Title: TAOISM
1TAOISM
- Maybe 225 million followers
- Yin/Yang far older in Chinese thought than
Taoist/Confucian schools. - "We believe in the formless and eternal Tao,
and we recognize all personified deities as being
mere human constructs. We reject hatred,
intolerance, and unnecessary violence, and
embrace harmony, love and learning, as we are
taught by Nature. We place our trust and our
lives in the Tao, that we may live in peace and
balance with the Universe, both in this mortal
life and beyond.--Creed of the Western Reform
Taoist Congregation
2- Lao Tzu (Tze) are both figures of the axial age
(800-200 BCE), along with Confucius, Buddha, and
Greek progenitors of philosophy. - Laozi is held to be the author of the Tao de Ching
3Laozi (Lao Tze) the Old Master on his water
buffalo
- Whether he existed or whether the Tao te Ching is
a composite work is contested. - But approximately a contemporary of Confucius and
of Greek pre-Socratic philosophers.
4Yin Yang
- Taoist symbol. "It represents the balance of
opposites in the universe. When they are equally
present, all is calm. When one is outweighed by
the other, there is confusion and disarray."
5The Taoist Sage the Wild Horses story
- Grandson traps a wild and corals it.
- Loses fine horse, we are destitute, ruined. You
never know - It returns with 10 others
- One throws off his son and breaks his hip
- Army comes through to round up young men and boys
to serve in the rulers new war.
- Hes gleeful Ill have a dowry and can get
married now the horse can be worked to make the
fields wonderfully productive. Sagely
grandfather In times of success, disappointment
is sure to follow Life itself does not endure.
How can prosperity be counted on? - Adversity like prosperity dont last where are
the strong and weak of old flowers cover the
fields of ancient battles. - 3. A moments glory is nothing more than a dream
in springtime. If we cant understand this well
be shackled by ambition. Dont let success lead
to complacency, for that will lead to grief
later, and perhaps sooner than you think. So
dont let yourself be dragged down by desire.
The pang of disappointment come in times of
fulfillment. - 4. Its a hardship, but well get through it In
the midst of hardship, a taste of delight is
often found. When things look worst, where is
6lessons
- The story fits the teaching of Lao Tze, and leads
to prescribing a kind of attitude of inner calm
in the face of whatever outer changes and
happenings are occurring in ones life - Change is natures way, and we should affirm the
process itself rather than just identifying with
our immediate point in it - Luck and knowing what you can control and what
you cant-as Sophocles also said, luck and fate
dangle by a thread count no one lucky until
hes dead. - So take disappointment in stride and as an
incentive to do better Dont let momentary
success make you forget to guard against the
future. the Taoist (and Chinese) say, when living
in prosperity, think about adversity and peril
when young and strong, dont be only carefree,
but think about your senior years, or you may
become complacent in working towards your future.
Without distant worries, trouble will be near at
hand.
7Eastern Wisdom by C. Chuh
8- Compare with
- Chi Lu asked about serving the spirits. Confucius
said, "If you can't yet serve men, how can you
serve the spirits?" Lu said, "May I ask about
death?" Confucius said, "If you don't understand
what life is, how will you understand death?" - Confucius said "If you govern the people
legalistically and control them by punishment,
they will avoid crime, but have no personal sense
of shame. If you govern them by means of virtue
and control them with propriety (li), they will
gain their own sense of shame, and thus correct
themselves." - --Analects 1111 23
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11- Under heaven all can see beauty as beauty only
because there is ugliness. All can know good as
good only because there is evil. Therefore having
and having not arise together. Difficult and easy
complement each other. TTC, 2
12Popular and Philosophical Taoism
- Search in popular Taoism for the pill of
immortality. - Popular Taoism also brings in divination, and
"acupuncture, herbalism, holistic medicine,
meditation and martial arts..."
13The Tao Te Ching(Book of the Way and of Virtue)
- The Tao What is it?
- 1. The way of ultimate reality way of the
universe way of human life. The root source or
first-cause of the universe "that which makes
things what they are. - Metaphors of the Tao The uncarved block, the
baby, the watercourse way. - 2. The path one should take or follow natures
way adopted as a normative guide to ones
conduct.
14- Tao can be roughly translated into English as
path, or the way. Still, it is basically
indefinable. It has to be experienced. 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 (i.e. there
would be no love without hate, no light without
dark, no male without female.) - Put up table of opposites. Polarity and analogy
two modes of conceptual thinking in ancient
eastern and western thought. Why? a) simplicity
b) comprehensiveness, c) definitive of
"dimensions of experience. - Substance vs. perspective ontology?
15Mysticism and the Limits of Language and
Discursive Understanding
- The Tao as indescribable mysterious The way
that can be spoken of is not the everlasting way - ---TTC, 1.
- We look at it and do not see it
- Its name is The Invisible.
- We listen to it and do not hear it
- Its Name is The Inaudible.
- We touch it and do not find it
- Its name is The Subtle (or Formless).
- These three cannot be inquired further into,
- and hence merge into one.
- Infinite and boundless, it cannot be given name
- It reverts to nothingnessIt is the Vague and
Eluding. - TTC, 14.
16- A bait is used to catch fish. When you have
gotten the fish, you can forget about the bait. A
rabbit trap is used to catch rabbits. When the
rabbits are caught, you can forget about the
trap. Words are used to express meaning. When you
understand the meaning, you can forget about the
words. - Where can I find a man who forgets about words
in order that I may talk with him? - --Zhuangzi
17Mysticism in the coincidence of opposites
- We find aspects of one in the other (being
nonbeing yin yang the dots on the yin/yang
symbol) - Western thought more a conflict dualism,
Eastern more complementary contraries. Change
in Taoism seen as cyclical reversal between Yin
and Yang poles. - The Tao as both the higher synthesis of
complementary opposites, and as the unitary
source out of which they are differentiated.
18Cosmogony in the Tao Te Ching
- Something undifferentiated was born before
heaven and earth still and silent, standing
alone and unchanging, going through cycles
unending, able to be mother to the world. I do
not know its name I label it the Way. Imposing
on it a name, I call it GreatTTC, 25 - Tao produced the One. The One produced the two.
The two produced the three. And the three
produced the ten thousand thingsTTC, 42
19- Cultures very often take a decided stand with
respect to the question of the chicken and
egg.the Western monotheistic tradition has
opted for a kind of heroic and divine chicken
which bravely and mysteriously produced and
brooded over a fallen omelet of the world. As a
counterpointChinese thought asserts with equal
justification that in the beginning there was no
avian spirit hovering willfully over the chaotic
watersThe Chinese imagination has tended to find
cosmic eggsmore metaphysically nourishing than
divine chickensthe Chinese perspective leads
back not to a Prime Mover but to a Prime Movement
and its continuing Primary Resonance among all
things. --N. Girardot, Behaving Cosmogonically
in Early Taoism
20- Human nature viewed positively
- Note short Chinese business contracts. That we
need more may show more pessimist, or more
realism, or both. - Time is cyclical, not linear as in Western
thinking - All traditional Chinese schools of thought share
some form of a trinity of Heaven, Earth and Man
as the forces of the universe.
21- Archetypes 2. Perspectivism (a Buddhist/Taoist
idea) objectivity isnt defined by finding the
one right view in contrast to all of the other
wrong views all perspectives are partial
(biases), and present only partial truth. If you
want to really appreciate a stone statue, you may
attempt to view it from all angles, in all
different shades of light and dark you may try
to touch it, smell it, etc, to expand our ways of
contacting it or experiencing it. Its the same
with WISDOM The greatest objectivity we can
achieve is by cycling ourselves through all the
various perspectives on a subject, in order to
preserve and appreciate their partial truths.
This does not mean all perspectives are created
equal, or are equally valid, but that no
perspective should be ignored before it is
closely considered. You have to have a full
range of perspectives before youre in a position
to responsibly pass judgment.
22Taoism and ethics
- Wu Wei (actionless action i.e. let nature take
its course) - Virtue (te) in Taoist perspective
- Intellectual humility as an ethical virtue
231. 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 - 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
24- 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. - 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."
- 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. - 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 - 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?
25Be water, my friend!Bruce Lee
- Stiffness is thus a companion of death,
flexibility a companion of life (TTC,76). - Nothing in the world is more flexible and
yielding than water. Yet when it attacks the firm
and the strong, none can withstand it, because
they have no way to change it (TTC, 78). - It is because they do not contend that no one can
contend with them---TTC, 22. The best person is
like water...It is because he does not compete
that he is without reproachTTC, 8 - The way of the intercepting fist of attacking
but turning the opponents energy against him . - Using no way as way having no limitations as
limitation This Bruce Lee wore as an insignia
medallion for the rest of his short life, his own
unique appropriation of the Taoist ideal of
actionless action. - http//www.metacafe.com/watch/23744/bruce_lee_lost
_interview/
26Notes
- Martial artist extrordinaire Bruce Lee was
highly affected by Eastern philosophy. When he
was recovering from his critical spine injury, he
used his idle time to read the Tao te Ching and
other eastern works, and apply them to his
martial arts. The experience dramatically
transformed his conception of method. He had
always been asked if he subscribed to the
Chinese, Japanese, or some other style. After
his recovery to competition, he chose to reject
all such labels, and to develop his own unique
style that developed into a new style of karate
the motto of this new martial art form became
Using no way as way having no limitations as
limitation. - This he wore as an insignia medallion for the
rest of his short life. It was his own unique
instantiation of the Taoist ideal of actionless
action. His approach would not reflect a
specific, established style, because that would
expose limitations to contrasting styles. He
strove for nonstriving (63) because The Way
is always uncontrived (37). Instead, he would
act without contention (81), allowing his
movements to be dictated by his opponents style.
He would focus himself only on taking the thrust
of the other and using it against them their own
commitment to acting in a specific style would be
their downfall.
272. Virtue
- The Way is always uncontrived, yet theres
nothing it doesnt do. If lords and monarchs
could keep to it, all beings would evolve
spontaneouslyBy not wanting there is calm, and
the world will straighten itself. TTC, 37 - The Sage wants to have no wantsThe sage
embraces unity as a model for the world. TTC,
22. - Cultivate it in yourself, and the virtue is
real cultivate it at home, and that virtue is
abundant cultivate it in the nation, and that
virtue is rich cultivate it in the world, and
that virtue is universal TTC, 54 - Habituation restores natural virtue When there
is a motive to be virtuous, there is no virtue
TTC
28Stoic temperament in the face of fate
- Laozi states, All that happens without us
knowing why is destinyFor one who trusts
destiny, and his mind, there is nothing agreeable
or offensive. (232). - The Taoist and the Stoic Life is serene if we
accept things as they come accept changes as
natural. Sorrow is merely a state of mind and
may not be warranted by the circumstances. Hence
whether or not you feel sad is all in the
mind. (237).
293. Intellectual humility
- Those who know do not say those who say do not
know. Close the senses, shut the doors blunt the
sharpness, resolve the complications harmonize
the light, assimilate to the worldTTC, 56
30The limits of knowledge
- Knowing is not like mirroring an objective
reality (i.e., what Heaven or nature makes). It
is always inevitably relational and situational.
But often in the West we take knowing as
mirroring, and the human contribution as merely
tarnishing or clouding the mirror. - Just as Taoist ethics rejects altruistic rules
and expectations, making place for greater
individuality, the Taoist approach to knowledge
is too psychologically acute to accept knowledge
as a mere mirroring of nature. As with the
philosopher William James, The trail of the
human serpent over what we take as truth and
knowledge is too apparent.
31The Three Sages from a Taoist Perspective
- 1) K'ung Fu-tse (mispronounced "Confucius") -
considered life to be sour. He felt that the
world was a disorderly place, which had to be
controlled. 2) Buddha - considered life to be
bitter. He saw the world as full of pain and
illusion, full of attachments and traps. He felt
that we must work spiritually to rise above these
things. 3) Lao-tse - considered life to be
perfect wonderful as is. He saw a natural
harmony that could be experienced by anyone at
anytime. He believed the world to be a teacher of
valuable lessons, and that we should embrace the
wonder of every moment.
32Chinese Multiple Religious Participation
- A history fairly harmonious interplay
(sporadically upset) between the three major
religions of China. Example of sharing the
community temple, rather than jealously
guarding it excluding one others. - The co-existence of Confucianism, Taoism, and
Buddhism is not merely an existence side by side
in the same land, they also coexist in the same
mind. That is, the same individual may subscribe
to all three value systems at the same
timePeople of MRP practice more than one
religion with a recognition that these are
different religions. They do it without making an
effort to integrate them into one single religion
on the basis of some common tenets.C. Li
33 Science and/or Mysticism?
- Mystics understand the roots of the Tao but not
its branches scientists understand its branches
but not its roots. Science does not need
mysticism and mysticism does not need science
but man needs both. Taoist saying/ F. Capra,
The Tao of Physics - Sometimes people ask if religion and science are
not opposed to one another. They are in the sense
that the thumb and fingers of my hand are opposed
to one another. It is an opposition by means of
which anything can be grasped W. Gragg in God
for the 21st Century - The most beautiful and most profound emotion we
can experience is the sensation of the
mysticalIt is the source of all art and
scienceThe religious geniuses of all ages have
been distinguished by this kind of religious
feeling, which knows no dogma and no God
conceived in mans image.Science without
religion is lame, religion without science is
blind.--Albert Einstein, The World as I See It
(1934)
34- "I see science and mysticism as two
complementary manifestations of the human mind
of its rational and intuitive faculties. The
modern physicist experiences the world through an
extreme specialization of the rational mind the
mystic through an extreme specialization of the
intuitive mind. The two approaches are entirely
different and involve far more than a certain
view of the physical world. However, they are
complementary, as we have learned to say in
physics. Neither is comprehended in the other,
nor can either of them be reduced to the other,
but both of them are necessary, supplementing one
another for a fuller understanding of the world.
To paraphrase an old Chinese saying, mystics
understand the roots of the Tao but not its
branches scientists understand its branches but
not its roots. Science does not need mysticism
and mysticism does not need science but man
needs both. Mystical experience is necessary to
understand the deepest nature of things, and
science is essential for modern life. What we
need, therefore, is not a synthesis but a dynamic
interplay between mystical intuition and
scientific analysis." Fritjof Capra, The Tao of
Physics - Add Heisenberg here. And the Bohrs quote on
when you think you know.
35Western science and Eastern mysticism?
- Niels Bohrs self-designed coat of arms,
featuring Yin/Yang and contraries in
complementarity. - It is wrong to think that the task of physics is
to find out how Nature is. Physics concerns what
we can say about Nature. - The opposite of a correct statement is a false
statement. But the opposite of a profound truth
may well be another profound truth. - At the micro-level, quantum physics tells us
theres no ultimate substance-brick of the
universe. It is no more particulars than
energy-packets nor more energy packets than
particlesBoth this and that are different
ways for the same entity to be (C. Li)
36- The Story of Cook Ding We always look at things
from a certain point of view. But Zhuangzi
recognizes no essence or primary being,
exclusively determining the entitys being. The
entitys being an aggregate of parts is no less
real than its being an ox. Only when we see it
not merely as an ox, but also as an entity that
is both a this and a that, can we get to the
pivot of the Tao (C. Li) Staying at the pivot of
the potters wheel of Heaven is called letting
both alternatives proceed. - To adhere dogmatically to thats it of an
entity is to discriminate against alternatives.
But in doing so one is obstructed from seeing the
reality of the Tao. To know the Tao is not to
discriminate against alternatives, but to be open
to them (C. Li).
37Stayin in the pivot of the Tao
- When there is no more separation of this and
that, it is called the pivot of the Tao. At the
pivot in the center of the circle one can see the
infinite in all things.Zhuangzi - To know the Tao is not to discriminate against
alternatives, but to be open to them (C. Li).
Staying at the pivot of the potters wheel of
Heaven is called letting both alternatives
proceed. - Everything is a that, and everything is a
this. You cannot see it as a this if you are
from the viewpoint of that you see it as a
this when you are from the viewpoint of this
Thus the sage does not bother with these
distinctions but sees all things the way they
are. The Way is the pivot of all thingsTTC
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38Zhuangzi and the Butterfly
- The transformation of things takes place when
the boundary between this and that is
dissolved and the oneness of the world is
revealed. - Heraclitus You cant step into the same river
twice. - Living in harmony with nature means to accept all
of its transformations. - As with the Stoics of old, accepting
transformationsnot trying to change what we
cannot change--serves to insulate us somewhat
from adverse luck. - Example calmness as to disaster and good fortune
in story of the wild horses.
39The usefulness of the useless
- Doors and windows are cut out to make a room,
But it is on its non-being that the utility of
the room depends.Tao te Ching, 11 - Relate Zhuangzis story of the old oak tree
- Also his story of Chu Shih and the gourds
40Chi Energy
- Each person must nurture the Ch'i (air, breath)
that has been given to them. Taoists strongly
promote health and vitality. - Tai chi as an art of the balance of forces
- Tai chi works on all parts of the body, to
"stimulate the central nervous system, lowers
blood pressure, relieves stress and gently tones
muscles without strain. It also enhances
digestion, elimination of wastes and the
circulation of blood. Moreover, tai chi's
rhythmic movements massage the internal organs
and improve their functionality." Traditional
Chinese medicine teaches that illness is caused
by blockages or lack of balance in the body's
"chi" (intrinsic energy). Tai Chi is believed to
balance this energy flow.
41Acupuncture Meridians
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43Y/Y and the Five Elements
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45Chinese acupuncture
- Cultural incommensurability (no common
measure) between Western and Eastern
explanations of pain. - Chi energy travels throughout the body along
channels, or meridians. - The method of selecting points along for
acupuncture anesthesiology "where a meridian
traverses, there is a place amenable to
treatment. - This doesnt jibe with Western explanations from
the Western perspective, its success is an
anomaly.
46CTM Western Medicine
- Different attitudes to acupuncture highlight
contrasting views of the the physician. The
gardener and the mechanic. - Mechanic structure determines function, and
structure is purely physical. Focus on parts to
be fixed. - Gardener Patient is viewed as a complete
integration of body and mind. - Theory-dominant vs. practice-dominant
orientations. The Chinese generally more
concerned about efficacy than about explanation. - CTM is holistic in directing itself to the
person as a physiological and psychological
unity. Analyze not the sickness but rather
understand the sick person to restore balance and
health. - Eastern medicines traditional view of the body
takes the bodys mode in the opposite direction
from modern medicines procedure of anatomy
first, then physiology, and only finally
psychology.--Yuasa
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