History of Tao

Tao is "the way of life". Ancient Chinese considered Tao as the highest, omnipresent order of universe. A life following Tao implies a life with highest fulfillment, i.e., a life by nature. Therefore, all branches of Chinese philosophy and the versatile Chinese cultures flowed and flourished from this central concept.

History of Tao could be traced back to the origin of Chinese civilization as early as 5,000 years ago. The common ancestor of Chinese, Fu-Shi, is believed to have invented Chinese characters by following Tao. He was also accredited with drawing the Chinese oracle book, I-Ching, which embeds and applies the underlying order of nature. There was no explanations and interpretations of I-Ching attached with its 64 symbols. Our understanding of the symbols largely came from numerous interpretations by scholars and Tao practitioners in the past thousands of years. Notably, Confucius has written so-called "Ten Wings" which interpret I-Ching from ten different angles.

Lao-Tzu, dated 700~500 B.C. (Spring-Autumn period), however, was the first sage to put Tao into words in his Tao-Te Ching. Tao is "way of life". Te is "virtue" (more properly, "manifestations of Tao", and Ching is "classics". Tao-Te Ching was originally named "Lao-Tzu", but was later honored as "classic" and given its current name by Emperor Ging in Tang Dynasty.

Another famous and beloved Taoist master is Chuang-Tzu, dated 399~295 B.C. (Warring-States period), who used lots of humorous and sarcastic parables and fables to express Tao in his book that bears his name. I-Ching, Tao-Te Ching, and Chuang-Tzu, collectively called "The Three Mysteries" in Chinese literary tradition, are three major classics for people to understand Tao even up to today.

In subsequent two thousand more years, the philosophy of Tao originated various widely known Tao practices such as Chinese herbal medicine, acupuncture, Feng-Shui (geomancy), meditation, martial arts, and astrology. Despite the fact that Lao-Tzu never founded an organized religion, the philosophy of Tao, which implies unification of Heaven and Man, evolved into Taoism, which in itself blossomed into numerous branches such as Talisman Taoism, Ceremonial Taoism, Meditative Taoism, Alchemy Taoism, and Magic Taoism. In addition, in early Tang Dynasty, circa 500 A.D., Buddhism was transmitted into China and later assimilated with Taoism to form several branches of Chinese Buddhism in the next thousand years. In a word, Tao is the root of Chinese cultures and represents the ultimate Chinese wisdom.

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- What is Tao?--A primer

First, forget about defining Tao!

Tao is the word that Lao-Tzu used to indicate the eternal truth, the principle behind the formation and running of the universe. This principle, Tao, in the eyes of Taoists, is not a fixated, unchanged rule. The Chinese oracle book, I-Ching, also called "The Book of Change", is a divining system centered solely around the concept of change.

Tao is also not the symbol of a dominant, omnipotent God that controls the rise and fall of everything. In Chapter 37, Lao-Tzu said: "Tao always acts with non-action but nothing is left undone" and had Tao been God, It did not look friendly either. In Chapter 5, Lao-Tzu said: "The Heaven and the Earth are not merciful, treating everything as straw-dogs".

Tao is not even some magic prayer that can propel you to Heaven or nirvana. Acting with Tao does not send you to the Pure Land, the Buddhism version of Heaven. Instead of unattainable saint or noble figures, Lao-Tzu likened most virtuous people to newborn babies, and wisest people to water.

Despite of its mysterious character, Tao Is describable, or Lao-Tzu would not spend his precious time writing Tao Te Ching. On the other hand, he also said that the Eternal Tao, which means the Complete Tao, is not describable.

There is an interesting story in Buddhism that described the difference between the complete and incomplete truth. A blind man tries to understand an elephant by touching the elephant. The blind man is able to figure out the shape of a teacup by holding it in his hands. But an elephant is beyond his grasp. Putting his hands on its belly, he says an elephant is like a wall; putting his hands on its tail, he says an elephant is like a rope; on its nose, like a pipe. What he says is not untrue, yet its not the whole picture, not the complete truth. An elephant"s belly IS like a wall, its tail IS like a rope, its nose IS like a pip...they are all true, yet they are just part of the elephant, part of the truth. The untold truth is not something inexplicable, it simply has not been told yet. Who will describe the untold? Everyone has the potential. When you are enlightened, you may tell people the untold. The Truth will be complete by putting everybody's descriptions together. Eternal does not mean unchangeable or immovable, it means covering all, complete, well-rounded.

Even the whole 81-chapter Tao-Te Ching can not describe Tao completely. It just tells us a good portion of the truth, and the rest takes your own appreciation. When the blind man knows that any part that he touches is not the complete elephant, he will try to pursue its whole picture. And this is precisely why Lao-Tz left Tao-Te Ching—to remind us that do not take any part of the truth we acquire as the Eternal Truth. Religious teachings tend to tell people that what they preach is the Truth, the eternal truth. Many insist their superiority and deny other teachings¡¦ validity. It is as if a blind man is saying an elephant is a rope by holding its tail, and in the meantime denying the claim from another blind man who touches its belly. The stronger and broader the denial is, the weaker and narrower the truth. And when we are able to open up ourselves by listening and exposing to various teachings—Christian, Buddhism, Hinduism, Taoism, etc., we naturally position ourselves to gain the more complete truth.

Take modern science development for example. Western scientists have been trying to look for the most fundamental building block of matter. First they find molecule, then they find atom, then nucleus and electron, then quark. Now what is smaller than quark? Scientists, by impacting the smallest particle with extremely high energy, they have found more than 200 even smaller particles. The smaller particles now look more and more like oscillating energy packets instead of stable, solid granules scientists had been dreamed of for ages. Similarly, from Newton's mechanical physics, to Einstein¡¦s relativity theory, to modern quantum physics, every new discovery was a step towards more understanding of composition of matter, and was in the meantime a correction of previous dominant thought. Every discovery and theory was correct in some aspects, but none is THE Truth. When someone declares that he is THE God, THE Buddha, or he finds THE ultimate theory of universe, he is far away from Truth, Tao.

By the same token, names that can be named are not the Eternal Name, the name of all. As mentioned, I-Ching theorizes that everything changes. When you give something a name, you have labeled and confined it to certain image, just like someone claiming he finds the Eternal Truth, which is also in constant transformation. That is what Zen Buddhist say: “Name the thing and you miss its essence”. Quantum physicists have discovered that soon after they declared some particle as “the smallest particle”, other scientists found even smaller particles. The moment you tell your friend what time it is, the time is not what you tell your friend anymore. The moment you weigh your self, your weight is not what you weigh because your weight constantly change as your body cells constantly die and reborn. In 30 days all your body cells would be totally different.

And if you try to give the universe or the eternal truth a name, you have lost the whole picture. For example, try describing “Mona Lisa”, the famous painting by Leonardo Da Vinci, to your friends. No matter how many words you use, how precise they represent your idea, your friends would not have the same perception as you do; and when they see the picture, you can be sure that they would feel differently than your description. We cannot even describe a painting well, how can we describe the Name of all things?

From nothing to all things--Tao's theory of universal existences

All religions have their answers, to some extent, to the following questions: How do human beings come into birth? Is there a God? Where does He come from? Why am I what I am? These questions sound quite intangible and even irrelevant to our daily lives. Yet if you get to understand Tao, you will know that all things come from Tao. We are with Tao all the time.

The Chinese character of Tao (道) is composed of “ead” implying thinking or principle, on the right, and “alk” implying application, on the left. It means that if you get the principle, you can apply to all situations. If you understand Tao, you understand yourself and you know how to live the way you should live under any circumstances. Understanding Tao to us is like understanding the program language to computer programmers, like understanding arithmetic to mathematicians, like understanding human body structure to surgery physicians. It is the building principle of universe, and thus the building principle of your life. “Practicing any dharma (i.e., teaching) is futile before understanding the original heart”, said the Six Patriarch of Zen Buddhism, Hui-Neng. In other words, devoting to anything before you understand Tao, or understanding yourself, would be futile. And the first step is to know where you come from.

You, obviously, came from your parents, who came from your grandparents,…,etc. If we trace back to the ultimate origin, Lao-Tzu said, we would find “Void”. In Christians’ saying, God created everything. When you give God a name, God is the origin of everything. Nothing exists before God. By the same token, here in Lao-Tz’s words, Tao created everything. But before we give Tao the name “Tao”, there was nothing with a name. And that was the Nameless. It’s the Tao without the name of Tao.

To illustrate the concept of Nameless, the Void, and the Named, the Being, let’s say we want to build a house. Nowadays it’s easy to build a house—just hire people to design, buy the building materials, and build. But assume that we do not have anything—designers, materials and builders, nothing. This nothingness is called “void”. With “void”, we have to start everything over. We start by thinking about how we want the house to be and drawing the draft. What about the materials? We need wood. There is nothing so we have to create trees, grow the trees, and chop the trees for wood. What about bricks? We have to create earth, and bake the earth to make bricks. How do we build? There is nobody, so we have to create people capable of building house… This is called “Nature”, which Christians call God. When God wants to build the world, He starts by thinking how he wanted the world to be, and then He starts to make the materials, including human beings. In the Bible, God says: “let there be light”, and there is light; God says: “let there be Earth”, and there is the Earth. Either Tao or God, they originate everything from pure ideas to various forms. They are the Named, the mother of all things. But before them, there was nothing, no name, Void, and that was Nameless, the origin of Heaven and Earth, the emblem of dual creators of world in Chinese culture.

Modern physics has also proved that all the existences are composed of this Void, emptiness. All materials are aggregates of molecules, which in turn are composed of basic atoms. But in an atom composed of electrons circling a nucleus, more than 99.999% of the space is empty. If you break the nucleus or electron into even smaller particle, 99.999% of that smaller particle is still empty space. In other words, what we see solid and unbreakable are composed of emptiness, Void. We do not feel that emptiness because our five senses cannot detect the high frequency of vibration. The limitation of our vision is why instead of radiated spokes, we see a running wheel as a piece of solid metal; and instead of series of individual pictures, we see a continuous film when the pictures move fast enough. How fast do electrons whirl around the nucleus? Around 600 miles per second!* So instead of empty space, we see a rigid sphere. The things that we feel so vividly “real” are really composed of the Nameless, the Void.

So how do we approach Tao?

Tao cannot be told, and Tao cannot be named. So how do we understand it? Through observation, observation, and more observations.

For instance, you can try to feel the sense of the Eternal Void through meditation as many spiritual practices suggest. Meditation is a form of observation as in it your mind ceases to judge, interpret, and interrupt. The Eternal Void is what Buddhists call “true emptiness”. Buddha says: “ True emptiness gives birth to wondrous beings”. Things that still come into your mind when you are in deep meditation is a kind of “wondrous beings”. It is completely natural, and it is the wonder Lao-Tzu talked about. We know that Lao-Tzu was born a few hundred years before Buddha, yet the truth they preach match almost perfectly.

The Eternal Being is the wondrous beings, and it includes everything, every phenomenon. We can understand objects by analyzing and researching it, much like the methodology that modern science has taken to understand our universe: studying objects and movement. The medical scientists perfect a new medicine by researching how human bodies react; the astronomical physicists explore the universe through researching the galaxies, stars and planets; the biologists find the symmetrical characteristics of living organisms through meticulous observation of the organisms. Scientists are able to explain the working of the researched objects, but they cannot explain how so many mystical, delicate and beautiful mechanisms come into being. There must be a God-like creator, if we carefully observe the millions of beauties around us.

In “Attached Interpretations”, Confucius’ interpretations on the philosophy of I-Ching, he said: “The ancients formulated and evolved I-Ching through watching the celestial phenomena, surveying the geological structures, and observing the body patterns of birds and animals.” Confucius also said: ”Heaven does not speak, Earth does not talk”. Heaven and Earth do not talk, but everything thrives on them. The four seasons do not talk either. Yet summer follows spring, and autumn comes before winter. They come on time, always.

If you put a soybean in earth, it will grow up and grow only soybeans. Human beings are born from human beings, and dogs are always born from dogs. If we pay enough attention to the nature, we notice that there is this governing principle, the God, behind these natural phenomena. Why does a mother love her child? Why are we able to learn language? Why are not there two identical persons in the world? Why even twins with split from same cell still bear notable differences? The program that supports the possibilities of the universe is Tao. You may find it difficult to experience the wonders through the abstract Void, but you will not have problem finding the working of Tao through the ineffable beauty of nature surrounding you. And when you realize and recognize the existence of the underlying order behind things around you, the world is not as disorderly, random as evolution theory suggests anymore. And from this moment on, you cannot help but move ahead the seeking journey for this mysterious order, Tao. And as Jesus said: “Seek and you will find”.

Void and Being: Two sides of the coin called Tao (nicknamed "mind")

The two, Void and Being, share the same origin—Tao. The Heart Sutra of Buddhism addresses the idea of “non-duality of form and emptiness”. It says:” Form is emptiness; emptiness is form”. Form is Being, emptiness is Void, yet both come from the same origin—mind. Mind can think of beings or it can think of nothing. Mind creates all dharmas—all things. Mind is Tao. Tao is mind.

In similar vein, quantum physicists have found that we can never measure the speed and position of a subatomic particle. In fact, the particle stops swinging the moment we measure it. In other words, it dances with us, with our measurement, with our mind. When our mind does not intrude, the particle is simply a range of possibilities. Where it locates depends on where our mind goes. This phenomenon was discovered and coined “uncertainty principle” by physicist Werner Karl Heisenberg in 1927.

Light has a similar attribute. Scientists have long found light can be wave and can be particle, but not both at the same time. Whether it appears as wave or as particle depends on how we measure it, how we “want” to see it. If we put let a beam of light shine on a piece of metal, the light appears as particles hitting the metal because it knocks off a stream of electrons which if collected produces an electric current. However, if we let a beam of light pass through two slits to reach a screen, the light appears as waves because we can see the phenomenon of diffraction, i.e., two light waves adding and canceling each other, forming a series of light and dark bands on the screen. As we have now understood that all materials are composed of photons, the packets of energy of light, the implication of this wave-particle duality is that all things appear as we think or assume how they appear!

As mentioned, when we reach total tranquility in deep meditation, with nothing in existence, there is still something coming into your mind. That is you, the original you, the Void. In total tranquility--total Void--things start to come into being. Nothingness is Void, and Void gives birth to Being—this is the Truth. Lao-Tz knew this principle by himself because there were no books or people for him to learn from. You may not know the Truth yet, but you can try to appreciate his words through you own experience and proof. For example, in meditation, you may suddenly have the similar feelings he described. That is the way to understand Lao-Tz’s philosophy—by putting your senses down and being with Tao.

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Tao Te Ching

One

The Tao that can be told is not the eternal Tao.

The name that can be named is not the eternal name.

The nameless is the beginning of heaven and Earth.

The named is the mother of the ten thousand things.

Ever desireless, one can see the mystery.

Ever desiring, one sees the manifestations.

These two spring from the same source but differ in name;

this appears as darkness.

Darkness within darkness.

The gate to all mystery.

Two

Under heaven all can see beauty as beauty only because there is ugliness.

All can know good as good only because there is evil.

Therefore having and not having arise together.

Difficult and easy complement each other.

Long and short contrast each other:

High and low rest upon each other;

Voice and sound harmonize each other;

Front and back follow one another.

Therefore the sage goes about doing nothing, teaching no-talking.

The ten thousand things rise and fall without cease,

Creating, yet not.

Working, yet not taking credit.

Work is done, then forgotten.

Therefore it lasts forever.

Three

Not exalting the gifted prevents quarreling.

Not collecting treasures prevents stealing.

Not seeing desirable things prevents confusion of the heart.

The wise therefore rule by emptying hearts and stuffing bellies, by weakening ambitions and strengthening bones.

If men lack knowledge and desire, then clever people will not try to interfere.

If nothing is done, then all will be well.

Four

The Tao is an empty vessel; it is used, but never filled.

Oh, unfathomable source of ten thousand things!

Blunt the sharpness,

Untangle the knot,

Soften the glare,

Merge with dust.

Oh, hidden deep but ever present!

I do not know from whence it comes.

It is the forefather of the gods.

Five

Heaven and Earth are impartial;

They see the ten thousand things as straw dogs.

The wise are impartial;

They see the people as straw dogs.

The space between heaven and Earth is like a bellows.

The shape changes but not the form;

The more it moves, the more it yields.

More words count less.

Six

It is the woman, primal mother.

Her gateway is the root of heaven and Earth.

It is like a veil barely seen.

Use it; it will never fail.

Seven

Heaven and Earth last forever.

Why do heaven and Earth last forever?

They are unborn,

So ever living.

The sage stays behind, thus he is ahead.

He is detached, thus at one with all.

Through selfless action, he attains fulfillment

Eight

The highest good is like water.

Water give life to the ten thousand things and does not strive.

It flows in places men reject and so is like the Tao.

In dwelling, be close to the land.

In meditation, go deep in the heart.

In dealing with others, be gentle and kind.

In speech, be true.

In ruling, be just.

In daily life, be competent.

In action, be aware of the time and the season.

No fight: No blame.

Nine

Better to stop short than fill to the brim.

Oversharpen the blade, and the edge will soon blunt.

Amass a store of gold and jade, and no one can protect it.

Claim wealth and titles, and disaster will follow.

Retire when the work is done.

This is the way of heaven.

Ten

Carrying body and soul and embracing the one,

Can you avoid separation?

Attending fully and becoming supple,

Can you be as a newborn babe?

Washing and cleansing the primal vision,

Can you be without stain?

Loving all men and ruling the country,

Can you be without cleverness?

Opening and closing the gates of heaven,

Can you play the role of woman?

Understanding and being open to all things,

Are you able to do nothing?

Giving birth and nourishing,

Bearing yet not possessing,

Working yet not taking credit,

Leading yet not dominating,

This is the Primal Virtue.

Eleven

Thirty spokes share the wheel's hub;

It is the center hole that makes it useful.

Shape clay into a vessel;

It is the space within that makes it useful.

Cut doors and windows for a room;

It is the holes which make it useful.

Therefore benefit comes from what is there;

Usefulness from what is not there.

Twelve

The five colors blind the eye.

The five tones deafen the ear.

The five flavors dull the taste.

Racing and hunting madden the mind.

Precious things lead one astray.

Therefore the sage is guided by what he feels and not by what he sees.

He lets go of that and chooses this.

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.

Fourteen

Look, it cannot be seen - it is beyond form.

Listen, it cannot be heard - it is beyond sound.

Grasp, it cannot be held - it is intangible.

These three are indefinable;

Therefore they are joined in one.

From above it is not bright;

From below it is not dark:

An unbroken thread beyond description.

It returns to nothingness.

The form of the formless,

The image of the imageless,

It is called indefinable and beyond imagination.

Stand before it and there is no beginning.

Follow it and there is no end.

Stay with the ancient Tao,

Move with the present.

Knowing the ancient beginning is the essence of Tao.

Fifteen

The ancient masters were subtle, mysterious, profound, responsive.

The depth of their knowledge is unfathomable.

Because it is unfathomable,

All we can do is describe their appearance.

Watchful, like men crossing a winter stream.

Alert, like men aware of danger.

Courteous, like visiting guests.

Yielding like ice about to melt.

Simple, like uncarved blocks of wood.

Hollow, like caves.

Opaque, like muddy pools.

Who can wait quietly while the mud settles?

Who can remain still until the moment of action?

Observers of the Tao do not seek fulfillment.

Not seeking fulfillment, they are not swayed by desire for change.

Sixteen

Empty yourself of everything.

Let the mind become still.

The ten thousand things rise and fall while the Self watches their return.

They grow and flourish and then return to the source.

Returning to the source is stillness, which is the way of nature.

The way of nature is unchanging.

Knowing constancy is insight.

Not knowing constancy leads to disaster.

Knowing constancy, the mind is open.

With an open mind, you will be openhearted.

Being openhearted, you will act royally.

Being royal, you will attain the divine.

Being divine, you will be at one with the Tao.

Being at one with the Tao is eternal.

And though the body dies, the Tao will never pass away.

Seventeen

The very highest if barely known.

Then comes that which people know and love.

Then that which is feared,

Then that which is despised.

Who does not trust enough will not be trusted.

When actions are performed

Without unnecessary speech,

People say, "We did it"

Eighteen

When the great Tao is forgotten,

Kindness and morality arise.

When wisdom and intelligence are born,

The great pretense begins.

When there is no peace within the family,

Filial piety and devotion arise.

When the country is confused and in chaos,

Loyal ministers appear.

Nineteen

Give up sainthood, renounce wisdom,

And it will be a hundred times better for everyone.

Give up kindness, renounce morality,

And men will rediscover filial piety and love.

Give up ingenuity, renounce profit,

And bandits and thieves will disappear.

These three are outward forms alone; they are not sufficient in themselves.

It is more important

To see the simplicity,

To realize one's true nature,

To cast off selfishness

And temper desire.

Twenty

Give up learning, and put an end to your troubles.

Is there a difference between yes and no?

Is there a difference between good and evil?

Must I fear what others fear? What nonsense!

Other people are contented, enjoying the sacrificial feast of the ox.

In spring some go to the park, and climb the terrace,

But I alone am drifting, not knowing where I am.

Like a newborn babe before it learns to smile,

I am alone, without a place to go.

Others have more than they need, but I alone have nothing.

I am a fool. Oh, yes! I am confused.

Others are clear and bright,

But I alone am dim and weak.

Others are sharp and clever,

But I alone am dull and stupid.

Oh, I drift like the waves of the sea,

Without direction, like the restless wind.

Everyone else is busy,

But I alone am aimless and depressed.

I am different.

I am nourished by the great mother.

Twenty One

The greatest Virtue is to follow Tao and Tao alone.

The Tao is elusive and intangible.

Oh, it is intangible and elusive, and yet within is image.

Oh, it is elusive and intangible, and yet within is form.

Oh, it is dim and dark, and yet within is essence.

This essence is very real, and therein lies faith.

From the very beginning until now its name has never been forgotten.

Thus I perceive the creation.

How do I know the ways of creation?

Because of this.

Twenty Two

Yield and overcome;

Bend and be straight;

Empty and be full;

Wear out and be new;

Have little and gain;

Have much and be confused.

Therefore the wise embrace the one

And set an example to all.

Not putting on a display,

They shine forth.

Not justifying themselves,

They are distinguished.

Not boasting,

They receive recognition.

Not bragging,

They never falter.

They do not quarrel,

So no one quarrels with them.

Therefore the ancients say, "Yield and overcome."

Is that an empty saying?

Be really whole,

And all things will come to you.

Twenty Three

To talk little is natural.

High winds do not last all morning.

Heavy rain does not last all day.

Why is this? Heaven and Earth!

If heaven and Earth cannot make things eternal,

How is it possible for man?

He who follows the Tao

Is at one with the Tao.

He who is virtuous

Experiences Virtue.

He who loses the way

Is lost.

When you are at one with the Tao,

The Tao welcomes you.

When you are at one with Virtue,

The Virtue is always there.

When you are at one with loss,

The loss is experienced willingly.

He who does not trust enough

Will not be trusted.

Twenty Four

He who stands on tiptoe is not steady.

He who strides cannot maintain the pace.

He who makes a show is not enlightened.

He who is self-righteous is not respected.

He who boasts achieves nothing.

He who brags will not endure.

According to followers of the Tao, "These are extra food and unnecessary luggage."

They do not bring happiness.

therefore followers of the Tao avoid them.

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.

Being great, it flows

I flows far away.

Having gone far, it returns.

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.

Man follows Earth.

Earth follows heaven.

Heaven follows the Tao.

Tao follows what is natural.

Twenty Six

The heavy is the root of the light.

The still is the master of unrest.

Therefore the sage, traveling all day,

Does not lose sight of his baggage.

Though there are beautiful things to be seen,

He remains unattached and calm.

Why should the lord of ten thousand chariots act lightly in public?

To be light is to lose one's root.

To be restless is to lose one's control.

Twenty Seven

A good walker leaves no tracks;

A good speaker makes no slips;

A good reckoner needs no tally.

A good door needs no lock,

Yet no one can open it.

Good binding requires no knots,

Yet no one can loosen it.

Therefore the sage takes care of all men

And abandons no one.

He takes care of all things

And abandons nothing.

This is called "following the light."

What is a good man?

A teacher of a bad man.

What is a bad man?

A good man's charge.

If the teacher is not respected,

And the student not cared for,

Confusion will arise, however clever one is.

This is the crux of mystery.

Twenty Eight

Know the strength of man,

But keep a woman's care!

Be the stream of the universe!

Being the stream of the universe,

Ever true and unswerving,

Become as a little child once more.

Know the white,

But keep the black!

Be an example to the world!

Being an example to the world,

Ever true and unwavering,

Return to the infinite.

Know honor,

Yet keep humility.

Be the valley of the universe!

Being the valley of the universe,

Ever true and resourceful,

Return to the state of the uncarved block.

When the block is carved, it becomes useful.

When the sage uses it, he becomes the ruler.

Thus, "A great tailor cuts little."

Twenty Nine

Do you think you can take over the universe and improve it?

I do not believe it can be done.

The universe is sacred.

You cannot improve it.

If you try to change it, you will ruin it.

If you try to hold it, you will lose it.

So sometimes things are ahead and sometimes they are behind;

Sometimes breathing is hard, sometimes it comes easily;

Sometimes there is strength and sometimes weakness;

Sometimes one is up and sometimes down.

Therefore the sage avoids extremes, excesses, and complacency.

Thirty

Whenever you advise a ruler in the way of Tao,

Counsel him not to use force to conquer the universe.

For this would only cause resistance.

Thorn bushes spring up wherever the army has passed.

Lean years follow in the wake of a great war.

Just do what needs to be done.

Never take advantage of power.

Achieve results,

But never glory in them.

Achieve results,

But never boast.

Achieve results,

But never be proud.

Achieve results,

Because this is the natural way.

Achieve results,

But not through violence.

Force is followed by loss of strength.

This is not the way of Tao.

That which goes against the Tao comes to an early end.

Thirty One

Good weapons are instruments of fear; all creatures hate them.

Therefore followers of Tao never use them.

The wise man prefers the left.

The man of war prefers the right.

Weapons are instruments of fear; they are not a wise man's tools.

He uses them only when he has no choice.

Peace and quiet are dear to his heart,

And victory no cause for rejoicing.

If you rejoice in victory, then you delight in killing;

If you delight in killing, you cannot fulfill yourself.

On happy occasions precedence is given to the left,

On sad occasions to the right.

In the army the general stands on the left,

The commander-in-chief on the right.

This means that war is conducted like a funeral.

When many people are being killed,

They should be mourned in heartfelt sorrow.

That is why a victory must be observed like a funeral.

Thirty Two

The Tao is forever undefined.

Small though it is in the unformed state, it cannot be grasped.

If kings and lords could harness it,

The ten thousand things would come together

And gentle rain fall.

Men would need no more instruction and all things would take their course.

Once the whole is divided, the parts need names.

There are already enough names.

One must know when to stop.

Knowing when to stop averts trouble.

Tao in the world is like a river flowing home to the sea.

Thirty Three

Knowing others is wisdom;

Knowing the self is enlightenment.

Mastering others requires force;

Mastering the self needs strength.

He who knows he has enough is rich.

Perseverance is a sign of willpower.

He who stays where he is endures.

To die but not to perish is to be eternally present.

Thirty Four

The great Tao flows everywhere, both to the left and to the right.

The ten thousand things depend upon it; it holds nothing back.

It fulfills its purpose silently and makes no claim.

It nourishes the ten thousand things,

And yet is not their lord.

It has no aim; it is very small.

The ten thousand things return to it,

Yet it is not their lord.

It is very great.

It does not show greatness,

And is therefore truly great.

Thirty Five

All men will come to him who keeps to the one,

For there lie rest and happiness and peace.

Passersby may stop for music and good food,

But a description of the Tao

Seems without substance or flavor.

It cannot be seen, it cannot be heard,

And yet it cannot be exhausted.

Thirty Six

That which shrinks

Must first expand.

That which fails

Must first be strong.

That which is cast down

Must first be raised.

Before receiving

There must be giving.

This is called perception of the nature