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Taoism and ethics

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Taoism and ethics Wu Wei (actionless action) Virtue (te) in Taoist perspective Intellectual humility as an ethical virtue 1. Wu Wei: Actionless Action The Way of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Taoism and ethics


1
Taoism and ethics
  1. Wu Wei (actionless action)
  2. Virtue (te) in Taoist perspective
  3. Intellectual humility as an ethical virtue

2
1. Wu Wei Actionless Action
  • The Way of heaven helps and does not harm. The
    Way for humans is to act without
    contention.TTC, 81
  • Tao invariably takes no action, and yet there is
    nothing left undone. "The tao of heaven does not
    strive, and yet it overcomes. It does not speak,
    and yet it is answered....The world is ruled by
    non-action, not by action.TTC, 37

3
  • The sage never strives for the great, and
    thereby the great is achieved.---TTC, 34
  • Do non-doing, strive for non-striving, savor the
    flavorless, regard the small as important, make
    much of little, repay enmity with virtue.TTC,
    63

4
  • Wu wei is one of the most difficult and leat
    understood doctrines of Lao Tze. First, the
    ontological Tao is said to be wu sei-natures
    course is effortless. Sounds paradoxical and
    meaningless. How should we interpret it?
  • Taoists respond to situations passively and yet
    appropriately, by following the art of letting
    nature take its course.

5
  • The holistic thinking the Taoist promotes can be
    seen to support proper respect for other living
    things it promotes seeing the natural world as a
    holistic system so that what affects one thing
    affects all. Balance and things like the scenario
    of weather in the movie The Day After Tomorrow
  • Taoists believe that "people are compassionate by
    nature...left to their own devices they will
    show this compassion without expecting a reward."

6
  • On third quote, from Zhuangzi, relate 1)
    effortless b/c habitual (and so automatic or
    natural to act so),
  • 2) uncontrived rather than forced or
    deliberative) responding to every interest.
    James on satisfying every relevant interest (what
    fills himhis moral perception he relies on
    something like wu wei may be necessary for that
    Jamesian ideal to occur.

7
  • READ FROM ZHUNAGZI Emptiness and stillness,
    calm and indifference, quiescence, Doing Nothing,
    are the even level of heaven and earth, the
    utmost reach of the Way and the Power
    thereforethe sage finds rest in them. At rest he
    empties, emptying he is filled, and what fills
    him sorts itself out. Emptying he is still, in
    stillness he is moved, and when he moves he
    succeeds.The Zhuangzi

8
  • So emptying the mind isnt just ignore principles
    and to do whatever comes handy it means
    increaing ones moral sensitivity Diminish the
    role of knowledge and precedent, of deliberation
    and custom, of thinking and planning, and the
    mind of the virtuous person will better reflect
    the morally relevant aspects of the situation and
    the interests that need to be responded-to. A
    CARE ETHIC?
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