New York, 1998, pg 93

[24] Ibid, pg 106

[25] Ivanhoe, Philip, The Daodejing of Laozi, Hackett Publishing: Indianapolis, 2002, chapter 1, pg 1

[26] Ch’ine, Edward, The Conception of Language and the use of Paradox in Buddhism and Taoism, Journal of Chinese Philosophy, vol. 11, 1984, pg 375

[27] This basic definition was one laid out by Wolfgang Bauer in h= is China and the Search for Happiness, 1976.

[28] Ivanhoe, Philip, The Daodejing of Laozi, Hackett Publishing: Indianapolis, 2002, chapter 25, pg 25 a= nd chapter 51 pg 54

[29] Moeller, Hans-Georg, The Philosophy of the Daodejing, Columbia University Press: Ne= w York, 2006, pg 52

[30] Lau and Ames, The Chinese Worldview in Tracing Dao to its Source, found at:= http://a= cademic.udayton.edu/WilliamRichards/Eastern%20essays/Lau%20and%20Ames,%20Ch= inese%20Worldview.htm

[31] Ivanhoe, Philip, The Daodejing of Laozi, Hackett Publishing: Indianapolis, 2002, chapter 17, pg 17

[32] Ibid, chapter 31, pg 31

[33] Ibid, chapter 57, pg 60

[34] Ivanhoe, Philip, The Daodejing of Laozi, Hackett Publishing: Indianapolis, 2002, chapter 2, pg 2, ch= apter 3, pg 3, chapter 43, pg 46

[35] Clarke, J.J., The Tao of the West, Routledge: New York, 2000, = pg 84

[36] Ivanhoe, Philip, The Daodejing of Laozi, Hackett Publishing: Indianapolis, 2002, chapter 29, pg 29

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