Ancient Roots Taoism
Ancient Roots Taoism
Ancient Roots Taoism
4.
Large population
Agricultural society
Climactic extremes
(hot summers,
freezing winters,
regular floods)
Relative isolation
(bounded by Pacific,
Himalayas, deserts)
2
CULTURAL ORIENTATIONS
1.
2.
3.
4.
1.
2.
Dao (Way) =
normative cosmic pattern
1.
2.
Two hypotheses:
Agonistic relationship:
humans versus earth, Tian,
other extrahuman forces
[Puett]
Triangular relationship:
humans, earth, Tian share
harmonious, correlative
cosmos [Chang, Mote]
In both, great emphasis on
human agency in
sustaining cosmic order
2.
3.
Zhuangzi = obscure
thinker from south China
responsible for some, but
not all, of text that bears
his name
Zhuangzi = most original
and complex early
Chinese text
After 221 BCE, little
interest in Zhuangzi until
arrival of Buddhism in
China
POSSIBLE SOURCES OF
ZHUANGZI
ZHUANGIST THEMES
Conscious knowledge =
product of dualism
(separation of subject &
object)
Dao = mysterious, amoral,
beyond conventional wisdom
Unity with Dao = naturalness
(ziran ), freedom,
insight
Spiritual models =
craftspersons, enduring
natural objects
2.
3.
Laozi = legendary,
probably non-historical
figure credited with text;
deified by 100s CE
Text (c. 250 BCE) also
known as Daodejing
(Classic of Way
and Power)
In contrast to Zhuangzi,
Laozi remains important
to Daoists beyond
Warring States era
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POSSIBLE SOURCES OF
LAOZI
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
LAOIST THEMES
Conscious knowledge =
product of decline from era of
sage-king rule
Dao = mysterious, amoral,
beyond conventional wisdom
Unity with Dao = anonymity,
freedom, natural social order
Spiritual model =
characteristic wuwei
(actionless action) of
natural world
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1.
2.
1.
2.
3.
Huang-Lao =
Huangdi (Yellow
Emperor mythical sage-king
of primeval times, associated
with healing arts and rulership
Laozi
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1.
2.
3.
4.
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MODERN SOLUTIONS
1.
2.
3.
4.
DEFINING TAOISM
1.
2.
Any definition of
Taoism must
account for:
Incredible diversity
of items associated
with term
Whether/why such
items ought to be
unified under term
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