I take it that, in a very basic sense, the white represents the good and the black represents evil. — TheMadFool
No, it doesn't. It's more like the 0 and 1 of computing. Evil is if anything represented by trying to compute with only ones and no zeros, but it is really a foreign concept to Chinese tradition — unenlightened
And that basically tells us to avoid extremes which can then be extended, I think quite reasonably, onto the good-evil duality(?) — TheMadFool
I never took it as a prescription, but as a description. — Terrapin Station
The idea is both that nothing is "purely" x or y, and that the interplay of opposites or complements is such that each contains seeds of the other, so to speak. — Terrapin Station
I take it that, in a very basic sense, the white represents the good and the black represents evil. — TheMadFool
That's odd. The prescription is determined by the description, don't you think? — TheMadFool
That's exactly what I mean (couldn't put it as well). So, given that interpretation, don't you think evil personalities (Hitler, Stalin, etc.) have in them a certain kind of ''innocence'' that redeems them? Similarly, isn't there ''evil'' in being too good, after all there's a hidden agenda - that of reward in the afterlife? This description therefore suggests the prescription, that of a balance between the two extremes. — TheMadFool
no one is truly innocent. — Wosret
Solved the problem of suffering by pulling people from their families to keep fucking images alive? Great success. — Wosret
I don't like proclaimed super-humans and mediators, no — Wosret
I think that is a very Christian/theistic/Western perspective on it, which is quite alien to the Taoists. — Wayfarer
Depends on the message. — Wosret
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