The last two lines, "up is down" and "sideways is straight ahead" manage to encapsulate the crux or the heart of Taoism as a philosophy dealing exclusively and whole-heartedly in paradoxes. — TheMadFool
Now, what about paradoxes makes them so damn important to Taoism? My hunch is, paradoxes vis-à-vis Taoism, are purposed for one specific task - to do an exposè on language itself but the question is what exactly about language is being revealed through paradoxes? — TheMadFool
In a way then, Laozi paradoxes are designed to make us confront, come face to face with, reality directly by arranging rendezvous with semantics/meanings, get past the confusion of words, language. — TheMadFool
How can you describe the same thing when you are seeing different things ?
If we can't even see and describe a book with all its different translations the same way, how could we describe the whole world the same way ? — Amity
Also, I haven't looked at the Chapters you missed out. I think Ch 5- 10 ?
It makes me wonder why and what we might have missed. It can't be because they are not your favourites. We spent a lot of time on Ch11 which you said you never liked. — Amity
Addis and Lombardo say "The self embodies distress. No self, No distress." Illusion is my word.
— T Clark
Saige again: Yes, your word, and one that would need more textual support if you are to claim it is appropriate. — Amity
Hope that we can now move on from this... — Amity
Really? Considering that the main topic is the Tao? — Possibility
I’m not sure I would trust a leader who claims to have no hope or fear - someone like Trump comes to mind...but I do get the notion of relating to honour and misfortune as if our own hopes and fears were irrelevant. — Possibility
The only verse I remember is:
And a horse has no udders,
And a cow can't whinny,
up is down,
And sideways is straight ahead — TheMadFool
Saige does not wish to be linked to anyone else but me, myself, I. — Amity
Flat out wrong. Even within the West and East what is being described differs. — Amity
Not necessarily. I can also have no body when I have seen through the illusion that my body is my self.
— T Clark
Even if you see through an illusion, you still need the body and mind to enable this. — Amity
Where does the text say this is an illusion? — Amity
I guess I’m always open to the possibility, however remote, that none of the current translations are accurate. In hermeneutics, I’ve found that returning to the source language with fresh eyes can be enlightening. — Possibility
In my view, courage is always needed. — Possibility
Perhaps a look there will help understanding. — Amity
I have been listening to what @Possibility has been saying about translating from Chinese. I agree it is important to return to the roots. — Amity
Most Chinese characters can serve equally as both nouns and verbs, and modifiers too (adjectives and adverbs); apart from context no graph has a unique grammatical function. — Amity
But I do think that what he’s missing reduces what those who rely on his translation would be able to get out of the TTC. — T Clark
The structure of traditional Chinese pinyin appears to solve many of the issues I have encountered with articulating my own philosophical approach in English - in particular the Ontic Structural Realism aspect. — Possibility
For me, this difference between fear and surprise relates back to affect, and Barrett’s theory that we predict our relation to the world in terms of valence (positive/negative) and arousal (high/low), and continually adjust our body’s energy distribution (in terms of attention and effort) accordingly. I’m not convinced that we’re able to not expect anything, but I think we can be aware of how affect influences our expectations, and remain sceptical of its positive/negative pull, at least. — Possibility
To say that hope is the same thing as fear seems to me an oversimplification. — Possibility
Have you ever tried to not have any expectations? Your brain is still generating predictions and distributing energies accordingly - you’re simply refusing to participate in the decision-making process. — Possibility
We can let affect (desire) call the shots and entirely ignore both our existing expectations and anything unexpected, or we can relate to the unexpected as neither good nor bad, but simply as unexpected. — Possibility
Shen refers to the main part of a structure, whether that is the body, life, morality and conduct, mind or self. It’s all of it, really - as far as our awareness of it goes. — Possibility
How we might define ‘self’ isn’t relevant here - it’s more about the relation.
The later fleshing out of this second idea I would translate as:
In order to exist, I am one who suffers greatly, and in the capacity of this living existence up until my death, I exist - how is this unfortunate? — Possibility
Therefore treasure the body as the world,
As if the body can be entrusted to the world.
Love the body as the world,
As if the body can be entrusted to the world.
— T Clark
This is not quite how I understand this part. There are two different sets of characters here that he has translated to read ‘as if the body can be entrusted to the world’. — Possibility
We are a temporary gift to the world. We can see that gift as one of expensive value and nobility, as if entrusted to the world. This perspective is dependent on the world to recognise that value and use our life carefully. The alternative is to see that gift as one of love, in which we are entrusted with the world. This perspective empowers us to collaborate with the world in a way that builds a lasting value and significance into our gift, so that it continues to give well beyond our death. — Possibility
Mitchell seems attached to certain concepts such as hope, success and fear, and he restructures the text to help consolidate these, missing the variability of a more complex (and less tangible) rendering of these ideas such as how we evaluate our suffering, humility and life. — Possibility
When we translate from Chinese to English, we try to translate all the characters, and then try to work out how the pieces fit together in our existing conceptual structures of experience and language. If it doesn’t seem to fit, there’s a tendency or temptation to distort the quality of these ideas, like forcing pieces of a jigsaw together. But the Chinese language has a very specific structure to it - and the way the ideas relate to each other in this structure is supposed to challenge the way we understand the world. — Possibility
I like the suggestion from other translations that the idea may be more startling than scary - I think it removes the tendency to avoid, and rather suggests that we may simply feel unprepared. — Possibility
Contentment here is not about avoiding the challenges of life, but about not always needing to appear to be a success - about recognising that humility, embarrassment or failure is the first step to learning, and therefore has value in our lives. Whether we succeed or fail, this feeling of fear or unpreparedness doesn’t really go away, it only shifts. — Possibility
The second idea introduced in this verse is that of value or nobility in a life of great suffering, which also seems startling/scary. — Possibility
Overall, I think this verse is about the courage to face what can seem a frightening perspective on life. — Possibility
You descibe the experience much better than i do. It was and is curious about how this aptitude arrives in your conciousness every time you use it. — Steve Leard
The map and the territory are always difficult to line up. All these different interpretations of the verse suggests to me that I am not the only one looking at the map with some confusion. — Valentinus
As my Sifu, Ry Cooder, once sang: "Romance without finance is a nuisance, so honey, give me your dough." — Valentinus
I have had the good fortune to take my work seriously without it having it be the only thing that was important for me to take care of. In fact, I only dedicated myself to treating it as a career in my early forties. Some of that was a matter of wanting to work at a certain level and some of that was existential in needing the dough for me and mine. I got to spend several years as the stay at home dad. I spent years remodeling my place. — Valentinus
As a result, I am conditioned (or biased, perhaps) to read the Taoists as calling for disengaging from some values and motivations while also acknowledging the need for work to happen. — Valentinus
I could add that saying "Means that something is more or less likely" just change the word probable for likely. — denis yamunaque
I don't understand the instructions. — Valentinus
For me, the inequality between being shamed or being honored is connected to the fear of failing to accomplish a task or duty. Beyond the pain of embarrassment or the pleasure of recognition, what is most scary about the prospect of failure is the withdrawal of trust by others to do something. — Valentinus
Why do you ask ? What does it matter ? — Amity
I think that the Tao is not a thing or an experience. It just is. It's the source from which all things come and to which all things return. Lao Tzu poetically guides us in the philosophy...the practice. The 'How to...' — Amity
There is a close connection between those of the West and East. — Amity
What does it mean to see the world as yourself? What does it mean to treasure your body as the world? To see your self as part of the whole, as unified with the Tao? And your body? Again, the use of "self" vs. "body" seems to make a big difference in the meaning.
— T Clark
The individual is part of the whole - see later in post. I am not sure the difference between 'self' and 'body' is the issue here. Both are our concern - the physical and the mental or spiritual aspects. — Amity
Ivanhoe talks of apprehension and reverence. — Amity
S. also sees apprehension and reverence as modes of care.
A central concern to individual bodies and the world. — Amity
when I no longer have a body I am dead. — Amity
The A.C Muller version gives a different emphasis on the quality of the fear by translating the character of jīng in its meaning: "to startle." — Valentinus
Muller's first line reads: "Accept humiliation as a surprise." The rest of his version is too intent upon drafting a maxim than explaining the text for my liking but the physicality of interpreting the first line is interesting. — Valentinus
The equality of success and failure concerns a connection that doesn't involve how obviously different the results are for us as benefits. — Valentinus
Beyond the shock of humiliation, there is dread for the future. Maybe this verse is about isolation. — Valentinus
Free will is not a thing, — Mww
Truth is objective reality which can lead to wisdom while pleasure serves our subjective desires. They do seem to be mutually exclusive. — Nikolas
"does there exist in man a natural attraction to truth and to the struggle for truth that is stronger than the natural attraction to pleasure?" — Nikolas
Stupid questions like this can't be asked unless there are fools to ask or answer them. — 180 Proof
Thanks for the advice. I have never participated in this sort of thing before and that is compounded by the fact that i am virtually computer illiterate. I appreciate the help. — Steve Leard
took the opportunity to visit the zoo — Steve Leard
What if it is ever determined that animals are sentient creatures and possess that slippery thing we humans think of as the soul? — Steve Leard
I agree that the context of heaven and earth is important. — Valentinus
The Tao is one but not a thing — Possibility
And the TTC is like a self-diagnostic program that can be run on any integrated structure of relations to help refine its operation in relation to the Tao, regardless of the level of awareness, connection or collaboration. — Possibility
there is no effective treatment for psychopathic personalities. — Bitter Crank
Nevertheless, I also grudgingly admit that the OP has a point - the 'big bang theory' (an awful name, by the way) has many vast anomalies. And it's impossible to deny that it seems to converge with the idea of 'creation ex nihilo'. It has often been resisted by scientists because of this very fact. — Wayfarer
I prayed to God for a solution to the confusion. He sent me a sage in shining armour who spake thus: — Amity
The nameless Tao is the beginning of Heaven and earth. — Amity
All perspectives count...for their potential value...
Does that sound about right ? — Amity
I don't see it as a problem that meanings or use of a word changes in different verses depending on what subject is being addressed. Being and Non-Being can describe different states of affairs. — Amity
When we assess the value or quality of anything e.g. the book, the TTC, we don't just look at the primary objective properties or qualities of it ( the cover, presentation ), we look at the secondary qualities, the subjective ( the reading, the meaning, the subjective interpretations). — Amity
The Tao, for me, IS the diverse quality of the world as a relational whole, inclusive of wu. — Possibility
Chen and Wang Pi seem to relate to the text as an ethical position, as if it’s telling the reader how they should behave, what is good and what is bad. This is common practice in relation to ancient metaphysical texts, but I think it’s a mistake to assume that either the text or its author has that kind of authority over us (and I think Lao Tzu makes a disclaimer to this effect in the second verse). — Possibility
..I disagree with the isolated message ‘that humans should be content with the simple pleasures of life’ - I think this is a misunderstanding. Having said that, I do think that contentment with simple pleasures has merit in relation to certain situations, but it cannot stand alone as an instruction for a ‘good’ life. — Possibility
he terms ‘being’ and ‘non-being’ refer to a particular level of awareness, which is often associated with human consciousness. The terms ‘substance’ and ‘lack’ I used in relation to the previous verse because it referred to a different level of awareness - a tangible, observable relation to the world. — Possibility
The difference between ‘the 10,000 things’ and ‘the Tao’ is the same idea again at a more complex level of awareness - but at some point we have to accept that it’s the relation we’re referring to, not two different ‘things’. ‘The 10,000 things’ refers to, but is not, the Tao. And ‘the Tao’ refers to, but is not, the Tao. They’re relative aspects of one absolute. — Possibility
Not necessarily. Imagine two dots drawn on a balloon, that is then inflated. The dots move apart exponentially as the angle from the radius increases. — counterpunch
But anyway, I linked to the wrong page, my bad. :yikes: — Wayfarer
Neoliberalism started as an ideological reaction to the regulated, pro-labor environment created by this set of values. It had little influence until the late 70s when stagflation seemed to be opening the door to an increased presence of socialism. — frank
