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Taoism

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One of the three great traditions of China along with Confucianism and Buddhism ... succession of decline, growth, fullness, and emptiness go in a cycle, each end ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Taoism


1
Taoism
2
Taoism
Two Characters Forward and Head
3
Taoism
The Vinegar Tasters
  • One of the three great traditions of China along
    with Confucianism and Buddhism
  • 20 million followers, primarily in Taiwan
  • In 1991 about 30,000 Taoists lived in North
    America

4
History
  • Context 5th c BC
  • Political crisis The just before or during of
    the era of warring states warlord-ruled
    provinces sections of the Great Wall built.
  • Weakening Zhou dynasty
  • Religious crisis accompanied social confusion.
  • Life harsh and chaotic, and the great minds of
    the time focused on regaining peace and stability.

5
History
  • Founder(?) Lao Tse (604-517 BC)
  • Lao Tse Old sage
  • His life roughly parallels that of Confucius.
  • He also sought for a way that would avoid the
    feudal warfare and other conflicts that disrupted
    society during his lifetime.

6
History
  • Legends
  • Native of Ch'ü-jen, which is in modern day Hunan
    Province
  • Born a wise old man of 72 with white hair
  • Mother carried him for 82 years

7
History
  • Tradition
  • Little history of his life
  • Keeper of the Royal Archives
  • Became disenchanted with society and government
    and decided to leave civilization and retire in
    solitude. 
  • Set out riding a water buffalo
  • Convinced by a gatekeeper to write his philosophy
    which is the Tao Te Ching
  • Arrived in India and instructed the Buddha in the
    way of enlightenment

8
History
  • A second founder?
  • Zhuangzi (3rd c BC) he is believed to have
    produced the text (often spelled Chuang Tzu)
    bearing his name.
  • Know nothing of him outside his text.

9
Important Texts
  • A Taoist Canon
  • Classical
  • Chuang Tzu (Zhuangzi) late 4th c and later
  • Mostly dialogical stories some fanciful.
  • The Tao-te-ching (Lao tzu)
  • Origins in oral tradition from 6th to 4th c BC
  • Attributed to Lao tzu who was actually a pious
    fiction. (Kirkland at the U of Georgia)
  • Many other texts created associated with various
    sects and Chinese dynasties.

10
Philosophical Taoism
  • Tao-chia
  • Mystical teachings about the Tao
  • Never institutionalized, passed on from teacher
    to student
  • Popular in the West
  • In many ways the opposite of Confucianism

11
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12
Philosophical Taoism
  • The Tao
  • Tao (pronounced "Dow") The path or the way
  • It "refers to a power which envelops, surrounds
    and flows through all things, living and
    non-living. The Tao regulates natural processes
    and nourishes balance in the Universe. It
    embodies the harmony of opposites
  • ("Our Beliefs," Western Reform Taoism at
    http//wrt.org/beliefs.htmltao)

13
Philosophical Taoism
  • Tao
  • Tao is the first-cause of the universe. It is the
    natural force that flows through all existence.
  • Taoists seek answers to life's problems through
    inner meditation and outer observation.
  • Impersonal, natural

14
Philosophical Taoism
Things are born and die . . . they are now empty
and now full, and their physical form is not
fixed . . . Time cannot be arrested. The
succession of decline, growth, fullness, and
emptiness go in a cycle, each end becoming a new
beginning. This is the way to talk about the . .
. principle of all things.
(Chuang Tzu)
  • The Cosmos
  • All matter is manifestation of the Ultimate
    Reality or Tao.
  • Reality is characterized by incessant change and
    transformation.
  • Duality Yin Yang
  • Drawn from traditional Chinese thought

15
Yin Yang
  • Yin yang Ancient Chinese sun chart
  • Two poles of existence which are opposite but
    complementary, and which exist in everything.
  • The phenomenal world arises through the
    interaction of Yin Yang

16
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17
Cosmos
  • The Five Elements (Wu Hsing)
  • The interplay of the male generative principle of
    yang and the female life-bearing powers of yin
    creates the Five Elements of the cosmos.
  • The elements earth, metal, fire, wood and water
  • The five interact with one another to form the
    others in a process of constant change.

18
Philosophical Taoism
  • Knowledge
  • Ineffability The Tao can not be described, it
    is beyond words or any conceptual understanding.
  • Mystical or esoteric The Way of ultimate
    reality
  • Seeks intuitive wisdom, rather than rational
    knowledge a contempt of reasoning and
    argumentation

A dog is not reckoned good because he barks
well, and a man is not reckoned wise because he
speaks skillfully. Disputation is a proof of
not seeing clearly. (Chuang Tzu)
19
Philosophical Taoism
  • Knowledge
  • Taoist observe nature in order to discern the
    characteristics of the Tao.
  • Those who follow the natural order flow in the
    current of the Tao. (Huai Nan Tzu)
  • Change in nature manifests the dynamic interplay
    between the polar opposites yin and yang.
  • Early Taoism states that education is unnecessary
    and even destructive.
  • Meditation Inner alchemy

20
Conduct
  • Wu-wei "Non-action"
  • Refraining from action contrary to nature
  • Non-action does not mean doing nothing and
    keeping silent. Let everything be allowed to do
    what it naturally does, so that its nature will
    be satisfied. (Chuang-tzu)
  • By not going against the grain of things one is
    in harmony with the Tao and one's actions will be
    successful.
  • The example of water
  • It moves gently forward, rises to its level,
    adapts to its surrounding
  • When still, it becomes clear
  • It has great power, wearing down the hardest stone

21
Conduct
  • Non-interference
  • The result of wu-wei
  • Directed to rulers

22
Conduct
  • P'u "uncarved block
  • Perceiving all things with a simple, clear and
    unbiased mind
  • The ultimate reality and our existence is
    elemental and uncomplicated.
  • Complexity brings trouble
  • Simple living

23
Philosophical Taoism
  • Good and Evil
  • Good and evil are just empty conceptual
    abstractions that have no permanent independent
    existence.
  • Reject the concept of good against evil
  • On the reality of good and evil, good
    necessitates evil according to the Taoist notion
    of the interdependence of all dualities.
  • Good is the balance and harmony of dualities,
    evil is disharmony brought about by human action.
  • The sage knows the reality of Good and Evil,
    whereas the fool concentrates on the concept of
    good and evil.
  • Alan Watts "The menu is not the meal."

24
Philosophical Taoism
  • Goal
  • The Tao is the natural flow of the cosmos. Nature
    follows the Tao, humans with their conscious
    wills go against the Tao.
  • The goal of the Taoist is to harmonize with the
    Tao and thereby become one with the cosmos, with
    nature, with all things.
  • No duality of salvation vs damnation

25
Philosophical Taoism
  • No concept of a personal deity
  • No creator of the universe
  • There is no prayer since there is no personal God
    to hear pray.

26
Religious Taoism
  • Tao-chiao
  • Institutional
  • From 2nd c on through a bewildering array of
    sects and teachings
  • The initiated priests view the many gods and
    spirits as manifestations of the one Tao which
    can not be represented.
  • Ritual traditions
  • Ritual healing of illness especially mental
    illnesses.

27
Religious Taoism
  • Seeks ways to achieve longevity or even physical
    immortality
  • Employs medicinal herbs, body movement, and
    alchemy.
  • May be shamanistic

28
Influence
  • Science
  • Nutrition
  • Acupuncture
  • Movement arts Tai Chi, martial arts

29
Response
  • The problem of ineffability
  • "Those who know don't say, and those who say
    don't know. (Lao-tzu)
  • If the Tao is truly inexpressible, how is it that
    attributes of the Tao are expressed?
  • The Tao and the God of the Bible
  • Moral relativism
  • "In their own way things are all right . . .
    generosity, strangeness, deceit, and abnormality.
    The Tao identifies them all as one.
  • The origins of personhood
  • Good and evil
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