Modeling Lifeworlds on the Rhythms of Nature: Perspectives on Daoism and Ecology in East Asia

A special issue of Religions (ISSN 2077-1444). This special issue belongs to the section "Religions and Humanities/Philosophies".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 March 2025) | Viewed by 2087

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
Department of Religious Studies, Seoul National University, Seoul 151-742, Korea
Interests: the practice and daoist scriptures of medieval period

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Guest Editor
College of Liberal Arts, Wenzhou-Kean University, 88 Daxue Rd, Ouhai, Wenzhou, 325060, China
Interests: East Asian history; environmental humanities; Daoist studies; history of medicine

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

This Special Issue explores East Asian ideas and practices in organizing and modeling human lifeworlds related to Daoism and the natural environment.

The twenty-fifth verse of the Daodejing describes a transitive chain in which human beings, Earth, Heaven, the Way, and That-which-is-in-and-of-itself (自然) are “modeled” (法) on one another in turn. In line with this vision, scholarly and popular understandings of Daoism have conceived of the Way as a process in which inanimate objects and living beings spontaneously emerge and develop in connection with one another. This is the Daoist framework for how human societies can accord with natural or cosmic rhythms. It assumes, however, an underlying constancy in that which is the basis of the modelling. In our present era of climate crisis and biodiversity loss, the external world to which close observers have long turned for insight is becoming increasingly erratic. How does the “modeling” of which the Daodejing speaks hold up?

A gap between the civilized, agriculturally based world and the realm outside it opened early on in the East Asian intellectual tradition. Transcendents and other mountain-dwellers in the regions now known as China, Japan, and Korea occupied these spaces and criticized the prevailing values of the dominant society. However, just as uncultivated areas provide biological resources for cultivated ones, the elements of the Daoist tradition that appear most amenable to present day environmental concerns were also embedded in societies that were the result of long-term homogenizing processes that they then perpetuated, is ways both deliberate and unconscious. The East Asian tradition provides rich resources for considering the natural world, but the world that historical writers observed was never static or free from modification by humans or other species. Daoist rituals and practices model cosmic cycles, yet in doing so they re-order the world according to human interpretations. As a product of human societies, Daoism is inevitably an anthropocentric system, but also pointed to ways of perceiving the world from the perspectives of other creatures and at spatio-temporal scales far from human experience. The articles in this Special Issue will explore which nature Daoist practices modeled and how these in turn affected both human and non-human world.

This Special Issue welcome contributions critically re-evaluating the theoretical basis or logic of ecological ideas and practices in Daoism and East Asian cultures. This subject stretches from the early notions of space-time and seasonal rhythms that are shared in East Asia and incorporated into Daoism, to the symbolic and material cultures built on the interrelationships between humans and nature, on to longevity-cultivation and medical practices.

New trans-humanistic perspectives and questions are also welcome: Is there a Daoist perspective on the management of ecological resources? To what extent did Daoist monastic organizations and rural communities tended to by Daoist priests contribute to conserving or reducing biological diversity? Are Daoist ideas about nature simply anthropocentric projections, or did they enable ways of perceiving the world that provided access to the perspectives of non-humans?

We hope that such investigations and reflections will inspire new research on society, environment and religion in East Asia and open the broad perspectives of environmental humanities in the field of Daoist studies.

Dr. Jihyun Kim
Dr. Daniel Burton-Rose
Guest Editors

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Keywords

  • environmental humanities
  • Daoism
  • East Asian science and technology
  • ecology

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Published Papers (2 papers)

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Research

14 pages, 400 KiB  
Article
Perfuming and Divine Scents in the Soteriology of Medieval Buddhism and Daoism
by Sang-ho Ro
Religions 2025, 16(4), 517; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040517 - 16 Apr 2025
Viewed by 227
Abstract
The olfactory sense and experience are considered a conduit between spirituality and the divine realm in Daoism. The ceremonial use of incense in Daoism (shixiang 侍香) has been explored from various theological perspectives and described by numerous liturgists. Despite its importance, several [...] Read more.
The olfactory sense and experience are considered a conduit between spirituality and the divine realm in Daoism. The ceremonial use of incense in Daoism (shixiang 侍香) has been explored from various theological perspectives and described by numerous liturgists. Despite its importance, several questions about the development and history of Daoist olfactory culture remain unresolved. This paper examines medieval religious dialogs concerning divine smells and smoke before and during the Tang dynasty, a period marked by the interaction and mutual influence of Daoism and Buddhism in China. I argue that medieval Daoism enhanced its soteriology by adopting the concept of vāsanā (xun 薰) from Buddhism, particularly Yogâcāra. Xuan Zang’s 玄奘 translation corpus of Vasubandhu, Cheng Weishi Lun 成唯識論, along with the treatises of two Tang Daoist liturgists Zhu Faman’s 朱法滿 and Du Guangting’s 杜光庭, reveal a shared belief that sacred smells transform the perfumed at a profound level, embedding the divine essence within them. The Yogâcāra concept of vāsanā, elucidated by Xuan Zang, was readily incorporated into Tang Daoism due to their shared soteriological interests. Tang Daoism was in the process of codifying its rituals for self-purification and collective salvation, thereby enhancing the significance of incense through its dynamic absorption of vāsanā. The olfactory practices in medieval Daoism demonstrate that East Asian medieval soteriology promoted universalism through the ritual interactions between Buddhism and Daoism. Full article
18 pages, 386 KiB  
Article
Prohibited Mountains and Forests in Late Imperial China
by Vincent Goossaert
Religions 2025, 16(1), 71; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16010071 - 11 Jan 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 993
Abstract
This essay explores the various types of spaces, primarily montane forested areas, where human access was restricted, either conditionally or entirely, during late imperial times. The range of restrictions always included felling trees, but often also encompassed other forms of extraction from local [...] Read more.
This essay explores the various types of spaces, primarily montane forested areas, where human access was restricted, either conditionally or entirely, during late imperial times. The range of restrictions always included felling trees, but often also encompassed other forms of extraction from local ecosystems. Based on the motivations for setting up and regulating such zones, it proposes a typology that includes imperial parks and graves, sacred sites, military exclusion zones, and certain forested commons. Based on some commonalities between these types, it concludes by reflecting on the place of notions of sacrality in local policies that directly impacted forested areas. Full article
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