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Passages similar to: Tao Te Ching — Tao Te Ching
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Taoist
Tao Te Ching
Tao Te Ching (4)
The Tao is (like) the emptiness of a vessel; and in our employment of it we must be on our guard against all fulness. How deep and unfathomable it is, as if it were the Honoured Ancestor of all things! We should blunt our sharp points, and unravel the complications of things; we should attemper our brightness, and bring ourselves into agreement with the obscurity of others. How pure and still the Tao is, as if it would ever so continue! I do not know whose son it is. It might appear to have been before God.
Taoist
Knowledge Travels North. (5)
"Wash your soul as white as snow. Discard your knowledge. Tao is abstruse and difficult of discussion. I will try, however, to speak to you of its out...
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Taoist
On Letting Alone. (12)
Low in the scale, but still to be allowed for,—matter. Humble, but still to be followed,— mankind. Of others, but still to be attended to,—affairs....
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Taoist
The Identity of Contraries. (6)
These things are but fingers and horses in this sense. The possible is possible: the impossible is impossible. Tao operates, and given results follow....
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Taoist
The Universe. (2)
The Master said, " Tao covers and supports all things,"—so vast is its extent. Each man should prepare his heart accordingly. "To act by means of...
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Taoist
Knowledge Travels North. (1)
[This chapter is supplementary to chapter vi.] When Knowledge travelled north, across the Black Water, and over the Dark-Steep Mountain, he met...
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Taoist
The Empire. (3)
Consequently, when a mere specialist comes forward and dogmatises on the beauty of the universe the principles which underlie all creation, the...
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Taoist
The Great Supreme. (5)
The dull of vision do not perceive that however you conceal things, small ones in larger ones, there will always be a chance of losing them. But if yo...
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Taoist
Knowledge Travels North. (9)
When Yen Kang Tiao heard this, he said, "Those who exemplify Tao are sought after by all the best men in the empire. Now if one who has not attained...
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Taoist
T'ien Tzŭ Fang. (6)
And all things being thus united in One, his body and limbs are but as dust of the earth, and life and death, beginning and end, are but as night and ...
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Taoist
The Tao of God. (11)
Except he be a perfect man, who shall determine their place? The world of the perfect man, is not that vast? And yet it is not able to involve him in ...
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Taoist
Autumn Floods. (5)
He seeks not gain, but does not despise his followers who do. He struggles not for wealth, but does not take credit for letting it alone. He asks help...
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Taoist
The Empire. (10)
What they call Tao is not Tao; and what they predicate affirmatively cannot escape being negative. The fact is that P'êng Mêng, T'ien P'ien, and Shên...
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Taoist
The Empire. (12)
In accord with the spirit of the universe, he was at peace with all creation. He judged not the rights and wrongs of mankind, and thus lived quietly...
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Taoist
The Empire. (1)
Each man thinks his own perfect. Where then does what the ancients called the system of Tao come in? There is nowhere where it does not come in. It ma...
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Taoist
Tsê Yang. (13)
When I look forward to an end, I see only time infinite. Infinity of time past and to come implies no beginning and is in accordance with the laws of ...
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Taoist
The Great Supreme. (4)
That which was ONE was ONE, and that which was not ONE was likewise ONE. In that which was ONE, they were of God; in that which was not ONE, they were...
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Taoist
Autumn Floods. (8)
To consider either as absolutely such would involve great injury to Tao. Few and many are like giving and receiving presents. These must not be...
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Taoist
The Tao of God. (6)
Tao came next, and then charity and duty to one's neighbour, and then the functions of public life, and then forms and names, and then employment acco...
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Taoist
The Identity of Contraries. (10)
"The true Sage," answered Tzŭ Ch'i, "keeps his knowledge within him, while men in general set forth theirs in argument, in order to convince each...
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Taoist
The Circling Sky. (9)
"Were Tao something which could be presented, there is no man but would present it to his sovereign, or to his parents. Could it be imparted or given,...
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