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Passages similar to: Tao Te Ching — Tao Te Ching
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Taoist
Tao Te Ching
Tao Te Ching (48)
He who devotes himself to learning (seeks) from day to day to increase (his knowledge); he who devotes himself to the Tao (seeks) from day to day to diminish (his doing). He diminishes it and again diminishes it, till he arrives at doing nothing (on purpose). Having arrived at this point of non-action, there is nothing which he does not do. He who gets as his own all under heaven does so by giving himself no trouble (with that end). If one take trouble (with that end), he is not equal to getting as his own all under heaven.
Taoist
The Universe. (11)
Aiming at Tao, he perfects his virtue. By perfecting his virtue he perfects his body, and by perfecting his body he perfects his spiritual part. And t...
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Taoist
Exercise of Faculties. (1)
Those who exercise their faculties in mere worldly studies, hoping thereby to revert to their original condition; and those who sink their...
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Taoist
The Empire. (11)
There he is in the midst of his abundance which comes to him without effort on his part. He does nothing, and laughs at the artifices of others. "He w...
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Taoist
The Empire. (8)
P'êng Mêng, T'ien P'ien, and Shên Tao, became enthusiastic followers of Tao. Their criterion was the identity of all things. "The sky," said they,...
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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
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
Kêng Sang Ch'u. (8)
Those who are devoted to the internal, in practice acquire no reputation. Those who are devoted to the external, strive for pre-eminence among their...
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Taoist
Kêng Sang Ch'u. (11)
And being duly ordered, it will be in repose. And being in repose, it will be clear of perception. And being clear of perception, it will be unconditi...
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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
Exercise of Faculties. (3)
Those of old who were called retired scholars, were not men who hid their bodies, or kept back their words, or concealed their wisdom. It was that...
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Taoist
Lieh Tzŭ. (3)
Whereas a man who should regard his distinctive abilities as of his own making, without reference to his parents, would be like the man of Ch'i who du...
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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
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
Knowledge Travels North. (3)
Then Knowledge said to the Yellow Emperor, "I asked Do-nothing Say-nothing, but he did not answer me. Not that he, would not; he could not. So I...
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Taoist
Self-Conceit. (2)
Such is the Tao of the universe, such is the virtue of the Sage. Wherefore it has been said, "In tranquillity, in stillness, in the unconditioned, in...
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Taoist
The Universe. (3)
He is as originally by nature, and his knowledge extends to the supernatural. Thus, his virtue expands his heart, which goes forth to all who come to ...
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Taoist
Nourishment of the Soul. (1)
My life has a limit, but my knowledge is without limit. To drive the limited in search of the limitless, is fatal; and the knowledge of those who do...
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Taoist
Tsê Yang. (3)
He recognised no beginning, no end, no quantity, no time. Daily modified together with his environ ment, as part of One he knew no modification. Why...
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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
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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