РефератыИностранный языкTaTaoism Essay Research Paper TaoismThroughout history Taoism

Taoism Essay Research Paper TaoismThroughout history Taoism

Taoism Essay, Research Paper


Taoism


Throughout history, Taoism has been one of the most influential


religions of Eastern culture. This is certainly one of the most unique


of all religions. Many Taoists, in fact, do not even consider it a


religion; and in many ways it is not. Taoists make no claim that the


Tao exists.1 That is what essentially separates Taoism from the rest of


the world religions: there is no heated debate or battle over Taoist


doctrine; there have been no crusades to spread the religion. The very


essence of Taoism is quite the opposite. Taoism?s uniqueness and


open-endedness have allowed the religion to flourish almost undisturbed


and unchanged for over two thousand years.


The founder of Taoism was a man named Lao Tzu, who lived around the


year 604 B.C.E. According to Chinese legend, Lao Tzu was an archivist


in the imperial library at Lo Yang was known for his knowledge, although


he never taught.2 When Lao Tzu left his position at the library, he


went to the Chinese province of Chou. At the border, however, he was


stopped and forced to write down his teachings. During this time, he


wrote the Tao Te Ching, the major scripture of Taoism.3


After Lao Tzu?s death, a man named Yang Chu (440-366 B.C.E.) took up


his teachings.4 A naturalist and philosopher, Yang Chu believed highly


in self-regard and survival as the core of human nature and direction.


His ideals were personal integrity and self-protection, and said that he


was unwilling to pluck one hair from his head even if all humanity were


to benefit from it.5


The next influential Taoist philosopher was Chang Tzu, who lived from


350-275 B.C.E. He defined existence using Lao Tzu?s teachings.6 He


wrote fifty-two books in response to the Tao Te Ching, thirty-three of


which still survive today.7 Using exaggeration and fantasy, he


illustrated Lao Tzu?s teachings and how the Tao acted in nature. His


theories spoke of a cosmic unity which encompasses all reality and


guides it naturally, without force, to its proper end.8


The Yin and Yang theory became part of Taoist philosophy around 300


B.C.E. when they were mentioned in the Hsi tz?u, an appendix to the I


Ching.9 Yin and Yang are defined as the two forces in nature. They are


often called the two ?breaths? or ch?i.10 Yin is the feminine


principle, representing darkness, coolness, and dampness; Yang is the


masculine principle, representing brightness, warmth, and dryness.11


Neither principle is good or bad; they are not opposites, but each is


needed to maintain stability in the universe.12 This belief holds that


everything is defined through opposition; consequently, the virtues of


balance and understanding are highly valued.13


Taoism became an official religion between 100 and 200 C.E.14 Due to


competition from Buddhism, Taoists adopted many Buddhist beliefs.


During this pivotal point in the religion?s history, searching for


self-knowledge and wisdom were replaced by searching for solutions to


sorrows and other physical problems.15 Alchemy and superstition became


highly popular during this period of time, as Taoists tried to escape


reality rather than to control the artificial and unnatural. Many


Taoists used magic and the concept of Tao to try to extend the physical


life rather than to focus on the afterlife.16 Gradually the religion


becomes more complicated, with a wide pantheon of gods and a ruling


hierarchy.17


The leader Chang Ling took the title ?Heavenly Teacher? in 200 C.E. He


created a dynasty of high priests who manipulated Taoism to support a


superstitious doctrine of magic and mysticism.18 Seizing higher power


as a religious leader, he pioneered a merging of Taoism and


Zoroastrianism into a system called Five Bushels of Rice Taoism.


Eventually this developed into a society based on Mazdaism, a


Zoroastrian sect, where every believer was charged five bushels of


rice.19 Although the believers followed the basic Zoroastrian worship


format, they worshipped different gods: the Tao instead of Ahura-Mazda,


and the various Chinese folk gods in place of the Persian Angels.20


Three hundred years later, the philosopher Honen moved away from


Mazdaism and combined Taoism with Buddhism. This simplified religion he


created became known as the Pure Land School, or Amidaism. Gradually,


however, Taoism again became tied to magic, and it failed as a


religion.21 Today, only its original philosophies survive and there are


very few followers of Taoism, mostly found in Taiwan.22 Although


Taoism?s religious practices deteriorated with advancing Western


influence, its philosophical aspects have outlasted those of


Confucianism and Zen Buddhism.23


For centuries, Taoism has been known as the Way of Harmony.24 This is


because Taoists believe that the Tao leads all nature toward a natural


balance. The Tao, however, is not considered to be a deity or a ruler:


it may reign but it does not rule.25 This is reflected in seven basic


statements.26 The first states that the Tao is nature. This means that


the Tao is the way of everything, the movement of everything in nature,


and all existence. The second statement is that the Tao is knowledge,


meaning that the Tao is the utmost form of understanding and wisdom and


that to understand it means to understand all. The third statement says


that the Tao is Goodness. This indicates that the Tao is the path


toward virtue, and the highest virtue of these is conforming to the


Tao. The fourth statement is that the Tao is imminent. This means that


the Tao is the source of all reality and that the Tao is inseparable.


The fifth statement tells that the Tao is ?being?, or the process of


becoming, which characterizes reality. The sixth holds that the Tao is


felt in passiveness, not in activity. The final statement asserts that


the Tao is individual and unique for every person. Therefore, no person


can truly know the Tao outside themselves. As the Tao Te Ching states:


The ways that can be walked are not the eternal way.


The names that can be named are not the eternal name.


The nameless is the origin of the myriad creatures.


The named is the mother of the myriad creatures.


Therefore,


Always be without desire


in order to observe its wondrous subtleties;


Always have desire


so that you may observe its manifestations.27


In essence, the universe is a pattern which cannot exist without any


part of it. Therefore, trying to alter the Tao through action is


essentially trying to destroy the balance of the universe.28


Taoists have a very simple definition of virtue, called Teh. For a


Taoist, the on

ly virtue is to find unity with the Tao.29 This


contradicts Western religious thought because Westerners believe in


peace and salvation through action. Taoists, however, believe that


unity with the Tao requires no effort but rather passive existence


without work; by finding unity with the Tao, one can therefore find


heaven. This is explained in Lao Tzu?s doctrine of the three treasures,


those being love, balance, and humility.30 Love stems from and results


in kindness and consideration for others. Balance can be found through


self-control and moderation. Humility results from self-esteem and


happiness in one?s status.


The Taoist path to salvation is called Wu Wei, meaning ?the principle


of non-action.”31 The way to attain unity with the Tao involves no


effort, ambition, discipline, or education. Therefore, each person has


an equal opportunity to attain balance. It involves a surrender to


nature: since every person is by definition part of the Tao, there is no


need or reason to seek it elsewhere. Furthermore, everyone has direct


access to the Tao because the Tao is connected to reality, and everyone


is a part of reality.32 In summary, there is no need to seek answers


outside of oneself. Through non-action the answer is revealed through


ones own existence.


Taoism is different from any other Eastern religion. According to


Lawrence Durrell, ?Taoism is such a privileged brand of eastern


philosophy that one would be right to regard it as an aesthetic view of


the universe rather than a purely institutional one.?33 Thus, as Taoism


is a religion of non-action, Lao Tzu and his followers discouraged the


practice of rituals. As a result, Taoism has no tangible rituals.


Early Taoists, in fact, were far more concerned with everyday life than


with celebrations or worship.34 Taoists prefer to leave the question of


God unanswered.35


Taoist rituals did flourish, however, around and during the 900s.36


During this time lavish temples were built, complex rituals were


practiced, and colorful festivals were celebrated.37 The closest


lasting action in Taoism to rituals is the idea of wu-hsing.38 This is


the set of notions called the ?five phases? (wu-hsing) or ?powers?


(wu-te): water, fire, wood, metal, and earth.39 This concept help


philosophers build a system of correspondences and participations which


link all macrocosmic and microcosmic phenomena. Thus all seasons,


colors, directions, musical tones, animals, and other aspects of nature


correspond to the five major inner organs of the human body.40 Because


of this, many Taoists believed that the essences relating to their


respective phases nourished the organs of the body; this supposedly led


to longevity.41


Several sects of Taoism emerged during the eleventh and twelfth


centuries. Among them were: the T?ai-i (Supreme Unity) sect, founded by


Hsiao Pao-chen in approximately 1140; the Chenta Tao (Perfect and Great


Tao) sect, founded by Liu Te-jen in 1142; and the Ch??an-chen (Perfect


Realization) sect, founded in 1163 by Wang Che.41 The Ch??an-chen


became very popular, and small groups of monks from this sect survived


until the twentieth century.42


Taoism has been affected largely by Confucianism, and vice versa. The


two religions grew up together and compose a Yin-Yang themselves.


Confucianism works for the public welfare, Taoism concerns the


individual.43 Confucianism emphasized sensibility and gentility, while


the latter encouraged spontaneity.44 While the two religions are


fundamentally different, they rely upon each other to create a balance


of their differences. Because of this, many people believe in and


practice both Confucianism and Taoism. Neither probably would have


survived if the other had never existed.


Taoism is in itself a very difficult religion to define. Little is


known of its founder or its origins, and it has no clear doctrine or


method of worship.45 The whole concept of Tao is extremely abstract and


therefore cannot be fully explained, only understood. The religion may


hold a completely different meaning for each person–it may be a form of


philosophy, religion, or magic.46 The religion has guided countless


individuals through life and toward union with the Tao. As it has


influenced the past through its writings, Taoism may influence the world


for generations more with its wisdom.


1.Bettencourt, Jerome: Comparative World Religions: Notes. Oxnard:


Fall


Semester 1994-95.


2.Durrell, Lawrence: A Smile in the Mind?s Eye. New York: Universe


Books,


1982.


3.Goetz, Philip (Ed.): Encyclopaedia Britannica, 15th Edition, Vol. 28.


?Taoism.? Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc., 1991.


4.Lao Tzu: Tao Te Ching. New York: Bantam Books, 1990.


5.Pastva, Loretta: Great Religions of the World. Winona, Minnesota:


Saint


Mary?s Press, 1986.


6.Smullyan, Raymond: The Tao Is Silent. San Francisco: HarperCollins


Publishers, 1977.


7.Watts, Alan: Tao: The Watercourse Way. New York: Pantheon Books,


1975.


Endnotes


1 Alan Watts, Tao: The Watercourse Way (New York: Pantheon Books,


1975), p. 5.


2 Jerome Bettencourt, Comparative World Religions: Notes (Oxnard: Fall


Semester 1994-95).


3 Ibid.


4 Ibid.


5 Ibid.


6 Ibid.


7 Ibid.


8 Ibid.


9 Philip Goetz, Ed., Encyclopaedia Britannica 15th Edition, Vol. 28:


?Taoism? (Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc., 1991), p. 399


10 Ibid., p. 398


11 Bettencourt.


12 Goetz, p. 398.


13 Bettencourt.


14 Ibid.


15 Loretta Pastva, Great Religions of the World (Winona, Minnesota:


Saint Mary?s Press, 1986), p. 117.


16 Ibid.


17 Bettencourt.


18 Ibid.


19 Ibid.


20 Ibid.


21 Ibid.


22 Goetz, p. 407


23 Bettencourt.


24 Ibid.


25 Alan Watts, Tao: The Watercourse Way (New York: Pantheon Books,


1975), p. 51.


26 Bettencourt.7


27 Lao Tzu, Tao Te Ching (San Francisco: HarperCollins Publishers,


1977), p. 59.


28 Watts, p. 51.


29 Bettencourt.


30 Ibid.


31 Ibid.


32 Ibid.


33 Lawrence Durrell, A Smile in the Mind?s Eye (New York: Universe


Books, 1982), p. 18.


34 Pastva, p. 117.


35 Durrell, p. 19.


36 Pastva, p. 117.


37 Ibid.


38 Goetz, p. 399.


39 Ibid.


40 Ibid.


41 Ibid., p. 404.


42 Ibid.


43 Pastva, p. 115


44 Ibid.


45 Ibid.


46 Ibid.

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