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Title: The Philosophical Ground of the Religions of Daoism


1
The Philosophical Ground of the Religions of
Daoism Confucianism
  • Mary I. Bockover
  • Professor of Philosophy
  • Humboldt State University
  • Arcata, California, USA
  • 12-26-06

2
Chapter 14 of Laozis Daodejing
  • What cannot be seen is called evanescent
  • What cannot be heard is called rarefied
  • What cannot be touched is called minute.
  • These three cannot be fathomed
  • And so they are confused and looked upon as one.
  • Its upper part is not dazzling
  • Its lower part is not obscure.
  • Dimly visible, it cannot be named
  • And returns to that which is without substance.
  • This is called the shape that has no shape,
  • The image that is without substance.
  • This is called indistinct and shadowy.
  • Go up to it and you will not see its head
  • Follow behind it and you will not see its rear.
  • Hold fast to the way of antiquity
  • In order to keep in control the realm of today.
  • The ability to know the beginning of antiquity
  • Is called the thread running through the way.
    (D.C. Lau)

3
Dao (Tao) The Way of the Universe
4
Dao (Tao) The Way of the Universe
  • The source and sustainer of all

5
Dao (Tao) The Way of the Universe
  • The source and sustainer of all
  • Gave birth to the One, and from the One came the
    two (yin and yang), and from the two came the
    10,000 things (wan, or everything)

6
Dao (Tao) The Way of the Universe
  • The source and sustainer of all
  • Gave birth to the One, and from the One came the
    two (yin and yang), and from the two came the
    10,000 things (wan, or everything)
  • Gives rise to a metaphysic or cosmology that
    has Dao as the first principle and final end of
    all things

7
Dao (Tao) The Way of the Universe
  • The source and sustainer of all
  • Gave birth to the One, and from the One came the
    two (yin and yang), and from the two came the
    10,000 things (wan, or everything)
  • Gives rise to a metaphysic or cosmology that
    has Dao as the first principle and final end of
    all things
  • Is ultimate reality, so rarified that it cannot
    be perceived (or named)

8
Dao (Tao) The Way of the Universe
  • The source and sustainer of all
  • Gave birth to the One, and from the One came the
    two (yin and yang), and from the two came the
    10,000 things (wan, or everything)
  • Gives rise to a metaphysic or cosmology that
    has Dao as the first principle and final end of
    all things
  • Is ultimate reality, so rarified that it cannot
    be perceived (or named)
  • Entails what is and what is not, being and
    non-being, change and non-change, but is prior to
    the opposites -- is prior to all distinction
    and differentiation that we refer to as life

9
Dao (Tao) The Way of the Universe
  • The source and sustainer of all
  • Gave birth to the One, and from the One came the
    two (yin and yang), and from the two came the
    10,000 things (wan, or everything)
  • Gives rise to a metaphysic or cosmology that
    has Dao as the first principle and final end of
    all things
  • Is ultimate reality, so rarified that it cannot
    be perceived (or named)
  • Entails what is and what is not, being and
    non-being, change and non-change, but is prior to
    the opposites -- is prior to all distinction
    and differentiation that we refer to as life
  • Is referred to in negative or yin terms as
    vacuity, being empty, receptive, what is not,
    what we dont have, what we dont know, what we
    cant experience, what does not exist (at least
    in tangible form)

10
Yin-Yang Receptive-Creative
11
Yin-Yang Receptive-Creative
  • The One refers to the harmonious blending of yin
    and yang

12
Yin-Yang Receptive-Creative
  • The One refers to the harmonious blending of yin
    and yang
  • Metaphysically, the One is the great ultimate
    or unity of all Being

13
Yin-Yang Receptive-Creative
  • The One refers to the harmonious blending of yin
    and yang
  • Metaphysically, the One is the great ultimate
    or unity of all Being
  • This unity consists of opposite yet
    complimentary forces that optimally produce
    harmonious change in the world

14
Yin-Yang Receptive-Creative
  • The One refers to the harmonious blending of yin
    and yang
  • Metaphysically, the One is the great ultimate
    or unity of all Being
  • This unity consists of opposite yet
    complimentary forces that optimally produce
    harmonious change in the world
  • Dao is the normative essence of reality that
    drives such change

15
Yin-Yang Receptive-Creative
  • The One refers to the harmonious blending of yin
    and yang
  • Metaphysically, the One is the great ultimate
    or unity of all Being
  • This unity consists of opposite yet
    complimentary forces that optimally produce
    harmonious change in the world
  • Dao is the normative essence of reality that
    drives such change
  • Dao comes before the One too before any
    distinction or differentiation

16
Yin-Yang Receptive-Creative
  • The One refers to the harmonious blending of yin
    and yang
  • Metaphysically, the One is the great ultimate
    or unity of all Being
  • This unity consists of opposite yet
    complimentary forces that optimally produce
    harmonious change in the world
  • Dao is the normative essence of reality that
    drives such change
  • Dao comes before the One too before any
    distinction or differentiation
  • Spiritually, knowing the relation between yin
    and yang calls for a mystical experience beyond
    ordinary distinctions and words, an experience
    that cannot be named (can be thought of as simple
    and childlike too)

17
Yin-Yang Receptive-Creative
  • The One refers to the harmonious blending of yin
    and yang
  • Metaphysically, the One is the great ultimate
    or unity of all Being
  • This unity consists of opposite yet
    complimentary forces that optimally produce
    harmonious change in the world
  • Dao is the normative essence of reality that
    drives such change
  • Dao comes before the One too before any
    distinction or differentiation
  • Spiritually, knowing the relation between yin
    and yang calls for a mystical experience beyond
    ordinary distinctions and words, an experience
    that cannot be named (can be thought of as simple
    and childlike too)
  • Dao is ultimately real, however, so rarified that
    it takes a direct spiritual experience for it to
    be understood

18
Yin-Yang Receptive-Creative
  • The One refers to the harmonious blending of yin
    and yang
  • Metaphysically, the One is the great ultimate
    or unity of all Being
  • This unity consists of opposite yet
    complimentary forces that optimally produce
    harmonious change in the world
  • Dao is the normative essence of reality that
    drives such change
  • Dao comes before the One too before any
    distinction or differentiation
  • Spiritually, knowing the relation between yin
    and yang calls for a mystical experience beyond
    ordinary distinctions and words, an experience
    that cannot be named (can be thought of as simple
    and childlike too)
  • Dao is ultimately real, however, so rarified that
    it takes a direct spiritual experience for it to
    be understood
  • What is ordinarily experienced is the power (de)
    Dao has on life and the world we live in in
    producing change that is harmonious or not

19
(No Transcript)
20
The Way Ultimate Spiritual Reality

21
The Way Ultimate Spiritual Reality
  • The Dao or Way of the World is tri-part
    traditionally consisting of the way of heaven,
    the way of earth, and the way of humanity

22
The Way Ultimate Spiritual Reality
  • The Dao or Way of the World is tri-part
    traditionally consisting of the way of heaven,
    the way of earth, and the way of humanity
  • Taoists redefine this traditional distinction by
    referring to a Way that is beyond tian or
    heaven, and by not deifying the way of humanity
    (rendao) as superior to the rest of creation (the
    many, myriad, or 10,000 things)

23
The Way Ultimate Spiritual Reality
  • The Dao or Way of the World is tri-part
    traditionally consisting of the way of heaven,
    the way of earth, and the way of humanity
  • Taoists redefine this traditional distinction by
    referring to a Way that is beyond tian or
    heaven, and by not deifying the way of humanity
    (rendao) as superior to the rest of creation (the
    many, myriad, or 10,000 things)
  • Hence, Daoists focus on yin principles earth
    (kun), receptivity, and the feminine, childlike,
    simple, dark, empty, weak, paradoxical,
    mysterious, changeless or actionless aspects
    of life

24
The Way Ultimate Spiritual Reality
  • The Dao or Way of the World is tri-part
    traditionally consisting of the way of heaven,
    the way of earth, and the way of humanity
  • Taoists redefine this traditional distinction by
    referring to a Way that is beyond tian or
    heaven, and by not deifying the way of humanity
    (rendao) as superior to the rest of creation (the
    many, myriad, or 10,000 things)
  • Hence, Daoists focus on yin principles earth
    (kun), receptivity, and the feminine, childlike,
    simple, dark, empty, weak, paradoxical,
    mysterious, changeless or actionless aspects
    of life
  • This is in contrast to the traditional Chinese
    focus on yang principles heaven, creativity, or
    the masculine, sagely, cultured, light, full,
    strong, definite, tangible, everchanging and
    active aspects of life

25
The Way Ultimate Spiritual Reality
  • The Dao or Way of the World is tri-part
    traditionally consisting of the way of heaven,
    the way of earth, and the way of humanity
  • Taoists redefine this traditional distinction by
    referring to a Way that is beyond tian or
    heaven, and by not deifying the way of humanity
    (rendao) as superior to the rest of creation (the
    many, myriad, or 10,000 things)
  • Hence, Daoists focus on yin principles earth
    (kun), receptivity, and the feminine, childlike,
    simple, dark, empty, weak, paradoxical,
    mysterious, changeless or actionless aspects
    of life
  • This is in contrast to the traditional Chinese
    focus on yang principles heaven, creativity, or
    the masculine, sagely, cultured, light, full,
    strong, definite, tangible, everchanging and
    active aspects of life
  • In truth, yin and yang are different aspects of
    the same ultimate reality that we mistakenly
    distinguish as being separate in kind

26
The Way Ultimate Spiritual Reality
  • The Dao or Way of the World is tri-part
    traditionally consisting of the way of heaven,
    the way of earth, and the way of humanity
  • Taoists redefine this traditional distinction by
    referring to a Way that is beyond tian or
    heaven, and by not deifying the way of humanity
    (rendao) as superior to the rest of creation (the
    many, myriad, or 10,000 things)
  • Hence, Daoists focus on yin principles earth
    (kun), receptivity, and the feminine, childlike,
    simple, dark, empty, weak, paradoxical,
    mysterious, changeless or actionless aspects
    of life
  • This is in contrast to the traditional Chinese
    focus on yang principles heaven, creativity, or
    the masculine, sagely, cultured, light, full,
    strong, definite, tangible, everchanging and
    active aspects of life
  • In truth, yin and yang are different aspects of
    the same ultimate reality that we mistakenly
    distinguish as being separate in kind
  • For example, dark is really just less light,
    receptivity is essential to creativity, and, as
    death is a part of life, life is a part of death

27
The Way Ultimate Spiritual Reality
  • The Dao or Way of the World is tri-part
    traditionally consisting of the way of heaven,
    the way of earth, and the way of humanity
  • Taoists redefine this traditional distinction by
    referring to a Way that is beyond tian or
    heaven, and by not deifying the way of humanity
    (rendao) as superior to the rest of creation (the
    many, myriad, or 10,000 things)
  • Hence, Daoists focus on yin principles earth
    (kun), receptivity, and the feminine, childlike,
    simple, dark, empty, weak, paradoxical,
    mysterious, changeless or actionless aspects
    of life
  • This is in contrast to the traditional Chinese
    focus on yang principles heaven, creativity, or
    the masculine, sagely, cultured, light, full,
    strong, definite, tangible, everchanging and
    active aspects of life
  • In truth, yin and yang are different aspects of
    the same ultimate reality that we mistakenly
    distinguish as being separate in kind
  • For example, dark is really just less light,
    receptivity is essential to creativity, and, as
    death is a part of life, life is a part of death
  • Like Dao, death is darker than any mystery is a
    mysterious change about which we know very
    little

28
Chuang Tzu (Zhuangzi)
  • Chuang Tzus wife died and Hui Tzu went to offer
    his condolence. He found Chuang Tzu squatting on
    the ground and singing, beating on an earthen
    bowl. He said, Someone has lived with you,
    raised children for you and now she has aged and
    died. Is it not enough that you should not shed
    a tear? But now you sing and beat the bowl. Is
    this not too much?
  • No, replied Chuang Tzu. When she died,how
    could I help being affected? But as I think the
    matter over, I realize that originally she had no
    life and not only no life, she had no form not
    only no form, she had no material force (chi,
    qi). In the limbo of existence and
    non-existence, there was transformation and the
    material force was evolved. The material force
    was transformed to be form, form was transformed
    to become life, and now birth has transformed to
    become death. This is like the rotation of the
    four seasons, spring, summer, fall, and winter.
    Now she lies asleep in the great house (the
    universe). For me to go about weeping and
    wailing would be to show my ignorance of destiny.
    Therefore, I desist. (ch. 18, 631b-32a Wing
    Tsit Chan)

29
Chapter 5 of Laozis Daodejing
  • Heaven and earth are ruthless, and treat the
    myriad creatures as straw dogs the sage is
    ruthless, and treats the people as straw dogs.
  • Is not the space between heaven and earth like a
    bellows?
  • It is empty without being exhausted
  • The more it works the more comes out.
  • Much speech leads inevitably to silence.
  • Better to hold fast to the void. (D.C. Lau)

30
The Daoist Religious Experience

31
The Daoist Religious Experience
  • Things come into being, and pass from being --
    returning to Dao

32
The Daoist Religious Experience
  • Things come into being, and pass from being --
    returning to Dao
  • This is the way of life, and there is no
    justice in it the way of life and the way of
    humanity are at odds because we have lost our way
    and cannot change Dao

33
The Daoist Religious Experience
  • Things come into being, and pass from being --
    returning to Dao
  • This is the way of life, and there is no
    justice in it the way of life and the way of
    humanity are at odds because we have lost our way
    and cannot change Dao
  • Has practical consequences seen in our failing to
    live in accordance with the Way (what is against
    the Dao will surely perish)

34
The Daoist Religious Experience
  • Things come into being, and pass from being --
    returning to Dao
  • This is the way of life, and there is no
    justice in it the way of life and the way of
    humanity are at odds because we have lost our way
    and cannot change Dao
  • Has practical consequences seen in our failing to
    live in accordance with the Way (what is against
    the Dao will surely perish)
  • Has religious consequences that run even deeper
    for life and death are mysteries to be
    experienced instead of ideas to be confirmed

35
The Daoist Religious Experience
  • Things come into being, and pass from being --
    returning to Dao
  • This is the way of life, and there is no
    justice in it the way of life and the way of
    humanity are at odds because we have lost our way
    and cannot change Dao
  • Has practical consequences seen in our failing to
    live in accordance with the Way (what is against
    the Dao will surely perish)
  • Has religious consequences that run even deeper
    for life and death are mysteries to be
    experienced instead of ideas to be confirmed
  • Death is just another change that is a part of
    life and leads back to the void

36
The Daoist Religious Experience
  • Things come into being, and pass from being --
    returning to Dao
  • This is the way of life, and there is no
    justice in it the way of life and the way of
    humanity are at odds because we have lost our way
    and cannot change Dao
  • Has practical consequences seen in our failing to
    live in accordance with the Way (what is against
    the Dao will surely perish)
  • Has religious consequences that run even deeper
    for life and death are mysteries to be
    experienced instead of ideas to be confirmed
  • Death is just another change that is a part of
    life and leads back to the void
  • Daoist emptiness in not literally nothing though
    non-being or non-change refers to a different way
    of being and changing (like the yin-yang
    relation)

37
The Daoist Religious Experience
  • Things come into being, and pass from being --
    returning to Dao
  • This is the way of life, and there is no
    justice in it the way of life and the way of
    humanity are at odds because we have lost our way
    and cannot change Dao
  • Has practical consequences seen in our failing to
    live in accordance with the Way (what is against
    the Dao will surely perish)
  • Has religious consequences that run even deeper
    for life and death are mysteries to be
    experienced instead of ideas to be confirmed
  • Death is just another change that is a part of
    life and leads back to the void
  • Daoist emptiness in not literally nothing though
    non-being or non-change refers to a different way
    of being and changing (like the yin-yang
    relation)
  • This Way is mysterious, but can be experienced as
    beautiful, perfect, and complete (formless yet
    complete, latent in it are the forms)

38
The Daoist Religious Experience
  • Things come into being, and pass from being --
    returning to Dao
  • This is the way of life, and there is no
    justice in it the way of life and the way of
    humanity are at odds because we have lost our way
    and cannot change Dao
  • Has practical consequences seen in our failing to
    live in accordance with the Way (what is against
    the Dao will surely perish)
  • Has religious consequences that run even deeper
    for life and death are mysteries to be
    experienced instead of ideas to be confirmed
  • Death is just another change that is a part of
    life and leads back to the void
  • Daoist emptiness in not literally nothing though
    non-being or non-change refers to a different way
    of being and changing (like the yin-yang
    relation)
  • This Way is mysterious, but can be experienced as
    beautiful, perfect, and complete (formless yet
    complete, latent in it are the forms)
  • Daoism calls upon us to BE ALIVE -- to simply
    appreciate what it means to be living -- but
    paradoxically this is done by fully entering into
    the mystery as a lived experience

39
Chapter 41 of Laozi Daodejing
  • When the best student hears about the way
  • He practices it assiduously
  • When the average student hears about the way
  • It seems to him one moment there and gone the
    next
  • When the worst student hears about the way
  • He laughs out loud.
  • If he did not laugh
  • It would be unworthy of being the way.
  • Hence the Chien yen an old proverb has it
  • The way that is bright seems dull
  • The way that leads forward seems to lead
    backward
  • The way that is even seems rough.
  • The highest virtue is like the valley
  • The sheerest whiteness seems sullied
  • Ample virtue seems defective
  • Vigorous virtue seems indolent
  • Plain virtue seems soiled
  • The great square has no corners.
  • The great vessel takes long to complete

40
Daoist Principles Practices
41
Daoist Principles Practices
  • An ecology of life

42
Daoist Principles Practices
  • An ecology of life
  • Daoist body cultivation a nexus of interrelated
    everchanging (yin-yang) processes

43
Daoist Principles Practices
  • An ecology of life
  • Daoist body cultivation a nexus of interrelated
    everchanging (yin-yang) processes
  • Disciplines for promoting health and long life

44
Daoist Principles Practices
  • An ecology of life
  • Daoist body cultivation a nexus of interrelated
    everchanging (yin-yang) processes
  • Disciplines for promoting health and long life
  • E.g, Taiji quan (Tai Chi) Qigong (Ch'i-kung)

45
Daoist Principles Practices
  • An ecology of life
  • Daoist body cultivation a nexus of interrelated
    everchanging (yin-yang) processes
  • Disciplines for promoting health and long life
  • E.g, Taiji quan (Tai Chi) Qigong (Ch'i-kung)
  • Purification of mind body to rarify spiritual
    energies (qi)

46
Daoist Principles Practices
  • An ecology of life
  • Daoist body cultivation a nexus of interrelated
    everchanging (yin-yang) processes
  • Disciplines for promoting health and long life
  • E.g, Taiji quan (Tai Chi) Qigong (Ch'i-kung)
  • Purification of mind body to rarify spiritual
    energies (qi)
  • Respect for the natural interdependency of all
    things for all things are what they are, only in
    relation to each other, and ultimately, in
    relation to the Great Dao itself

47
Daoist Principles Practices
  • An ecology of life
  • Daoist body cultivation a nexus of interrelated
    everchanging (yin-yang) processes
  • Disciplines for promoting health and long life
  • E.g, Taiji quan (Tai Chi) Qigong (Ch'i-kung)
  • Purification of mind body to rarify spiritual
    energies (qi)
  • Respect for the natural interdependency of all
    things for all things are what they are, only in
    relation to each other, and ultimately, in
    relation to the Great Dao itself
  • Goal to cultivate ones self beyond the gross
    body and (as celestial immortals) to be in
    harmony with the subtle and mysterious
    transformations of the Dao (the dynamic unity of
    being or everchanging cosmic spiritual processes)

48
Daoist Principles Practices
  • An ecology of life
  • Daoist body cultivation a nexus of interrelated
    everchanging (yin-yang) processes
  • Disciplines for promoting health and long life
  • E.g, Taiji quan (Tai Chi) Qigong (Ch'i-kung)
  • Purification of mind body to rarify spiritual
    energies (qi)
  • Respect for the natural interdependency of all
    things for all things are what they are, only in
    relation to each other, and ultimately, in
    relation to the Great Dao itself
  • Goal to cultivate ones self beyond the gross
    body and (as celestial immortals) to be in
    harmony with the subtle and mysterious
    transformations of the Dao (the dynamic unity of
    being or everchanging cosmic spiritual processes)
  • Daoists seek not to interfere with the natural
    rhythms of life human life is seen as occurring
    within the larger patterns of the natural world
    and the whole cosmos

49
Daoist Principles Practices
  • An ecology of life
  • Daoist body cultivation a nexus of interrelated
    everchanging (yin-yang) processes
  • Disciplines for promoting health and long life
  • E.g, Taiji quan (Tai Chi) Qigong (Ch'i-kung)
  • Purification of mind body to rarify spiritual
    energies (qi)
  • Respect for the natural interdependency of all
    things for all things are what they are, only in
    relation to each other, and ultimately, in
    relation to the Great Dao itself
  • Goal to cultivate ones self beyond the gross
    body and (as celestial immortals) to be in
    harmony with the subtle and mysterious
    transformations of the Dao (the dynamic unity of
    being or everchanging cosmic spiritual processes)
  • Daoists seek not to interfere with the natural
    rhythms of life human life is seen as occurring
    within the larger patterns of the natural world
    and the whole cosmos
  • Alchemy meditation aiming to reach material
    immortality to rarify qi

50
Confucian Religion The Human Way Embedded in the
Great Way
51
Confucian Religion The Human Way Embedded in the
Great Way
  • Confucianism is a religion, not just an ethic

52
Confucian Religion The Human Way Embedded in the
Great Way
  • Confucianism is a religion, not just an ethic
  • The human spirit -- ren -- requires the tangible
    ritual expression of li

53
Confucian Religion The Human Way Embedded in the
Great Way
  • Confucianism is a religion, not just an ethic
  • The human spirit -- ren -- requires the tangible
    ritual expression of li
  • The goal is to promote harmonious human activity
    co-extensive with the harmonious way of heaven or
    tian

54
Confucian Religion The Human Way Embedded in the
Great Way
  • Confucianism is a religion, not just an ethic
  • The human spirit -- ren -- requires the tangible
    ritual expression of li
  • The goal is to promote harmonious human activity
    co-extensive with the harmonious way of heaven or
    tian
  • We can make the way great (Wang Pi)

55
Confucian Religion The Human Way Embedded in the
Great Way
  • Confucianism is a religion, not just an ethic
  • The human spirit -- ren -- requires the tangible
    ritual expression of li
  • The goal is to promote harmonious human activity
    co-extensive with the harmonious way of heaven or
    tian
  • We can make the way great (Wang Pi)
  • The human spirit has a benevolent normative
    nature that has its roots in the Great Way itself

56
Confucian Religion The Human Way Embedded in the
Great Way
  • Confucianism is a religion, not just an ethic
  • The human spirit -- ren -- requires the tangible
    ritual expression of li
  • The goal is to promote harmonious human activity
    co-extensive with the harmonious way of heaven or
    tian
  • We can make the way great (Wang Pi)
  • The human spirit has a benevolent normative
    nature that has its roots in the Great Way itself
  • The human spirit at its best IS an expression of
    harmony and unity

57
Confucian Religion The Human Way Embedded in the
Great Way
  • Confucianism is a religion, not just an ethic
  • The human spirit -- ren -- requires the tangible
    ritual expression of li
  • The goal is to promote harmonious human activity
    co-extensive with the harmonious way of heaven or
    tian
  • We can make the way great (Wang Pi)
  • The human spirit has a benevolent normative
    nature that has its roots in the Great Way itself
  • The human spirit at its best IS an expression of
    harmony and unity
  • The human way or rendao is a microcosm of the way
    of heaven

58
Confucian Religion The Human Way Embedded in the
Great Way
  • Confucianism is a religion, not just an ethic
  • The human spirit -- ren -- requires the tangible
    ritual expression of li
  • The goal is to promote harmonious human activity
    co-extensive with the harmonious way of heaven or
    tian
  • We can make the way great (Wang Pi)
  • The human spirit has a benevolent normative
    nature that has its roots in the Great Way itself
  • The human spirit at its best IS an expression of
    harmony and unity
  • The human way or rendao is a microcosm of the way
    of heaven
  • The secular expression of li IS ren or the
    sacred activation of the human spirit in
    goodness and responsibility

59
Li Ren Humanity At Its Best
60
Li Ren Humanity At Its Best
  • Westerners have a hard time grasping this point
    because consciousness or the human spirit has
    been internalized by a more dualistic metaphysic.
    Confucius offers us a new and different way of
    thinking about ethics and religion by having us
    think of consciousness as an objective social and
    spiritual fact

61
Li Ren Humanity At Its Best
  • Westerners have a hard time grasping this point
    because consciousness or the human spirit has
    been internalized by a more dualistic metaphysic.
    Confucius offers us a new and different way of
    thinking about ethics and religion by having us
    think of consciousness as an objective social and
    spiritual fact
  • For Confucius, action and spirit are
    interdependent universal human ren requires
    culturally diverse expressions of li

62
Li Ren Humanity At Its Best
  • Westerners have a hard time grasping this point
    because consciousness or the human spirit has
    been internalized by a more dualistic metaphysic.
    Confucius offers us a new and different way of
    thinking about ethics and religion by having us
    think of consciousness as an objective social and
    spiritual fact
  • For Confucius, action and spirit are
    interdependent universal human ren requires
    culturally diverse expressions of li
  • Together, li ren point to different aspects of
    an act of communion, or harmonious human
    interaction

63
The Great Learning
  • Once things are investigated, knowledge will be
    completed.
  • Once knowledge is complete, opinions will be
    verified.
  • Once opinions are verified, minds will be
    rectified.
  • Once minds are rectified, persons will be
    cultivated.
  • Once persons are cultivated, families will be
    harmonized.
  • Once families are harmonized, states will be put
    in order.
  • Once states are in order, there will be peace all
    under heaven.
  • From the emperor to the common people, all must
    see the cultivation of their own person as the
    root of all else.
  • If roots are in disarray, there will never be
    healthy branches. (Lydia Garber)

64
The Analects of Confucius
  • Someone asked the Master for an explanation of
    the di imperial ancestral sacrifice, and he
    replied I dont have one. Anyone who did know
    how to explain it could rule the empire as easily
    as having it here. And he pointed to the palm
    of his hand. representing the magical effect of
    ritual in ordering things. (Ames Rosemont 3,
    11)

65
The Analects of Confucius
  • The Master said, High office filled with men of
    narrow views, ritual preformed without reverence,
    the forms of mourning observed without
    griefthese are things I cannot bear to see!
    (Waley 3, 26)
  • The expression sacrifice as though present is
    taken to mean sacrifice to the spirits as though
    the spirits are present. But the Master said
    If I myself do not participate in the sacrifice,
    it is as though I have not sacrificed at all
    (Ames Rosemont 3, 12)

66
The Tri-part Dao The Great Way (of Heaven), The
Way of Humanity, The Way of Earth
67
  • The End
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