Mobility and Intuition: What Does Pre-Qin Daoist Philosophy Reveal about Constructive Postmodernism?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The World Is a Mobile Organic Whole
2.1. The Way Determines the Characteristics of the Cosmos
Even while the ten thousand kinds of entities all act at once, I [as opposed to others] by way of this [emptiness and stillness] perceive that to which they return. Generally speaking, while the entities are of unending diversity, each one of them returns to its [common] root (Chapter 16).
万物并作,吾以观复。夫物芸芸,各复归其根(第十六章)
The Way generates them. What they get is that it nourishes them: As entities it [the Way] lets them assume form. As situation it has them fully develop. That is why there is none among the ten thousand kinds of entities that does not honor the Way and value the receipt/capacity.…That is why the Way generates them [the ten thousand entities] and that what they get nourishes them. And it lets them grow and nurtures them, specifies them and completes them, protects and covers them (Chapter 51).
道生之,德畜之,物形之,势成之。是以万物莫不尊道而贵德。……故道生之,德畜之;长之育之,亭之毒之,养之覆之(第五十一章)
[The space] between Heaven and Earth is like a drum or flute! [That is,] hollow it is, but inexhaustible [in the variety of sounds it can produce] [the more] it is beaten, the more [sound] comes out of it (Chapter 5).
天地之间,其犹橐龠乎!虚而不屈,动而愈出(第五章)
2.2. The Invariance of the Way Determines the Invariance of the Cosmos
3. Cognitive Inwardness, Privacy, and Overall Connectedness
3.1. The Cognitive Inwardness Confirmed by the Way
[Only when] not going out of doors [into All Under Heaven one has something] by means of which to cognize All Under Heaven; [only when] not peeping out of the window [to Heavenly phenomenon one has something] by means of which to cognize the Way of Heaven; while the further one ventures out, the less one cognizes. That is why the Sage cognizes without going to [the objects]. That is why the Sage gives [the correct] name to [the objects] without looking at [them]. [In short,] without his acting [on them], he gets [them] completed (Chapter 47).
不出户,知天下;不窥牖,见天道。其出弥远,其知弥少。是以圣人不行而知,不见而明,不为而成(第四十七章)
3.2. The Private Nature of Knowing and the Communicability of Knowledge Made Possible by the Way
Once Zhuang Zhou dreamed he was a butterfly, a butterfly flitting and fluttering around, happy with himself and doing as he pleased. He didn’t know he was Zhuang Zhou. Suddenly he woke up, and there he was, solid and unmistakable Zhuang Zhou. But he didn’t know if he were Zhuang Zhou who had dreamed he was a butterfly or a butterfly dreaming he was Zhuang Zhou. Between Zhuang Zhou and a butterfly, there must be some distinction! This is called the Transformation of Things.
昔者庄周梦为蝴蝶,栩栩然蝴蝶也。自喻适志与!不知周也。俄然觉,则蘧蘧然周也。不知周之梦为蝴蝶与?蝴蝶之梦为周与?周与蝴蝶,则必有分矣。此之谓物化。(齐物论)
4. Conclusions
Funding
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Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The author of this paper does not intend to judge the views of constructive postmodernism but only to present the parts of organismic philosophy and pan-empiricism that are similar to pre-Qin Daoist philosophy in terms of the relationship between mind and matter, as an introduction to the discussion of pre-Qin Daoist philosophy in a contemporary philosophical context. |
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4 | Dongmei Fang 方东美 argues that if one can systematically compare and contrast the philosophies of Organismic Buddhism and Huayan Buddhism and come up with a result, “then you will cut yourself a great figure in philosophy”, see Fang (1981). He also cites the primitive Daoist wisdom as one of the elements of Chinese Buddhism: “When Buddhism came to China, we welcomed it with the high wisdom of Taoism, which led to the development of the high wisdom of Mahayana Buddhism, and combined it with the spirit of Confucianism, which made the original foreign Buddhism completely Chinese.” See Fang (2011). This is enough to convince us that there is still a lot of room for further comparative discussion between constructive postmodernism and pre-Qin Daoist philosophy. |
5 | This paper takes the views of Laozi and Zhuangzi as representatives of the pre-Qin Daoist philosophers. The dichotomy between Daoist philosophy and Taoism is not clear-cut; Daoist philosophy, Taoism, and the unity of the two can each form a system. Philosophy from Laozi and Zhuangzi lays the groundwork for all three. For a view of the unity of Taoism and Daoism, see Ma (2018, pp. 249–73). From the perspective of religious studies, Laozi and Zhuangzi can undoubtedly be called representatives of pre-Qin Daoist philosophy. Mainstream Daoist alchemical theory and practice is based on the Daodejing; for specific cases see Ma and Guo (2019, pp. 53–59). In addition, Chen Guying argues that Laozi’s theory and practice are based on the Daodejing. |
6 | For a discussion of how Laozi and Zhuangzi came to be discussed as one, see Thomas Michael (2012, 2015); Simai Ma (2018). According to Ma, the worldviews and monastic systems of both the Daodejing and Zhuangzi are centered on the Way, with the former focusing on the body and the latter on the spirit. The author of this paper agrees with this classification. This paper mainly uses the Daodejing as material for the cosmology of the Way and the Zhuangzi as material for the epistemology of the Way. It is also argued that Zhuangzi’s “spiritual cultivation” can in a sense contribute to the epistemology described in this paper. |
7 | The translations of the Daodejing quoted in this article refer to the translations of Rudolf G. Wagner (2003) in A Chinese Reading of the Daodejing in the references and they have been modified to fit the argument of the present article. The original text of Daodejing quoted in this article is mainly based on the annotated edition of Wang Bi and some adjustments are made according to the Mangwangdui and the Guodian versions published by The Commercial Press, Guying Chen (2017) Annotated. |
8 | The translations of Zhuangzi quoted in this article refer to the translations of Burton Watson (2013) in The Complete Works of Zhuangzi in the references. The original text of Zhuangzi quoted in this article is based on the annotated edition of Guying Chen (2016). |
9 | This paper adopts Laozi’s version based on the annotated edition of Wang Bi, which does not directly mention the “five elements”, but does mention Yin and Yang directly in the 42 chapters. There are two different views on Laozi’s view of Yin and Yang (yinyang 阴阳). Some scholars believe that Laozi did not directly discuss the Yin and Yang and Five Elements (wuxing 五行), and therefore could not interpret Laozi in terms of the Five Elements. For example, Guying Chen discusses it in detail in his book Laozi’s current annotation and translation (Chen 2017, pp. 234–35). He believes that the Huainanzi 淮南子, which was written in the Han Dynasty and had a detailed explanation of chapter 42 of Daodejing, the chapter named Tianwen 天文 said, “Dao began with one, one cannot reproduce, so it divided into Yin and Yang, Yin and Yang are harmony then all things birth, therefore, it is said that ‘The Way generates the One. The One generates the two. The two generates the three. The three generates the ten thousand entities’” (道始于一,一而不生,故分而为阴阳,阴阳合和而万物生,故曰“一生二,二生三,三生万物”). Most scholars still use the Huainanzi as the basis for interpreting two (er 二) with Yin and Yang. However, Chen suggests, “when we look at Laozi, except for the phrase ‘embrace yin and embrace the yang’ (负阴而抱阳) which appears in chapter 42, the words Yin and Yang have never been seen in the whole book” (Chen 2017, pp. 235). Some scholars believe that Laozi subscribed to the theory of the Five Elements, which is directly related to the “Five Colors” (wuse 五色), “Five Voices” (wuyin 五音), and “Five Tastes” (wuwei 五味) in Chapter 12, see Zhang (2017). The concepts of Yin and Yang and Five Elements permeated the thinking mode of the pre-Qin philosophers, so this paper uses the Five Elements as an intermediary to discuss the pre-Qin Daoist philosophical views on the relationship between mind and matter. |
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Li, W. Mobility and Intuition: What Does Pre-Qin Daoist Philosophy Reveal about Constructive Postmodernism? Religions 2023, 14, 1132. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14091132
Li W. Mobility and Intuition: What Does Pre-Qin Daoist Philosophy Reveal about Constructive Postmodernism? Religions. 2023; 14(9):1132. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14091132
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, Weixi. 2023. "Mobility and Intuition: What Does Pre-Qin Daoist Philosophy Reveal about Constructive Postmodernism?" Religions 14, no. 9: 1132. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14091132
APA StyleLi, W. (2023). Mobility and Intuition: What Does Pre-Qin Daoist Philosophy Reveal about Constructive Postmodernism? Religions, 14(9), 1132. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14091132