I think the reason we can make sense of the Way is more to do with the logical and qualitative structure of the text in relation to the world than anything to do with differences in time or culture. — Possibility
For myself, I’m reluctant to attribute such intentionality or desire to the original author. — Possibility
I get that your approach is to make some definitive distinction between metaphysical and physical understanding, but I don’t subscribe to this duality myself. — Possibility
Having said that, I don’t feel like we have to go there in this discussion at all. — Possibility
Yes, as I've noted before. — T Clark
Capra is another one who doesn't know his metaphysics from his physics. Reading "Tao of Physics" was the first time I remember recognizing that — T Clark
He who stands on tiptoe does not stand (firm),
He who strains his strides does not walk (well)
He who reveals himself is not luminous,
He who justifies himself is not far-famed,
He who boasts of himself is not given credit.
He who prides himself is not chief among men.
These in the eyes of Tao
Are called ''the dregs and tumors of Virtue,”
Which are things of disgust.
Therefore the man of Tao spurns them. — T Clark
A critique
"He who tiptoes can see over the wall and do ballet
She who strains his strides can escape
He who reveals herself shows beauty
She who justifies himself shows resilience
He who boasts herself can win the game and be given a lot of credit
She who prides himself can be powerful"
The "dregs and tumors" turned into gaseous benevolence! — Hillary
That remains to be seen. His advocating of non-desire doesn't mean he's free of it. He surely had the desire to express this. — Hillary
until you're willing to respond seriously, I won't respond to you. — T Clark
I appreciate the side-by-side commentaries and translations. So much to puzzle over in this cryptic poem. — ZzzoneiroCosm
fter a while it felt like I was presenting myself as more knowledgeable than I am, so I decided to start digging deeper, looking at more translations, reading commentaries. That's what lead me to this thread. — T Clark
Free from desire, you realize the mystery.
Caught in desire, you see only the manifestations. — T Clark
I'm wondering about your take on desire. To my view, desire, broadly defined, is the prime motivator for artistic creation and spiritual aspiration. I get that Toaists and Buddhists (I'm a self-made universalist syncretist of sorts) have a beef with desire, and I understand that unregulated desire, untempered irrational desire, can cause a lot of psychical suffering. But I put desire at the heart of inspiration and inspiration at the heart of a life fully lived. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Toaists — ZzzoneiroCosm
Keeping in mind, please, that this is my understanding. Lao Tzu gets pissed when I put words in his mouth. — T Clark
Hope is as hollow as fear. — T Clark
Kazantzakis' epitaph: I hope for nothing. I fear nothing. I am free. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Though I love the poem. — ZzzoneiroCosm
I don't think Lao Tzu, as a good Taoist — T Clark
"Taoism? Never heard of it! What are you on about?"
"Then you're a taoist, you knucklehead!" — Agent Smith
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