Tao
In Chapter 29 of the Tao te Ching, Lao-tze raises an issue that is central to Taoism but which a modern American might find difficult to understand. This issue is non-interference. Americans like to be in control. This is not just an American feature, but a feature of the modern world. People have become used to instant answers to their questions, and instant gratification that patience is completely elusive. If something seems wrong, the modern person fixes it immediately even if that means taking short cuts and making the situation worse. Lao-tze's philosophy of non-interference seems anathema to modern life. However, it is central to the Way, the Tao. The Taoist master "sees things as they are / without trying to control them," (Chapter 29). To this, the American might answer, "But what if things are bad? Don't we have a responsibility to fix them?" Lao-tze responds simply: "Do you want to improve the world? / I don't think it can be done." This statement seems on the surface like a pessimistic one; as the author seems to suggest that it is impossible to change anything so why bother trying? However, what Lao-tze really means is that "the world is sacred / It cannot be improved. / If you tamper with it, you'll ruin it," (Chapter 29).
To fully understand what Lao-tze is trying to say in Chapter 29 of the Tao te Ching, it is important to place the chapter in the broader context of the philosophy as a whole. Chapter 29 refers to the Taoist concept of non-interference, which is a state of being that is in accordance with the Tao or the Way. The Way is the way of balance and neutrality, which mirrors the essential nature of the universe as being "infinite" "unchanging" and "eternally present," (Chapter 25). The Tao or Way is a state of being, which is paradoxically a state of action. Lao-tze explains why a state of being and being nothingness can also be a state of action, in terms relaxing and letting go. "Open yourself to the Tao," Lao-tze advises. "Then trust your natural responses; / And everything will fall into place," (Chapter 23). When Lao-tze expands upon this concept in Chapter 29, he states that relaxing and letting go are the only ways of making the world a better place because by letting go and doing nothing, the world is in tune with itself.
For example, in the preceding chapter, Chapter 28, Lao-tze writes, "If you accept the world, / the Tao will be luminous inside you / and you will return to your primal self." The modern person might then ask, "What is the primal self, and how would I know what it looked like?" Herein lies one of the mysteries of the Tao that must be understood if the entire philosophy is to be grasped. The primal self is that which is original and untainted, because it was "formed from the void" as all creation (Chapter 28). There is no hard definition of the primal self, either, because "he who defines himself / can't really know who he really is," (Chapter 24). The primal self is beyond words or descriptions; it is a state of being. In a sense, Lao-tze's primal self is not a "self" at all, but simply a way of being that is self-less. The primal self cannot be revealed through typical mental cognition, but through emptying the mind. In fact, the primal self is the Tao. It is "ungraspable," which is why effort is meaningless (Chapter 21).
Lao-tze's concept of letting go, which he advises throughout the Tao de Ching, is linked with the concept of emptiness and nothingness. The American will have a difficult time accepting emptiness and nothingness as being real, or as being acceptable. It is hard for a modern person to accept a void, which is why individuals try to fill the natural void with things like drugs, alcohol, and shopping. Yet any pursuits that seek to fill the void are only avoiding the reality of the Tao. Nothingness is beauty, pure and untainted. "The Tao is dark and unfathomable. / How can it make her radiant? / Because she lets it," (Chapter 21).
The Master lets the darkness of the Void illuminate her own impulses so that doing Nothing is really doing Something special. Nothingness is pure potency and power, and all is perfect and sacred within the void of nothingness. Nothingness is at the center and origin of the universe. When...
By avoiding extremes, a sage can avoid conflict. "Therefore the sage: Eliminates extremes Eliminates excess Eliminates arrogance" (Chapter 29) Sage prefers Non-action: This is the most vital attribute of a sage. The sage doesn't seek to impose or interfere and hence let people follow him on their own will. There is no compulsion in sage's rule. The sage seeks to rule people by example instead of force. He quietly observes and does and people then
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Tao de Ching is one of the most influential and important philosophical texts in human history. Attributed to Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu between 500 and 400 BCE, the teachings contained within the Tao de Ching have become collectively known as Taoism. The term "tao" or "dao" is usually translated straightforwardly as "the way," but the entire title of the text Tao de Ching may refer to a cluster of concepts
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