There are two types of truth, Relative truth and Absolute Truth. — synthesis
‘Objectivity’ is a modern idea. The word itself came into use around the time of Leibniz. It is associated with the emergence of the exact sciences. Taoism is not objective in that sense, but allegorical, metaphorical, and poetic. — Wayfarer
Note the juxtaposition of 'without desire' (which is related to wu-wei, not acting, the detachment of the sage) and the 'observation of the essence', with those who are 'with desire', who 'observes it's manifestations (i.e. the 10,000 things). 'Differing in name' - the named being 'the conditioned', the domain of phenomena. — Wayfarer
I wonder if this means in choosing to think a thing good or bad, you create a reversal by this very thought action. — Tom Storm
Maybe it means that the more you conceptualize life along these lines, the more you create its opposition. — Tom Storm
I read the importance of wu wei as recognizing that there is a process underway that is generated by the play of opposites but does not consume the opposed elements that keep reproducing the things that are. — Valentinus
I don't agree that "consciousness interferes with action." I think it is more like "talking about action" interferes with consciousness. — Valentinus
The Tao Te Ching can be read as a conversation with the Analects of Confucius in this regard. There are agreements and disagreements between the two but they share a sensibility regarding the defects of Draconian approaches to order. — Valentinus
It is interesting to note that 2500 years later, his work is still the second most popularly read book in the world after the Christian bible. I know I have read it no less than 100 times! — synthesis
I sing this to my stonemason knees when they complain: — Valentinus
There is nothing to understand. — synthesis
It always struck me how much of the writing is dedicated to statecraft. — Isaac
Secondly, that which can be named, again we see a linguistic slant here, is also NOT the Tao [ref: The name that can be named is not the eternal Name] — TheMadFool
This sets up the paradox or disclaimer that underlies the entire book: all he can do here with these phrases is paint the shadows. They won’t directly tell us what the Tao is - even naming ‘the Tao’ is an approximation that implies we can imagine a point beyond, looking back. To entertain this illusion is to limit what it is we could possibly understand (by excluding ourselves), which then renders any depiction inaccurate as such. We could find some beautiful words, as Lao Tzu has, but that’s not the Tao. — Possibility
There are various ways to interpret this, but I find it’s clearest when I simply experience what it says, without trying to describe what it means to me for your benefit. — Possibility
We are irretrievably bound by affect, by valence and arousal. It is the medium of our consciousness, what we use to render the world. This is all we see: the manifestations (concepts) or predictions in terms of how their uncertainty and inaccuracy affects us. This suffering from prediction error (‘darkness within darkness’) is the most effective and efficient method we have to understand the world. — Possibility
The tao that can be told
is not the eternal Tao
The name that can be named
is not the eternal Name.
— T Clark
I believe the above is the crux of what Taoism is all about. Lao Tzu attempts to point at "something" that can't be pointed at. — TheMadFool
Thoughts: this is one of my favourite quotes from Tao. I guess it is related to peace and order in the cities or villages. If you control the Principle and everything around you is under a composure state the “horses” will not be prepared to fight anyone but just being free in the green fields having a good life. — javi2541997
I get from this that it is an immutable truism that the paragon teaches the scoundrel just through their presence or example. Anger and aggrieved advice or recriminations are without utility. What I also get from this is if I want to be of use and work towards a better 'way of being' remember that good and bad share the same space and need each other. Endless unhappy thoughts and interpersonal conflicts will be avoided if this is understood and acted out. And I will also avoid the path to being the very thing I think I hate. — Tom Storm
In any case, don ‘t loose site of the point: ‘the unnameable’ - what does that mean? — Wayfarer
The TTC is about reality before concepts. If it is put into words, it's no longer the Tao. The Tao is unspeakable. It's what was before there was anybody to think about it. It's also a joke. In this book, we're going to talk about what can't be talked about. — T Clark
By way of footnote, a recent essay by a philosophical biographer, Ray Monk, on Collingwood's early death, his replacement by Glibert Ryle, and its consequences. How the untimely death of RG Collingwood changed the course of philosophy forever. Paints a very sympathetic portrait. — Wayfarer
I was struck by the following:
What is a good man but a bad man’s teacher?
What is a bad man but a good man’s job?
If you don’t understand this, you will get lost,
however intelligent you are.
It is the great secret. — Tom Storm
I loaned out my copy of the TTC, and I’m missing having the little book at hand. — Possibility
“The old problem...if everything is metaphysics then nothing is metaphysics” I think fails to really understand the Tao. — Possibility
Heaven and earth are ruthless,
and treat the myriad creatures
as straw dogs — Maw
I don’t there is a conceptual niche for ‘the unmanifest, unmade, unnamed’ in modern thought. — Wayfarer
I'd be interested in how you find it supports you (if this is the correct term) in life. — Tom Storm
But what is the probability of any other particular result? They're exactly the same! People only think all heads is unlikely because it stands out. The probability of any particular exact sequence of heads and tails is exactly the same as any other: one out of a trillion. Yet some result must occur. — fishfry
the reader must adopt these uses — creativesoul
Do you believe that this is what the health care system would like me to do? — synthesis
Groups have seemingly perfected the manipulation of individuals to the point where there are those like yourself who simply cannot exist without their omnipresence/omnipotence. — synthesis
I also think pinning ourselves to the concept of an amino acid or nucleotide is presumptuous. They wouldn't have evolved from a solution containing only their basic building blocks, but rather in many increments. You might want to consider the existence of a partial amino acid or nucleotide, and that some may have evolved prior to cells, in protocells, and then in the complete cell. All the evolution doesn't have to happen within a single medium, in one fell swoop, and considering the process to be essentially determined by holistic function is fallacy unless some evolutionary principles exist that have not been discovered. We lack a record of the missing molecular links, but it hasn't been disproven that they existed, we just haven't found comparable combinations so far. — Enrique
BTW, this ABC podcast provides an interesting overview of Collingwood's life and thought. — Olivier5
Group-people are the parasites that have nearly completely destroyed their hosts (individuals). — synthesis
In my understanding it is philosophy that paved the way for science by undermining fixed religious beliefs. Do you agree? — TaySan
I just had a quick scan on line. It certainly is striking - it reads like poetry and the reader needs to have a particular personality or imagination (I suspect) to get the most from it. — Tom Storm
I was unable to get much out of the Tao Te Ching — Tom Storm
I'm interested in your idea about philosophy being stony. Can you say more in concrete terms (no half-arsed pun intended) about why it doesn't work for you? — Tom Storm
And what is my way exactly? — CallMeDirac
We must not stay in the minority for any longer and must RISE UP AND TAKE POWER. — CallMeDirac
I see your point, however if we do it slowly, and don't force people into anything it wouldn't. — CallMeDirac
We don't have a chance to escape then. — javi2541997
