[Hawking]
For thousands of years
People have wondered about the universe
Did it stretch out forever
Or was there a limit
From the big bang to black holes
From dark matter to a possible big crunch
Our image of the universe today
Is full of strange sounding ideas
— Carl Sagan - A Glorious Dawn lyrics
We can either act in accord with the Way or try to hack our way through life. — Fooloso4
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symphony_of_ScienceThe Symphony of Science is a music project created by Washington-based electronic musician John D. Boswell. The project seeks to "spread scientific knowledge and philosophy through musical remixes." Boswell uses pitch-corrected audio and video samples from television programs featuring popular educators and scientists.
:smile:A few words that caution us about the use of words. — Fooloso4
It works for me as poetry, evoking a sense of connectedness with both nature and the affairs of humans. It is also a kind of metaphysics, allusive, not determinate. It is about unknowing more than it it is about knowing—metaphysics is not and can never be a science, but it is an inspiring activity as it is so closely allied with the arts. — Janus
The Dao has long been associated in my mind with the Dharma, and most particularly as the Dharma is evoked by the great Zen teachers—Dogen, Hui Hai, Han Shan, and my favorite modern Zen text: Zen MInd, Beginners Mind by Suzuki. — Janus
I also associate it with the teachings of the Stoics, the Epicureans and Spinoza—I mean I think it is coming from the same place of radical acceptance of those things which are beyond our control. The Dao, like Spinoza's "deus siva natura' has no concern for humans, and to live well we must bow to the greater power. — Janus
This is one of the first verses that grabbed me in Mitchell's translation - really opened my eyes. — T Clark
Whether or not it is "authentic," I think it get's right to the heart of what Lao Tzu was trying to say in a way that's more concrete than other versions. — T Clark
I think this shows respect for both the Tao and the 10,000 things, which represent the multiplicity of distinctions in our everyday world. Humanity is one of the 10,000 things. — T Clark
The Jane English version:
Therefore, “Tao is great;
Heaven is great;
Earth is great;
The human being is also great.”
These are the four great powers of the universe,
And the human being is one of them. — Amity
The Jane English version is objectively superior to Stephen Mitchell's version. I am aware that I said something controversial in the previous sentence. — Arcane Sandwich
13
Success is as dangerous as failure.
Hope is as hollow as fear.
What does it mean that success is a dangerous as failure?
Whether you go up the ladder or down it,
you position is shaky.
When you stand with your two feet on the ground,
you will always keep your balance.
What does it mean that hope is as hollow as fear?
Hope and fear are both phantoms
that arise from thinking of the self.
When we don't see the self as self,
what do we have to fear?
See the world as your self.
Have faith in the way things are.
Love the world as your self;
then you can care for all things. — Terebess - Mitchell trans. of Tao Te Ching
Thirteen
Accept disgrace willingly.
Accept misfortune as the human condition.
What do you mean by "Accept disgrace willingly"?
Accept being unimportant.
Do not be concerned with loss or gain.
This is called "accepting disgrace willingly."
What do you mean by "Accept misfortune as the human condition"?
Misfortune comes from having a body.
Without a body, how could there be misfortune?
Surrender yourself humbly; then you can be trusted to care for all things.
Love the world as your own self; then you can truly care for all things.
— Terebess - Translated by Gia-Fu Feng and Jane English
The Jane English version is "more ancient", more "ancestral" in its expressions. — Arcane Sandwich
I do not. Your contributions to this thread are substantive and greatly appreciated. — Arcane Sandwich
If it doesn't work for you, that's no surprise. It doesn't work for lots of people. It works for me.
— T Clark
Cheers T Clark, it actually does work for me. It and the Bhagavad Gita are two of my favorite texts. — Janus
Twenty-five
Something mysteriously formed,
Born before heaven and Earth.
In the silence and the void,
Standing alone and unchanging,
Ever present and in motion.
Perhaps it is the mother of ten thousand things.
I do not know its name
Call it Tao.
For lack of a better word, I call it great. — Lao Tzu (Laozi)
The Tao or Dao[note 1] is the natural way of the universe, primarily as conceived in East Asian philosophy and religion. This seeing of life cannot be grasped as a concept. Rather, it is seen through actual living experience of one's everyday being.
Theconcept is represented by the Chinese character 道, which has meanings including 'way', 'path', 'road', and sometimes 'doctrine' or 'principle'.[1]
In the Tao Te Ching, the ancient philosopher Laozi explains that the Tao is not a name for a thing, but the underlying natural order of the universe whose ultimate essence is difficult to circumscribe because it is non-conceptual yet evident in one's being of aliveness.
The Tao is "eternally nameless" and should be distinguished from the countless named things that are considered to be its manifestations, the reality of life before its descriptions of it.
The word "Tao" has a variety of meanings in both the ancient and modern Chinese language. Aside from its purely prosaic use meaning road, channel, path, principle, or similar,[2] the word has acquired a variety of differing and often confusing metaphorical, philosophical, and religious uses.
In most belief systems, the word is used symbolically in its sense of "way" as the right or proper way of existence, or in the context of ongoing practices of attainment or of the full coming into being, or the state of enlightenment or spiritual perfection that is the outcome of such practices. — Wiki - Tao
The universe is everything. It includes all of space, and all the matter and energy that space contains. It even includes time itself and, of course, it includes you. — Nasa Science - What is the Universe?
However, we are so, sooo far away from the Main Topic (Chapter 25 of the Tao Te Ching), that first and foremost, some ambience is required to get back to the Main Topic.
Therefore, I share the following song with the intention (I intend it as such) of getting back to Chapter 25 of the Tao Te Ching: — Arcane Sandwich
All Things Pass
by Timothy Leary
All things pass
A sunrise does not last all morning
All things pass
A cloudburst does not last all day
All things pass
Nor a sunset all night
All things pass
What always changes?
Earth . . . sky . . . thunder . . .
mountain . . . water . . .
wind . . . fire . . . lake . . .
These change
And if these do not last
Do man's visions last?
Do man's illusions?
Take things as they come
All things pass
Translation:
Language: English
Author of original: Lao Tzu — All Things Pass - Timothy Leary
OK, so the translations contradict one another. How do you know which is correct, or considering what I said just above, how can there be a correct and incorrect at all? — Janus
I have argued that the text, being poetical, does not have one true interpretation — Janus
Downloadable with photographs and script.
2011 Edition - with over 100 photos
https://terebess.hu/english/tao/gia.html — Amity
Twenty-five
The human being follows the earth.
Earth follows heaven.
Heaven follows the Tao.
Tao follows what is natural. — Jane English
Humanity, Earth, Heaven, and the Tao are called the four great powers. There is clearly a hierarchy with the Tao at the top. — T Clark
I see this as one depiction of the hierarchy of steps between the Tao and the king or humankind. — T Clark
Therefore, “Tao is great;
Heaven is great;
Earth is great;
The human being is also great.”
These are the four great powers of the universe,
And the human being is one of them.
[The Yin-Yang symbol is inserted ]Here is the Tao that can be told, and it shows the eternal Tao (the Tao that cannot be told) — Arcane Sandwich
Taoist Cosmology. How do Yin and Yang relate to qi (chi), the Tao, and the Five Elements? This is Taoism's story of the creation and maintenance and continuous transformation of the universe.
Taoist practitioners enter into a "path of return"—a movement from the myriad things of the world back into wuji. The Immortals, or those who have entered the Tao, are those who have completed this "path of return."
Yin Qi and Yang Qi give birth to the Five Elements, whose various combinations produce the Ten-Thousand-Things.
The operation of the Five Elements can be seen within the human body, within an ecosystem, or within any other living system. When the elements of a system are in balance, the cycles of generation and control function to both nourish and contain one another. When the elements are out of balance, they "overact" on and/or "insult" one another. — Learn Religions - 8 important Taoist Visual Symbols
Yin-Yang and The Ten Thousand Things
The traditional yin-yang (feminine/dark-masculine/light) symbol below shows a bit of yin in yang and of yang in yin. A phrase that appears often in Tao Te Ching is “the ten-thousand things,” as in this excerpt from that book:
Tao begot one
One begot two
Two begot three
And three begot the ten-thousand things.
The ten-thousand things carry yin and embrace yang
They achieve harmony by combining these forces
— Tao Te Ching, Chapter 42
This image below, Yin, Yang and the Ten-Thousand Things, came to me in meditation around 1988. It shows yin-yang opening up and bringing forth their rainbow children, all of creation, the “ten-thousand things.”
[Image]
Expanding on that traditional symbol and rather than seeing yin and yang as opposites, we can realize a co-creative balance of masculine yang and feminine yin in our lives, so that their children, the rainbow of our creativity, the ten-thousand things, can be born.
Tao may be found not only in the undivided ground of being, nor solely in the polarity of yin and yang, dark and light, dynamic and receptive, but also everywhere in the full rainbow spectrum of the ten-thousand things: all the myriad ways the un-nameable whole is divided into discrete beings.
—from page 16 in the book A Rainbow of Tao — Tao - Earth Heart Blog - Jane English
Anyway. I have no interest in attempting to engage with you further. — Janus
Therefore, "Tao is great;
Heaven is great;
Earth is great;
The king is also great."
These are the four great powers of the universe,
And the king is one of them.
— Lao Tzu (Laozi)
The King is one of them. Who is to say that the King is not the Great Chinggis Khaan? — Arcane Sandwich
Who is to say that the King is not instead Haile Selassie, Emperor of Ethiopia, the Second Incarnation of Christ, the Lion of Judah, who will unify all the peoples of Africa and all of the peoples of the African diaspora? — Arcane Sandwich
Therefore, “Tao is great;
Heaven is great;
Earth is great;
The human being is also great.”
These are the four great powers of the universe,
And the human being is one of them.
The human being follows the earth.
Earth follows heaven.
Heaven follows the Tao.
Tao follows what is natural. — Amity
Now Jane English and her long-time editor, Toinette Lippe, have refreshed and revised the translation, so that it more faithfully reflects the Classical Chinese in which it was first written, while taking into account changes in our own language and eliminating any lingering infelicities. [...] Also included is an introduction by the well-known writer and scholar of philosophy and comparative religion, Jacob Needleman. — Amazon - Tao Te Ching: Illustrated Edition: With Over 150 Photographs
Who says that it's just poetry? It can be science instead. Be cooperative, instead of intentionally trying to cause a disturbance in this Thread. I am the author of the OP and I am formally requesting you to be less disruptive. In other words, I'm giving you a "yellow card", a "warning", if you will. — Arcane Sandwich
Jane English, born 1942 in Massachusetts, is a photographer, artist, and author who holds a doctorate in particle physics.
English received her B.A. in physics from Mount Holyoke College in 1964 and Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin–Madison for her work in high energy particle physics. She taught courses in Oriental thought and modern physics at Colorado College.[1]
English collaborated on a translation of the Tao Te Ching of Laozi which she illustrated through photography, in collaboration with her spouse Gia-Fu Feng. — Wiki - Jane English
I'm getting into the idea. I think I have a topic picked out already. — hypericin
But I'm ready to give them up if most people prefer a common topic. — Vera Mont
I'd think that an essay actually completes a thought or presents a whole argument or tells a story or is in some sense a self-contained peice of writing meant to be presented as a whole for a reader. — Moliere
Whereas a thread can do that, it's really just about having a conversation at all and needn't conclude or be self-contained and can wander more. — Moliere
presumably the third optioners are fine with either outcome. — Moliere
I was thinking to use the poll option which the forum has and then going with whatever side gets more votes -- so option 1 is "Open topic" and option 2 is "Imagination", and whichever category gets more votes on the forum poll is the one we'd decide upon. — Moliere
It sounded like you wanted it later? — Moliere
the list of authors could be posted in a separate thread?
A day or so, for speculation, before the reveal.
When' is "the end" ? — Moliere
along with a "Discussion/Guess the author" overall thread, the way I'm thinking it. — Moliere
Perhaps with the guidelines we could also submit a poll for preferences? — Moliere
I read over the Literary Activity guidelines and I think I'd pretty much copy them verbatim with a changes in dates (and the topic of course), and maybe add in a mini-tutorial for pastebin for those that need the walk through. — Moliere
I've been wondering about the Favourites and the Guessing Game threads.
I get the impression that only a few are willing to list favourites and give reasons.
The 'Guess the Author' thread received a bit more attention.
They work OK-ish for a fiction activity where most authors/readers already know each other.
[Not sure that would work for the June event.]
Perhaps, a single thread where authors and readers leave their overall impressions?
Time line from the Lit Activity suggests that after about 17dys reading and feedback, people are keen to know about the authors. Perhaps this is when the list of authors could be posted in a separate thread?
A day or so, for speculation, before the reveal.
Do you think that this separate thread could incorporate both, evolving into a relaxed conversation?
If so, what would we call it ?
Brainstorming:
'Story Discussion'. 'The Author Encounter'. 'Writer/Reader Get Together'. 'Authors and Readers Unite'.
Finally, I got 'Meet the Authors'. Hmmm...
To me, this becomes more interesting with a single topic everyone writes about, i.e. "Imagination". — hypericin
It would be interesting to see how varied everyone's approach is, and how much richness there really is in the topic. — hypericin
every writer deeply engages with the same topic, and only after everyone has written do they come together and discuss each other's take — hypericin
I think it's often the case that people find that there are fewer reasons for living than there are reasons for dying. Sometimes those people choose suicide. It's a common enough phenomenon and there might be many reasons for it. It's been interesting to read people's responses to your OP. What are the least helpful answers here?
— Tom Storm
I think the least helpful answers are the ones that insist life has good points or that one is lucky to be alive. That smacks of hindsight bias. I'm not an anti-natalist myself but I find it hard to argue against their claims and reasoning. People who think life is worth living are lucky and shouldn't speak on it's value. — Darkneos
That makes sense. — Tom Storm
Oldies and Some Goodies — 180 Proof
The way the suicide discussion is so often carried out in Western culture (what little there is of such discussion, that is) is that all the blame is conveniently placed on the person who killed themselves or seems to want to, along with calling them mentally ill, selfish, etc. While it is somehow considered bad taste to point out how others may have contributed to the suicide, or even caused it. — baker
All that talk of love, empathy, compassion. And yet, it is somehow always other people who should be the first to practice love, empathy, compassion, and never those who preach them. — baker
Great term--existential vacuum. — BC
Now what? It took me years to fill the vacuum but I did, several times over. — BC
we all, at different stages and ages, reach the point of existential change, and rarely does it occur at a time when we are ready to embrace it. The trick is to allow it to happen and use it as the opportunity it really is, to become who we really are.,
We must be careful how we talk to ourselves: if a lot of our internal dialogue is about the pointless, meaninglessness of life, suicide as a solution, and so on -- we are -- at the very least -- sowing the seeds of more unhappiness, if not our death. — BC