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Tao: Difference between revisions

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** [[Zhuangzi| Zhuangzi (Chuang Tzu)]], as quoted in ''A source Book in Chinese Philosophy'' (1969) by Wing-tsit Chan, p. 194
 
* Take, for instance, a twig and a pillar, or the ugly person and the great beauty, and all the strange and monstrous transformations. These are all levelled together by Tao. Division is the same as creation; creation is the same as destruction. There is no such thing as creation or destruction, for these conditions are again levelled together into One. Only the truly intelligent understand this principle of the levelling of all things into One. They discard the distinctions and take refuge in the common and ordinary things. The common and ordinary things serve certain functions and therefore retain the wholeness of nature. From this wholeness, one comprehends, and from comprehension, one tocomes thenear to Tao. There it stops. To stop without knowing how it stops – this is Tao.
** [[Zhuangzi]], [http://web.archive.org/web/20060423162418/http://www.religiousworlds.com/taoism/cz-text2.html#LEVEL ''Chuang-tzu'', "On Levelling All Things"] (tr. [[Lin Yutang]])