fbpx
Wikipedia

Taoism

Taoism or Daoism (/ˈtɪzəm/ (listeni) or /ˈdɪzəm/ (listeni)) is a Chinese philosophy, as well as a set of Chinese traditions and religions, that emphasize living in harmony with the Tao (Chinese: ; pinyin: Dào; Wade–Giles: Tao 4; lit. 'Way', 'Path'). The Tao is generally defined as the source of everything and the ultimate principle underlying reality.[2][3] The Tao Te Ching and the Zhuangzi are widely considered key Taoist texts and are distinctly philosophical in nature and theme.

Taoism
Tao, a Chinese word signifying way, path, route, road or, sometimes more loosely, doctrine
Chinese name
Chinese道教
Hanyu PinyinDàojiào[1]
Literal meaning"Religion of the Way"
Vietnamese name
Vietnamese alphabetĐạo giáo
Chữ Hán道教
Korean name
Hangul도교
Hanja道敎
Transcriptions
Revised Romanizationdo gyo
Japanese name
Kanji道教
Hiraganaどうきょう
Transcriptions
RomanizationDō kyō

Taoism includes various self-cultivation methods, including meditation, internal alchemy, and various rituals. Common aims include becoming one with the natural flow of the Dao, longevity, becoming a sage (zhenren) and even an immortal (xian).[2][4] Taoist ethics vary depending on the particular school, but they generally tend to emphasize virtues such as "inaction" (无为; 無爲; wúwéi), "naturalness" or "spontaneity" (自然; zìrán), "simplicity" (; ; ), and the three treasures: compassion (; ), frugality (; ; jiǎn) and humility (不敢为天下先; 不敢爲天下先; bù gǎn wèi tiānxià xiān).

The roots of Taoism go back at least to the 4th century BCE. Early Taoism drew its cosmological notions from the School of Yinyang (also known as "the Naturalists"). Other influences include: Shang and Zhou dynasty religion, Mohism, Confucianism, Legalist theorists like Shen Buhai and Han Fei, and the Chinese classics, especially the I Ching and the Lüshi Chunqiu.[5][6][7]

Taoism has had a profound influence on Chinese culture in the course of the centuries and Dao masters (道士; dàoshi), a title traditionally attributed only to the clergy and not to their lay followers, usually take care to note the distinction between their ritual tradition and the practices of Chinese folk religion and non-Taoist vernacular ritual orders, which are often mistakenly identified as pertaining to Taoism. Chinese alchemy (especially "internal alchemy"—neidan), Chinese astrology, Chan (Zen) Buddhism, several Chinese martial arts including Tai chi, traditional Chinese medicine, feng shui, and many styles of Qigong have been associated with Taoism throughout history.

Today, the Taoist religion is one of the five religious doctrines officially recognized by the People's Republic of China (PRC), including in its special administrative regions (SARs) of Hong Kong and Macau.[8] It is also a major religion in Taiwan[9] as well as throughout the Sinosphere including Korea, Japan, and Vietnam, and it has a significant number of adherents in a number of other societies throughout East and Southeast Asia, particularly in Malaysia, Singapore. Taoism also has adherents in the West, which includes East or Southeast Asian immigrants as well as Western convert Taoists.

Definition Edit

 
The birthplaces of notable Chinese philosophers from the Hundred Schools of Thought in the Zhou Dynasty. Philosophers of Taoism are marked by triangles in dark green.

Spelling and pronunciation Edit

Since the introduction of the Pinyin system for romanizing Mandarin Chinese, there have been those who have felt that "Taoism" would be more appropriately spelled as "Daoism". The Mandarin Chinese pronunciation for the word (way, path) is spelled as tao4 in the older Wade–Giles romanization system (from which the spelling "Taoism" is derived), while it is spelled as dào in the newer Pinyin romanization system (from which the spelling "Daoism" is derived). The Wade–Giles tao4 and the Pinyin dào are pronounced identically in Mandarin Chinese (like the unaspirated "t" in "stop"); despite this, "Taoism" and "Daoism" are often pronounced differently in English vernacular.[10]

Categorization and terminology Edit

The word Taoism is used to translate different Chinese terms:[11]

  1. Teachings of the Dao (道教; Dàojiào; lit. "teachings of the Tao"), often interpreted as the "Taoist religion" proper, or the "liturgical" aspect of Taoism[12]—a family of organized religious movements sharing concepts or terminology from "Taoist philosophy";[13] the first of these being the Celestial Masters school.
  2. Philosophical School of the Dao (道家; Dàojiā; lit. "school or family of the Tao", sometimes "Taoist philosophy") or "Taology" (道學; dàoxué; lit. "study of the Tao"), or the mystical aspect[12]—the philosophical doctrines based on the texts of the I Ching, the Tao Te Ching (道德經; dàodéjīng), and the Zhuangzi (莊子; zhuāngzi). One of the hundred schools of thought during the Warring States period. The earliest recorded uses of the term Tao to refer to a philosophy or a school of thought are found in the works of classical historians during Han Dynasty.[14][15] These works include The Commentary of Zhuo (左传; zuǒ zhuàn) by Zuo Qiuming (左丘明) and in the Records of the Grand Historian (史記; Shǐjì) by Sima Tan. This usage of the term to narrowly denote a school of thought precedes the emergence of the Celestial Masters and associated later religions. It is unlikely that Zhuangzi was familiar with the text of the Tao Te Ching,[15][16] and Zhuangzi himself may have died before the term was in use.[16]

The use of the term Dàojiā dates back to the Han dynasty (around 100 BCE) and was used to refer to the supposed authors of texts like the Tao Te Ching and the Zhuāngzǐ.[17][18]

The distinction between Taoist philosophy (道家) and religion (道教) is an ancient one, one rooted in Chinese history and language—even though both share concepts. The earliest references to the 道 (Dao) are philosophical—relating either to metaphysics or to the conditions for human flourishing and are completely devoid of liturgical aspects. This distinction has been rearticulated by experts on Chinese history and philosophy like Feng Youlan (馮友蘭; 1895–1990) and Wing-tsit Chan (陳榮捷; 1901–1994) and is accepted amongst modern Chinese and observed in everyday language. This distinction is rejected by the majority of Western and Japanese scholars of religion, some of who claim that their interpretive procedures and hermeneutic techniques have superior validity to those of Feng Youlan and Chan Wing-Tsit, as well as the prevailing understanding in modern China.[19] These claims, which emphasize that Taoist religion and philosophy are inseparable and cannot be distinguished, are being made by Western scholars of religion, rather than by scholars of history or philosophy.

Furthermore, the nature of the text of the Dao DeJing and the Zhuangzi, as well as early Chinese encyclopedias and discussions, identify Taoism as originally being a school of thought with no cultic significance. It can be nonetheless said that religious Taoism emerged from the latter-day synthesis of folk religion and the appropriation of the ideas of secular, philosophical Taoism. Because the ideas in original philosophical Taoism were entertained free of cultic aspect by pre-Han and Han thinkers, and continued to inform the lives and actions of Song dynasty neo-Confucianists and others who rejected the state-sanctioned and private cults that later called themselves Taoist or that were labelled as such, it has been proven useful to distinguish between the two. This distinction is observed in the Chinese language—道家 (the Daoist philosophy) and 道教 (the Daoist religion).

This distinction is contested by hermeneutic (interpretive) difficulties in the categorization of the different Taoist schools, sects, and movements.[20] Regarding this distinction, Russell Kirkland writes that "most scholars who have seriously studied Taoism, both in Asia and in the West" have abandoned this "simplistic dichotomy".[21] Others would argue that to confute the two would be to ignore the way Chinese people currently think and use language and the way that they have actually thought in the past. Neo-Confucianists and politicians might identify themselves as Taoist without subscribing to any Taoist rituals. For instance, both Shen Kuo and Kuo Hsiang were non-religious.

Similarly, religious Taoism emerged from the synthesis of folk religion and the appropriation of the ideas of secular, philosophical Taoism. Louis Komjathy writes that this is an untenable misconception because "the association of daojia with "thought" (sixiang) and of daojiao with "religion" (zongjiao) is a modern Chinese construction largely rooted in earlier Chinese literati, European colonialist, and Protestant missionary interpretations."[22] Komjathy argues that none of these terms were understood in this bifurcated "philosophy/religion" manner in the pre-modern era. Daojia was a taxonomical category for Taoist texts that was eventually applied in the early medieval period for Taoist movements and priests.[22] Meanwhile, Daojiao was originally used to distinguish Taoist tradition from Buddhism. Thus, Daojiao included daojia.[22] Komjathy notes that the earliest Taoist texts also "reveal a religious community composed of master-disciple lineages".[22] Thus, according to Komjathy, "Taoism was a religious tradition from the beginning."[22]

The Chinese-American philosopher Chung-ying Cheng also views Taoism as a religion, one that has been embedded into Chinese history and tradition, while also assuming many different forms, including "forms of philosophy and practical wisdom".[23] Chung-ying Cheng also noted that the Taoist view of heaven flows mainly from "observation and meditation, [though] the teaching of the way (Dao) can also include the way of heaven independently of human nature".[23] Taoism can also not be classified as a mere variant of Chinese folk religion. This is because while the two share some similar concepts, much of Chinese folk religion is quite different from the tenets and core teachings of Taoism.[24]

Scholars continue to disagree on the nature of Taoist religion. For example, sinologists like Isabelle Robinet and Livia Kohn agree that "Taoism has never been a unified religion, and has constantly consisted of a combination of teachings based on a variety of original revelations."[25] Meanwhile, Komjathy sees Taoism as "a unified religious tradition characterized by complexity and diversity."[26]

"Taoists" Edit

Traditionally, the Chinese language does not have terms defining lay people adhering to the doctrines or the practices of Taoism, who fall instead within the field of folk religion. Taoist, in Western sinology, is traditionally used to translate daoshi/taoshih (道士, "master of the Dao"), thus strictly defining the priests of Taoism, ordained clergymen of a Taoist institution who "represent Taoist culture on a professional basis", are experts of Taoist liturgy, and therefore can employ this knowledge and ritual skill for the benefit of a community.[27]

This role of Taoist priests reflects the definition of Taoism as a "liturgical framework for the development of local cults", in other words a scheme or structure for Chinese religion, proposed first by the scholar and Taoist initiate Kristofer Schipper in The Taoist Body (1986).[28] Taoshi are comparable to the non-Taoist ritual masters(法師) of vernacular traditions (the so-called Faism) within Chinese religion.[28]

The term dàojiàotú (道敎徒; 'follower of Dao'), with the meaning of "Taoist" as "lay member or believer of Taoism", is a modern invention that goes back to the introduction of the Western category of "organized religion" in China in the 20th century, but it has no significance for most of Chinese society in which Taoism continues to be an "order" of the larger body of Chinese religion.

History Edit

 
Laozi Riding an Ox by Zhang Lu (c. 1464–1538)
 
Illustration of "The Debate on the Joy of Fish" from the Zhuangzi

Classical Taoism and its sources Edit

Scholars like Harold Roth argue that early Taoism was a series of "inner-cultivation lineages" of master-disciple communities. According to Roth, these practitioners emphasized a contentless and nonconceptual apophatic meditation as a way of achieving union with the Dao.[29] According to Louis Komjathy, their worldview "emphasized the Dao as sacred, and the universe and each individual being as a manifestation of the Dao."[30] These communities were also closely related to and intermixed with the fangshi (method master) communities.[26]

Other scholars, like Russell Kirkland, argue that before the Han dynasty, there were no real "Taoists" or "Taoism". Instead, there were various sets of behaviors, practices, and interpretative frameworks (like the ideas of the Yijing, yin-yang thought, as well as Mohist, "Legalist", and "Confucian" ideas), which were eventually synthesized in the medieval era into the first forms of "Taoism".[31]

Some of the main early Taoist sources include: the Neiye, the Zhuangzi, and the Tao Te Ching.[32] The Tao Te Ching, which is attributed to Lao Tzu (the "Old Master"), is dated by scholars to sometime between the 4th and 6th century BCE.[33][34]

According to tradition, many Taoists believe that Lao Tzu founded Taoism.[35] Laozi's historicity is disputed, with many scholars seeing him as a legendary founding figure.[36][37]

While Taoism is often regarded in the West as arising from Laozi, many Chinese Taoists claim that the Yellow Emperor formulated many of their precepts,[38] including the quest for "long life".[39] Traditionally, the Yellow Emperor's founding of Taoism was said to have been because he "dreamed of an ideal kingdom whose tranquil inhabitants lived in harmonious accord with the natural law and possessed virtues remarkably like those espoused by early Taoism. On waking from his dream, Huangdi sought to" bring about "these virtues in his own kingdom, to ensure order and prosperity among the inhabitants".[40]

Early Taoism drew on the ideas found in the religion of the Shang dynasty and the Zhou dynasty, such as their use of divination and ancestor worship and the idea of Heaven (Tian) and its relationship to humanity.[6] According to modern scholars of Taoism, such as Russell Kirkland and Livia Kohn, Taoist philosophy also developed by drawing on numerous schools of thought from the Warring States Period (4th to 3rd centuries BCE), including Mohism, Confucianism, Legalist theorists like Shen Buhai and Han Fei which speak of Wu wei, the School of Naturalists (from which Taoism draws its main cosmological ideas, yin and yang and the five phases), and the Chinese classics, especially the I Ching and the Lüshi Chunqiu.[5][6][7]

Meanwhile, Isabelle Robinet identifies four components in the emergence of Taoism: the teachings found in the Daodejing and Zhuangzi, techniques for achieving ecstasy, practices for achieving longevity and becoming an immortal (xian), and practices for exorcism.[36] Robinet states that some elements of Taoism may be traced to prehistoric folk religions in China.[41] In particular, many Taoist practices drew from the Warring States era phenomena of the wu (Chinese shamans) and the fangshi ("method masters", which probably derived from the "archivist-soothsayers of antiquity").[42]

Both terms were used to designate individuals dedicated to "...magic, medicine, divination,... methods of longevity and to ecstatic wanderings" as well as exorcism.[42] The fangshi were philosophically close to the School of Naturalists and relied greatly on astrological and calendrical speculations in their divinatory activities.[43] Female shamans played an important role in the early Taoist tradition, which was particularly strong in the southern state of Chu. Early Taoist movements developed their own tradition in contrast to shamanism while also absorbing shamanic elements.[44]

During the early period, some Daoists lived as hermits or recluses who did not participate in political life, while others sought to establish a harmonious society based on Daoist principles.[30] Zhuang Zhou (c. 370–290 BCE) was the most influential of the Daoist hermits. Some scholars holds that since he lived in the south, he may have been influenced by Chinese shamanism.[45] Zhuang Zhou and his followers insisted they were the heirs of ancient traditions and the ways of life of by-then legendary kingdoms.[46] Pre-Daoist philosophers and mystics whose activities may have influenced Daoism included shamans, naturalists skilled in understanding the properties of plants and geology, diviners, early environmentalists, tribal chieftains, court scribes and commoner members of governments, members of the nobility in Chinese states, and the descendants of refugee communities.[47]

Significant movements in early Daoism disregarded the existence of gods, and many who believed in gods thought they were subject to the natural law of the Tao, in a similar nature to all other life.[48][49]

Early Taoists studied the natural world in attempts to find what they thought were supernatural laws that governed existence.[34] Taoists created scientific principles that were the first of their kind in China, and the belief system has been known to merge scientific, philosophical, and religious conceits from close to its beginning.[34]

Early Organized Taoism Edit

 
Zhang Daoling, the first Celestial Master

By the Han dynasty (206 BCE–220 CE), the various sources of Taoism had coalesced into a coherent tradition of ritualists in the state of Shu (modern Sichuan).[45] One of the earliest forms of Taoism was the Han era (2nd century BCE) Huang–Lao movement, which was an influential school of thought at this time.[50] The Huainanzi and the Taipingjing are important sources from this period.[51] Also during the Han, the earliest extant commentaries on the Daodejing were written: the Heshang Gong commentary and the Xiang'er commentary.[52][53]

The first organized form of Taoism was the Way of the Celestial Masters (Tianshi Dao), which developed from the Five Pecks of Rice movement at the end of the 2nd century CE. The latter had been founded by Zhang Taoling, who was said to have had a vision of Laozi in 142 CE and claimed that the world was coming to an end.[54][55] Zhang sought to teach people to repent and prepare for the coming cataclysm, after which they would become the seeds of a new era of great peace (taiping). It was a mass movement in which men and women could act as libationers and tend to the commoners.[56] A related movement arose in Shandong called the "Way of Great Peace", seeking to create a new world by replacing the Han dynasty. This movement led to the Yellow Turban Rebellion, and after years of bloody war they were crushed.[55]

The Celestial Masters movement survived this period and did not take part in attempting to replace the Han. As such they grew and became an influential religion during the Three Kingdoms period, focusing on ritual confession and petition, as well as developing a well-organized religious structure.[57] The Celestial Masters school was officially recognized by the warlord Cao Cao in 215 CE, legitimizing Cao Cao's rise to power in return.[58] Laozi received imperial recognition as a divinity in the mid-2nd century BCE.[59]

Another important early Taoist movement was Taiqing (Great Clarity), which was a tradition of external alchemy (weidan) that sought immortality through the concoction of elixirs, often using toxic elements like cinnabar, lead, mercury, and realgar, as well as ritual and purificatory practices.[60]

After this point, Taoism did not have nearly as significant an effect on the passing of law as the syncretic Confucian-Legalist tradition.[citation needed]

Three Kingdoms and Six Dynasties eras Edit

 
A Taoist talisman from one of the Lingbao Scriptures.

The Three Kingdoms Period saw the rise of the Xuanxue (Mysterious Learning or Deep Wisdom) tradition, which focused on philosophical inquiry and integrated Confucian teachings with Taoist thought. The movement included scholars like Wang Bi (226–249), He Yan (d. 249), Xiang Xiu (223?–300), Guo Xiang (d. 312), and Pei Wei (267–300).[61] Another later influential figure was the 4th century alchemist Ge Hong, who wrote a key Taoist work on inner cultivation, the Baopuzi (Master Embracing Simplicity).[62]

The Six Dynasties (316–589) era saw the rise of two new Taoist traditions, Shangqing (Supreme Clarity) and Lingbao (Numinous Treasure). Shangqing was based on a series of revelations by gods and spirits to a certain Yang Xi between 364 and 370. As Livia Kohn writes, these revelations included detailed descriptions of the heavens as well as "specific methods of shamanic travels or ecstatic excursions, visualizations, and alchemical concoctions."[63] The Shangqing revelations also introduced many new Taoist scriptures.[64]

Similarly, between 397 and 402, Ge Chaofu compiled a series of scriptures that later served as the foundation of the Lingbao school, which was most influential during the later Song dynasty (960–1279) and focused on scriptural recitation and the use of talismans for harmony and longevity.[65][66] The Lingbao school practiced purification rituals called purgations (zhai) in which talismans were empowered. Lingbao also adopted Mahayana Buddhist elements. According to Kohn, they "integrated aspects of Buddhist cosmology, worldview, scriptures, and practices, and created a vast new collection of Taoist texts in close imitation of Buddhist sutras."[67] Louis Komjathy also notes that they adopted the Mahayana Buddhist universalism in its promotion of "universal salvation" (pudu).[68]

During this period, Louguan, the first Taoist monastic institution (influenced by Buddhist monasticism) was established in the Zhongnan mountains by a local Taoist master named Yin Tong. This tradition was called the Northern Celestial masters, and their main scripture was the Xisheng jing (Scripture of Western Ascension).[69]

During the sixth century, Taoists attempted to unify the various traditions into one integrated Taoism that could compete with Buddhism and Confucianism. To do this they adopted the schema known as the "three caverns", first developed by the scholar Lu Xiujing (406–477) based on the "three vehicles" of Buddhism. The three caverns were: Perfection (Dongzhen), associated with the Three Sovereigns; Mystery (Dongxuan), associated with Lingbao; and Spirit (Dongshen), associated with the Supreme Clarity tradition.[70] Lu Xiujing also used this schema to arrange the Taoist scriptures and Taoist deities. Lu Xiujing worked to compile the first edition of the Daozang (the Taoist Canon), which was published at the behest of the Chinese emperor. Thus, according to Russell Kirkland, "in several important senses, it was really Lu Hsiu-ching who founded Taoism, for it was he who first gained community acceptance for a common canon of texts, which established the boundaries, and contents, of 'the teachings of the Tao' (Tao-chiao). Lu also reconfigured the ritual activities of the tradition, and formulated a new set of liturgies, which continue to influence Taoist practice to the present day."[71]

This period also saw the development of the Three Pure Ones, which merged the high deities from different Taoist traditions into a common trinity that has remained influential until today.[70]

Later Imperial Dynasties Edit

 
A temple in the Wudangshan, a sacred space in Taoism.

The new Integrated Taoism, now with a united Taoist identity, gained official status in China during the Tang dynasty. This tradition was termed HP: Daojiao/WP: Taochiao (the teaching of the Tao).[72] The Tang was the height of Taoist influence, during which Taoism, led by the Patriarch of Supreme Clarity, was the dominant religion in China.[73][74][72] According to Russell Kirkland, this new Taoist synthesis had its main foundation in the Lingbao school's teachings, which was appealing to all classes of society and drew on Mahayana Buddhism.[75]

Perhaps the most important figure of the Tang was the court Taoist and writer Du Guangting (850–933). Du wrote numerous works about Taoist rituals, history, myth, and biography. He also reorganized and edited the Taotsang after a period of war and loss.[76]

During the Tang, several emperors became patrons of Taoism, inviting priests to court to conduct rituals and enhance the prestige of the sovereign.[77] The Gaozong Emperor even decreed that the Daodejing was to be a topic in the imperial examinations.[78] During the reign of the 7th century Emperor Taizong, the Five Dragons Temple (the first temple at the Wudang Mountains) was constructed.[79] Wudang would eventually become a major center for Taoism and a home for Taoist martial arts (Wudang quan).

Emperor Xuanzong (r. 712–755) was also a devoted Taoist who wrote various Taoist works, and according to Livia Kohn, "had frequent meetings with senior masters, ritual specialists, Taoist poets, and official patriarchs, such as Sima Chengzhen."[80] He reorganized imperial rituals based on Taoist forms, sponsored Taoist shrines and monasteries, and introduced a separate examination system based on Taoism.[80] Another important Taoist figure of the Tang dynasty was Lu Dongbin, who is considered the founder of the jindan meditation tradition and an influential figure in the development of neidan (internal alchemy) practice.

Likewise, several Song dynasty emperors, most notably Huizong, were active in promoting Taoism, collecting Taoist texts, and publishing updated editions of the Daozang.[81] The Song era saw new scriptures and new movements of ritualists and Taoist rites, the most popular of which were the Thunder Rites (leifa). The Thunder rites were protection and exorcism rites that evoked the celestial department of thunder, and they became central to the new Heavenly Heart (Tianxin) tradition as well as for the Youthful Incipience (Tongchu) school.[82]

 
Qiu Chuji (1503) by Guo Xu

In the 12th century, the Quanzhen (Complete Perfection) School was founded in Shandong by the sage Wang Chongyang (1113–1170) to compete with religious Taoist traditions that worshipped "ghosts and gods" and largely displaced them.[83] The school focused on inner transformation,[83] mystical experience,[83] monasticism, and asceticism.[84][85] Quanzhen flourished during the 13th and 14th centuries and during the Yuan dynasty. The Quanzhen school was syncretic, combining elements from Buddhism and Confucianism with Taoist tradition. According to Wang Chongyang, the "three teachings" (Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism), "when investigated, prove to be but one school".[86] Quanzhen became the largest and most important Taoist school in China when master Qiu Chuji met with Genghis Khan who ended up making him the leader of all Chinese religions as well as exempting Quanzhen institutions from taxation.[87][88] Another important Quanzhen figure was Zhang Boduan, author of the Wuzhen pian, a classic of internal alchemy, and the founder of the southern branch of Quanzhen.

During the Song era, the Zhengyi tradition properly developed in Southern China among Taoists of the Chang clan.[89] This liturgically focused tradition would continue to be supported by later emperors and survives to this day.[90]

Under the Ming dynasty (1368–1644), aspects of Confucianism, Taoism, and East Asian Buddhism were consciously synthesized in the Neo-Confucian school, which eventually became Imperial orthodoxy for state bureaucratic purposes.[91] Taoist ideas also influenced Neo-Confucian thinkers like Wang Yangming and Zhan Ruoshui.[92] During the Ming, the legends of the Eight Immortals (the most important of which is Lü Dongbin) rose to prominence, being part of local plays and folk culture.[93] Ming emperors like the Hongwu Emperor continued to invite Taoists to court and hold Taoist rituals that were believed to enhance the power of the throne. The most important of these were connected with the Taoist deity Xuanwu ("Perfect Warrior"), which was the main dynastic protector deity of the Ming.[77]

The Ming era saw the rise of the Jingming ("Pure Illumination") school to prominence, which merged Taoism with Buddhist and Confucian teachings and focused on "purity, clarity, loyalty and filial piety".[94] [95] The school derided internal and external alchemy, fasting (bigu), and breathwork. Instead, the school focused on using mental cultivation to return to the mind's original purity and clarity (which could become obscured by desires and emotions).[94] Key figures of this school include Xu Xun, Liu Yu, Huang Yuanji, Xu Yi, and Liu Yuanran. Some of these figures taught at the imperial capital and were awarded titles.[94] Their emphasis on practical ethics and self-cultivation in everyday life (rather than ritual or monasticism) made it very popular among the literati class.[96]

The Qing dynasty (1644–1912) mainly promoted Buddhism as well as Neo-Confucianism.[96] Thus, during this period, the status and influence of Taoism declined. During the 18th century, the Qing imperial library excluded virtually all Taoist books.[97]

The Qing era also saw the birth of the Longmen ("Dragon Gate" 龍門) school of Wang Kunyang (1552–1641), a branch of Quanzhen from southern China that became established at the White Cloud Temple.[98][99] Longmen authors like Liu Yiming (1734–1821) and Min Yide (1758–1836) worked to promote and preserve Taoist inner alchemy practices through books like The Secret of the Golden Flower.[100] The Longmen school synthesized the Quanzhen and neidan teachings with the Chan Buddhist and Neo-Confucian elements that the Jingming tradition had developed, making it widely appealing to the literati class.[101]

Early modern Taoism Edit

 
Yang Chengfu practicing Tai chi
 
English language Chinese Health magazines with Taoist and Qigong content

During the 19th and 20th centuries, Taoism suffered much destruction as a result of religious persecution and numerous wars and conflicts that beset China in the so called century of humiliation. This period of persecution was caused by numerous factors including Confucian prejudices, anti-traditional Chinese modernist ideologies, European and Japanese colonialism, and Christian missionization.[102] By the 20th century, only one complete copy of the Tao Tsang survived intact, stored at the White Cloud Monastery in Beijing.[103] A key Taoist figure during this period was Chen Yingning (1880–1969). He was a key member of the early Chinese Taoist Association and wrote numerous books promoting Taoist practice [104]

During the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976), many Taoist priests were laicized and sent to work camps, and many Taoist sites and temples were destroyed or converted to secular use.[105][106] This period saw an exodus of Taoists out of China. They immigrated to Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, and to Europe and North America. Thus, the communist repression had the consequence of making Taoism a world religion by disseminating Taoists throughout the world.[107]

In the 1910s, Taoist doctrine about immortals and waiting until after death to live in "the dwelling of the immortals" was one of the faith's most popular and influential beliefs.[108]

The 20th century was also a creative period for Taoism despite its many setbacks. The Taoist influenced practice of Tai Chi developed during this time, led by figures like Yang Chengfu and Sun Lutang.[109] Early proponents of Tai Chi Quan, like Sun Lutang, claimed that Tai Chi was a Taoist internal practice created by the Taoist immortal Zhang Sanfeng (though modern scholars note that this claim lacks credible historical evidence).[110]

Late modern Taoism Edit

 
Wong Tai Sin Temple, one of the most important Taoist temples in Hong Kong

Taoism began to recover during the Reform and Opening up period (beginning in 1979) after which it experienced increased religious freedom in mainland China.[111] This led to the restoration of many temples and communities, the publishing of Taoist literature and the preservation of Taoist material culture.[112] Several Chinese intellectuals, like Hu Fuchen (Chinese Academy of Social Studies) and Liu Xiaogan (Chinese University of Hong Kong) have worked to developed a "New Daojia" (xin daojia), which parallels the rise of New Confucianism.[113]

During the 1980s and 1990s, China experienced the so called Qigong fever, which saw a surge in the popularity of Qigong practice throughout China. During this period many new Taoist and Taoist influenced religions sprung up, the most popular being those associated with Qigong, such as Zangmigong (Tantric Qigong influenced by Tibetan Buddhism), Zhonggong (Central Qigong), and Falungong (which came to be outlawed and repressed by the Chinese Communist Party [CCP]).[104]

Today, Taoism is one of five official recognized religions in the People's Republic of China. In mainland China, the government regulates its activities through the Chinese Taoist Association.[114] Regarding the status of Taoism in mainland China, Livia Kohn writes:

Taoist institutions are state-owned, monastics are paid by the government, several bureaus compete for revenues and administrative power, and training centers require courses in Marxism as preparation for full ordination. Still, temple compounds are growing on the five sacred mountains, on Taoist mountains, and in all major cities.[115]

The White Cloud Temple at Beijing remains the most important center for the training of Taoist monastics on the mainland, while the five sacred mountains of China also contain influential Taoist centers. Other key sites include: Wudangshan, Mount Longhu, Mount Qiyun, Mount Qingcheng, Mount Tai, Zhongnan mountains, Mount Mao, and Mount Lao.[116] Meanwhile, Taoism is also practiced much more freely in Taiwan and Hong Kong, where it is a major religion and retains unique features and movements that differ from mainland Taoism.[117] Taoism is also practiced throughout the wider East Asian cultural sphere.[118]

 
The Temple among the Trees Beneath the Clouds (雲林廟), also known as Weaverville Joss House State Historic Park, the oldest Chinese temple in California and an active Taoist center.

Outside of China, many traditionally Taoist practices have spread, especially through Chinese emigration as well as conversion by non-Chinese.[118] Taoist influenced practices, like Tai chi and qigong, are also popular around the world.[119] As such, Taoism is now a diverse "world religion" with a global distribution.[118]

During the late 20th century, Taoism began to spread to the Western world, leading to various forms of Taoist communities in the West, with Taoist publications, websites, meditation and Tai chi centers, and translations of Taoist texts by western scholars as well as non-specialists.[120] Taoist classics like the Daodejing have also became popular in the New Age movement and in "popular Western Taoism", a kind of popularized hybrid spirituality.[121] According to Louis Komjathy, this "popular Western Taoism" is associated with popular translations and interpretations of the Daodejing and the work of popular figures like James Legge, Alan Watts, John Blofeld, Gia-fu Feng, and Bruce Lee.[122] This popular spirituality also draws on Chinese martial arts (which are often unrelated to Taoism proper), American Transcendentalism, 1960s counterculture, New Age spirituality, the perennial philosophy, and alternative medicine.[123]

On the other hand, traditionally minded Taoists in the West are often either ethnically Chinese or generally assume some level of sinification, especially the adoption of Chinese language and culture. This is because, for most traditional Taoists, the religion is not seen as separate from Chinese ethnicity and culture. As such, most Western convert Taoist groups are led either by Chinese teachers or by teachers who studied with Chinese teachers.[124] Some prominent Western Taoist associations include: Associacion de Taoism de España, Association Francaise Daoiste, British Daoist Association, Daoist Foundation (San Diego, California), American Taoist and Buddhist Association (New York), Ching Chung Taoist Association (San Francisco), Universal Society of the Integral Way (Ni Hua-Ching), and Sociedade Taoista do Brasil.[125]

Particularly popular in the West are groups that focus on internal martial arts like Taijiquan, as well as qigong and meditation. A smaller set of groups also focus around internal alchemy, such as Mantak Chia's Healing Dao.[126] While traditional Daoism initially arrived in the West through Chinese immigrants, more recently, Western run Daoist temples have also appeared, such as the Taoist Sanctuary in San Diego and the Dayuan Circle in San Francisco. Kohn notes that all of these centers "combine traditional ritual services with Daodejing and Yijing philosophy as well as with various health practices, such as breathing, diet, meditation, qigong, and soft martial arts."[127]

Teachings Edit

Tao Edit

 
Bronze script for tao

Tao (or Dao) can mean way, road, channel, path, doctrine, or line.[128] Livia Kohn describes the Dao as "the underlying cosmic power which creates the universe, supports culture and the state, saves the good and punishes the wicked. Literally 'the way', Dao refers to the way things develop naturally, the way nature moves along and living beings grow and decline in accordance with cosmic laws."[129] The Dao is ultimately indescribable and transcends all analysis and definition. Thus, the Tao Te Ching begins with: "The Dao that can be told is not eternal Dao."[129] Likewise, Louis Komjathy writes that the Dao has been described by Taoists as "dark" (xuan), "indistinct" (hu), "obscure" (huang), and "silent" (mo).[130]

According to Komjathy, the Dao has four primary characteristics: "(1) Source of all existence; (2) Unnamable mystery; (3) All-pervading sacred presence; and (4) Universe as cosmological process."[131] As such, Taoist thought can be seen as monistic (the Dao is one reality), panenhenic (seeing nature as sacred), and panentheistic (the Dao is both the sacred world and what is beyond it, immanent and transcendent).[132] Similarly, Wing-Tsit Chan describes the Dao as an "ontological ground" and as "the One, which is natural, spontaneous, eternal, nameless, and indescribable. It is at once the beginning of all things and the way in which all things pursue their course."[133][134] The Dao is thus an "organic order", which is not a willful or self-conscious creator, but an infinite and boundless natural pattern.[129]

Furthermore, the Dao is something that individuals can find immanent in themselves, as well as in natural and social patterns.[135][129] Thus, the Dao is also the "innate nature" (xing) of all people, a nature which is seen by Taoists as being ultimately good.[136] In a naturalistic sense, the Dao as visible pattern, "the Dao that can be told", that is, the rhythmic processes and patterns of the natural world that can be observed and described.[129] Thus, Kohn writes that Dao can be explained as twofold: the transcendent, ineffable, mysterious Dao and the natural, visible, and tangible Dao.[129]

Throughout Taoist history, Taoists have developed different metaphysical views regarding the Dao. For example, while the Xuanxue thinker Wang Bi described Dao as (nothingness, negativity, not-being), Guo Xiang rejected wú as the source and held that instead the true source was spontaneous "self-production" (zìshēng 自生) and "self-transformation" (zìhuà 自化).[137] Another school, the Chóngxuán (Twofold Mystery), developed a metaphysics influenced by Buddhist Madhyamaka philosophy.[138]

De Edit

The active expression of Dao is called De (; ; also spelled,Te or Teh; often translated with virtue or power),[139] in a sense that De results from an individual living and cultivating the Tao.[140] The term De can be used to refer to ethical virtue in the conventional Confucian sense, as well as to a higher spontaneous kind of sagely virtue or power that comes from following the Dao and practicing wu-wei. Thus, it is a natural expression of the Dao's power and not anything like conventional morality.[141] Louis Komjathy describes De as the manifestation of one's connection to the Dao, which is a beneficial influence of one's cosmological attunement.[142]

Ziran Edit

 
Zhuang zhou in front of a waterfall. The natural downward flow of water is a common metaphor for naturalness in Taoism.

Ziran (自然; zìrán; tzu-jan; lit. "self-so", "self-organization"[143]) is regarded as a central concept and value in Taoism and as a way of flowing with the Dao.[144][145] It describes the "primordial state" of all things[146] as well as a basic character of the Dao,[147] and is usually associated with spontaneity and creativity.[148] According to Kohn, in the Zhuangzi, ziran refers to the fact that "there is thus no ultimate cause to make things what they are. The universe exists by itself and of itself; it is existence just as it is. Nothing can be added or substracted from it; it is entirely sufficient upon itself."[149]

To attain naturalness, one has to identify with the Dao and flow with its natural rhythms as expressed in oneself.[147][150] This involves freeing oneself from selfishness and desire, and appreciating simplicity.[144] It also involves understanding one's nature and living in accordance with it, without trying to be something one is not or overthinking one's experience.[151] One way of cultivating ziran found in the Zhuangzi is to practice the "fasting of the mind", a kind of Taoist meditation in which one empties the mind. It is held that this can also activate qi (vital energy).[152] In some passages found in the Zhuangzi and in the Tao Te Ching, naturalness is also associated with rejection of the state (anarchism) and a desire to return to simpler pre-technological times (primitivism).[153]

An often cited metaphor for naturalness is pu (; pǔ, pú; p'u; lit. "uncut wood"), the "uncarved log", which represents the "original nature... prior to the imprint of culture" of an individual.[154] It is usually referred to as a state one may return to.[155]

Wu-wei Edit

 
Illustration of the parable of the adept butcher Ding from the Zhuangzi. Butcher Ding was so expert at butchering a carcass, that he barely had to use any force to cut the meat.

The polysemous term wu-wei or wuwei (無爲; wúwéi) constitutes the leading ethical concept in Taoism.[156] Wei refers to any intentional or deliberated action, while wu carries the meaning of "there is no ..." or "lacking, without". Common translations are nonaction, effortless action, action without intent, noninterference and nonintervention.[157][156] The meaning is sometimes emphasized by using the paradoxical expression "wei wu wei": action without action.[158] Kohn writes that wuwei refers to "letting go of egoistic concerns" and "to abstain from forceful and interfering measures that cause tensions and disruption in favor of gentleness, adaptation, and ease."[145]

In ancient Taoist texts, wu-wei is associated with water through its yielding nature and the effortless way it flows around obstacles.[159] Taoist philosophy, in accordance with the I Ching, proposes that the universe works harmoniously according to its own ways. When someone exerts their will against the world in a manner that is out of rhythm with the cycles of change, they may disrupt that harmony and unintended consequences may more likely result rather than the willed outcome.[160] Thus the Daodejing says: "act of things and you will ruin them. Grasp for things and you will lose them. Therefore the sage acts with inaction and has no ruin, lets go of grasping and has no loss."[145]

Taoism does not identify one's will as the root problem. Rather, it asserts that one must place their will in harmony with the natural way of the universe.[160] Thus, a potentially harmful interference may be avoided, and in this way, goals can be achieved effortlessly.[161][162] "By wu-wei, the sage seeks to come into harmony with the great Tao, which itself accomplishes by nonaction."[156]

Aspects of the self (xing, xin, and ming) Edit

The Daoist view of the self is a holistic one that rejects the idea of a separate individualized self. As Russell Kirkland writes, Daoists "generally assume that one's 'self' cannot be understood or fulfilled without reference to other persons, and to the broader set of realities in which all persons are naturally and properly embedded."[163]

In Daoism, one's innate or fundamental nature (xing) is ultimately the Dao expressing or manifesting itself as an embodied person. Innate nature is connected with one's heartmind (xin), which refers to consciousness, the heart, and one's spirit.[142] The focus of Daoist psychology is the heartmind (xin), the intellectual and emotional center (zhong) of a person. It is associated with the chest cavity, the physical heart as well as with emotions, thoughts, consciousness, and the storehouse of spirit (shen).[164] When the heartmind is unstable and separated from the Dao, it is called the ordinary heartmind (suxin). On the other hand, the original heartmind (benxin) pervades Dao and is constant and peaceful.[165]

The Neiye (ch.14) calls this pure original heartmind the "inner heartmind", "an awareness that precedes language", and "a lodging place of the numinous".[166] Later Daoist sources also refer to it by other terms like "awakened nature" (wuxing), "original nature" (benxing), "original spirit" (yuanshen), and "scarlet palace".[167] This pure heartmind is seen as being characterized by clarity and stillness (qingjing), purity, pure yang, spiritual insight, and emptiness.[167]

Taoists see life (sheng) as an expression of the Dao. The Dao is seen as granting each person a ming (life destiny), which is one's corporeal existence, one's body and vitality.[142] Generally speaking, Daoist cultivation seeks a holistic psychosomatic form of training that is described as "dual cultivation of innate nature and life-destiny" (xingming shuanxiu).[142] Daoism believes in a "pervasive spirit world that is both interlocked with and separate from the world of humans."[168]

The cultivation of innate nature is often associated with the practice of stillness (jinggong) or quiet meditation, while the cultivation of life-destiny generally revolves around movement based practices (dongong) like daoyin and health and longevity practices (yangsheng).[169]

The Taoist body Edit

 
The Neijing Tu, a diagram which illustrates the complex Daoist schema of the body as a way to aid practitioners of inner cultivation.

Many Taoist practices work with ancient Chinese understandings of the body, its organs and parts, "elixir fields" (dantien), inner substances (such as "essence" or jing), animating forces (like the hun and po), and meridians (qi channels). The complex Daoist schema of the body and its subtle body components contains many parallels with Traditional Chinese medicine and is used for health practices as well as for somatic and spiritual transformation (through neidan – "psychosomatic transmutation" or "internal alchemy").[170] Taoist physical cultivation rely on purfying and transforming the body's qi (vital breath, energy) in various ways such as dieting and meditation.[171]

According to Livia Kohn, qi is "the cosmic energy that pervades all. The concrete aspect of Dao, qi is the material force of the universe, the basic stuff of nature."[172] According to the Zhuangzi, "human life is the accumulation of qi; death is its dispersal."[172] Everyone has some amount of qi and can gain and lose qi in various ways. Therefore, Daoists hold that through various qi cultivation methods they can harmonize their qi, and thus improve health and longevity, and even attain magic powers, social harmony, and immortality.[171] The Neiye (Inward Training) is one of the earliest texts that teach qi cultivation methods.[173]

Qi is one of the Three Treasures, which is a specifically Daoist schema of the main elements in Daoist physical practices like qigong and neidan.[174] The three are: jīng (精, essence, the foundation for one's vitality), (氣), and shén (神, spirit, subtle consciousness, a capacity to connect with the subtle spiritual reality).[174][175][176] These three are further associated with the three "elixir fields" (dantien) and the organs in different ways.[177][176]

Ethics Edit

 
Illustration of the tortoise in the mud parable from the Zhuangzi. When some officials came to offer Zhuang zhou a job at court, he replied he preferred to continue to live a life of solitary simplicity, like a turtle who prefers to live in the mud than to be displayed at court.

Daoist ethics tends to emphasize various themes from the Daoist classics, such as naturalness (pu), spontaneity (ziran), simplicity, detachment from desires, and most important of all, wu wei.[178] The classic Daoist view is that humans are originally and naturally aligned with Dao, thus their original nature is inherently good. However, one can fall away from this due to personal habits, desires, and social conditions. Returning to one's nature requires active attunement through Daoist practice and ethical cultivation.[179]

Some popular Daoist beliefs, such as the early Shangqing school, do not believe this and believe that some people are irredeemably evil and destined to be so.[180] Many Taoist movements from around the time Buddhist elements started being syncretized with Daoism had an extremely negative view of foreigners, referring to them as yi or "barbarians", and some of these thought of foreigners as people who do not feel "human feelings" and who never live out the correct norms of conduct until they became Taoist.[181] At this time, China was widely viewed by Taoists as a holy land because of influence from the Chinese public that viewed being born in China as a privilege and that outsiders were enemies.[181] Foreigners who joined these Taoist sects were made to repent for their sins in another life that caused them to be born "in the frontier wilds" because of Buddhist ideas of reincarnation coming into their doctrines.[181] Some Daoist movements viewed human nature neutrally.[182] However, some of the movements that were dour or skeptical about human nature did not believe that evil is permanent and believed that evil people can become good. Korean Daoists tended to think extremely positively of human nature.[183]

Some of the most important virtues in Daoism are the Three Treasures or Three Jewels (三寶; sānbǎo). These are: ci (; , usually translated as compassion), jian (; jiǎn, usually translated as moderation), and bugan wei tianxia xian (不敢爲天下先; bùgǎn wéi tiānxià xiān, literally "not daring to act as first under the heavens", but usually translated as humility). Arthur Waley, applying them to the socio-political sphere, translated them as: "abstention from aggressive war and capital punishment", "absolute simplicity of living", and "refusal to assert active authority".[184]

Daoism also adopted the Buddhist doctrines of karma and reincarnation into its religious ethical system.[185] Medieval Daoist thought developed the idea that ethics was overseen by a celestial administration that kept records of people's actions and their fate, as well as handed out rewards and punishments through particular celestial administrators.[186]

Soteriology and religious goals Edit

 
Illustrations of Daoist immortals at the White Cloud Temple
 
The Daoist immortal Lü Dongbin crossing Lake Dongting, dated to the Song dynasty.

Daoists have diverse religious goals that include Daoist conceptions of sagehood (zhenren), spiritual self-cultivation, a happy afterlife, and/or longevity and some form of immortality (xian, variously understood as a kind of transcendent post-mortem state of the spirit).[187][188]

Daoists' views about what happens in the afterlife tend to include the soul becoming a part of the cosmos[189] (which was often thought of as an illusionary place where qi and physical matter were thought of as being the same in a way held together by the microcosm of the spirits of the human body and the macrocosm of the universe itself, represented and embodied by the Three Pure Ones),[188] somehow aiding the spiritual functions of nature or tiān after death, and/or being saved by either achieving spiritual immortality in an afterlife or becoming a xian who can appear in the human world at will,[190] but normally lives in another plane. "[S]acred forests and[/or] mountains"[191] or a yin-yang,[192][193] yin, yang, or Tao realm[193] inconceivable and incomprehensible by normal humans and even the virtuous Confucius and Confucianists,[194] such as the mental realm sometimes called "the Heavens" where higher, spiritual versions of Daoists such as Laozi were thought to exist when they were alive and absorb "the purest Yin and Yang"[195] were all possibilities for a potential xian to be reborn in. These spiritual versions were thought to be abstract beings that can manifest in that world as mythical beings such as xian dragons who eat yin and yang energy and ride clouds and their qi.[195]

More specifically, possibilities for "the spirit of the body" include "join[ing] the universe after death",[189] exploring[196] or serving various functions in parts of tiān[197] or other spiritual worlds,[196][198] or becoming a xian who can do one or more of those things.[196][197]

Taoist xian are often seen as being eternally young because "of their life being totally at one with the Tao of nature."[199] They are also often seen as being made up of "pure breath and light" and as being able to shapeshift, and some Taoists believed their afterlife natural "paradises" were palaces of heaven.[200]

Taoists who sought to become one of the many different types of immortals, such as xian or zhenren, wanted to "ensure complete physical and spiritual immortality".[39]

In the Quanzhen school of Wang Chongyang, the goal is to become a sage, which he equates with being a "spiritual immortal" (shen xien) and with the attainment of "clarity and stillness" (qingjing) through the integration of "inner nature" (xing) and "worldly reality" (ming).[201]

Those who know the Dao, who flow with the natural way of the Dao and thus embody the patterns of the Dao are called sages or "perfected persons" (zhenren).[202][203] This is what is often considered salvation in Daoist soteriology.[196][204][205] They often are depicted as living simple lives, as craftsmen or hermits. In other cases, they are depicted as the ideal rulers which practice ruling through non-intervention and under which nations prosper peacefully.[202] Sages are the highest humans, mediators between heaven and earth and the best guides on the Daoist path. They act naturally and simply, with a pure mind and with wuwei. They may have supernatural powers and bring good fortune and peace.[206]

Some sages are also considered to have become one of the immortals (xian) through their mastery of the Dao. After shedding their mortal form, spiritual immortals may have many superhuman abilities like flight[198] and are often said to live in heavenly realms.[207][196]

The sages as thus because they have attained the primary goal of Daoism: a union with the Dao and harmonization or alignment with its patterns and flows.[208] This experience is one of being attuned to the Dao and to our own original nature, which already has a natural capacity for resonance (ganying) with Dao.[209] This is the main goal that all Daoist practices are aiming towards and can be felt in various ways, such as a sense of psychosomatic vitality and aliveness as well as stillness and a "true joy" (zhenle) or "celestial joy" that remains unaffected by mundane concerns like gain and loss.[210]

The Taoist quest for immortality was inspired by Confucian emphasis on filial piety and how worshipped ancestors were thought to exist after death.[200]

Becoming an immortal through the power of yin-yang and heaven, but also specifically Taoist interpretations of the Tao, was sometimes thought of as possible in Chinese folk religion,[193] and Taoist thoughts on immortality were sometimes drawn from Confucian views on heaven and its status as an afterlife that permeates the mortal world as well.

Cosmology Edit

 
Zhou Dunyi's (1017–1073 CE) cosmological Taijitu diagram. The red circle is the formless Wuji which gives birth to "the two" – yin and yang (i.e. taiji).

Daoist cosmology is cyclic—the universe is seen as being in constant change, with various forces and energies (qi) affecting each other in different complex patterns.[211][212][143] Daoist cosmology shares similar views with the School of Naturalists.[7] Daoist cosmology focuses on the impersonal transformations (zaohua) of the universe, which are spontaneous and unguided.[213]

Livia Kohn explains the basic Daoist cosmological theory as:[214]

the root of creation Dao rested in deep chaos (ch. 42). Next, it evolved into the One, a concentrated state cosmic unity that is full of creative potential and often described in Yijing terms as the Great Ultimate (Taiji). The One then brought forth "the Two", the two energies yin and yang, which in turn merged in harmony to create the next level of existence, "the Three" (yin-yang combined), from which the myriad beings came forth. From original oneness, the world thus continued to move into ever greater states of distinction and differentiation.

The main distinction in Daoist cosmology is that between yin and yang, which applies to various sets of complementary ideas: bright – dark, light – heavy, soft – hard, strong – weak, above – below, ruler – minister, male – female, and so on.[215] Cosmically, these two forces exist in mutual harmony and interdependence.[216] Yin and yang are further divided into five phases (Wu Xing, or five materials): minor yang, major yang, yin/yang, minor yin, major yin. Each of these correlates with a specific substance: wood, fire, earth, metal, and water respectively.[217] This schema is used in many different ways in Daoist thought and practice, from nourishing life (yangsheng) and medicine to astrology and divination.[218]

Daoists also generally see all things as being animated and constituted by qi (vital air, subtle breath), which is seen as a force that circulates throughout the universe and throughout human bodies (as both air in the lungs and as a subtle breath throughout the body's meridians and organs).[219] Qi is in constant transformation between its condensed state (life) and diluted state (potential).[220] These two different states of qi are embodiments of yin and yang,[220] two complementary forces that constantly play against and with each other and where one cannot exist without the other.[221]

Daoist texts present various creation stories and cosmogonies. Classic cosmogonies are non-theistic, presenting a natural undirected process in which an apophatic undifferentiated potentiality (called wuwuji, "without non-differentiation") naturally unfolds into wuji (primordial oneness, "non-differentiation"), which then evolves into yin-yang (taiji) and then into the myriad beings (as in the Daodejing).[222][223] Later medieval models included the idea of a creator God (mainly seen as Lord Lao), representing order and creativity.[222] Daoist cosmology influences Daoist soteriology, which holds that one can "return to the root" (guigen) of the universe (and of ourselves), which is also the Dao—the impersonal source (yuan) of all things.[224]

In Daoism, human beings are seen as a microcosm of the universe,[24] and thus the cosmological forces, like the five phases, are also present in the form of the zang-fu organs.[225] Another common belief is that there are various gods that reside in human bodies.[226] As a consequence, it is believed that a deeper understanding of the universe can be achieved by understanding oneself.[227]

Another important element of Daoist cosmology is the use of Chinese astrology.[211]

Theology Edit

 
Xi Wangmu (The Queen Mother of the West).

Daoist theology can be defined as apophatic, given its philosophical emphasis on the formlessness and unknowable nature of the Dao, and the primacy of the "Way" rather than anthropomorphic concepts of God. This is one of the core beliefs that nearly all the sects share.[58]

However, Daoism does include many deities and spirits and thus can also be considered animistic and polytheistic in a secondary sense (since they are considered to be emanations from the impersonal and nameless ultimate principle).[228] Some Daoist theology presents the Three Pure Ones at the top of the pantheon of deities, which was a hierarchy emanating from the Dao.[229] Laozi is considered the incarnation of one of the three and worshiped as the ancestral founder of Daoism.[230][231]

Different branches of Daoism often have differing pantheons of lesser deities, where these deities reflect different notions of cosmology.[232] Lesser deities also may be promoted or demoted for their activity.[233] Some varieties of popular Chinese religion incorporate the Jade Emperor (Yü-Huang or Yü-Di), one of the Three Pure Ones, as the highest God. Historical Daoist figures, and people who are considered to have become immortals (xian), are also venerated as well by both clergy and laypeople.[234]

Despite these hierarchies of deities, most conceptions of Dao should not be confused with the Western sense of theism.[further explanation needed] Being one with the Dao does not necessarily indicate a union with an eternal spirit in, for example, the Hindu theistic sense.[235][160]

Practices Edit

 
Xuan Yuan [Yellow Emperor] Inquires of the Dao, National Palace Museum, Taipei, Early Ming Dynasty (1368–1644). This silk scroll painting is based on the story that the Yellow Emperor went out to the Kongtong Mountains to meet with the famous Daoist sage Guangchengzi

Some key elements of Daoist practice include a commitment to self-cultivation, wu wei, and attunement to the patterns of the Dao.[236] Most Daoists throughout history have agreed on the importance of self cultivation through various practices, which were seen as ways to transform oneself and integrate oneself to the deepest realities.[237]

Communal rituals are important in most Taoist traditions, as are methods of self cultivation. Daoist self cultivation practices tend to focus on the transformation of the heartmind together with bodily substances and energies (like jing and qi) and their connection to natural and universal forces, patterns and powers.[238]

Despite the detachment from reality and dissent from Confucian humanism that the Daodejing teaches, Taoists were and are generally not misanthropes or nihilists and saw humans as an important class of things in the world.[182] However, humans in most Daoist views were not held to be especially important in comparison to other aspects of the world and Taoist metaphysics that were seen as equally or more special.[182] Similarly, some Daoists had similar views on their gods or the gods of other religions.[48]

According to Komjathy, Daoist practice is a diverse and complex subject and can include "aesthetics, art, dietetics, ethics, health and longevity practice, meditation, ritual, seasonal attunement, scripture study, and so forth."[236]

Throughout the history of Daoism, mountains have occupied a special place for Daoist practice. They are seen as sacred spaces and as the ideal places for Daoist cultivation and Daoist monastic or eremitic life, which may include "cloud wandering" (yunyou) in the mountains and dwelling in mountain hermitages (an) or grottoes (dong).[239]

Tao can serve as a life energy instead of qi in some Taoist belief systems.[citation needed]

The nine practices Edit

One of the earliest schemas for Daoist practice was the "nine practices" or "nine virtues" (jiǔxíng 九行) which were taught in the Celestial Masters school. These were drawn from classic Daoist sources mainly the Daodejing, and are presented in the Laojun jinglu (Scriptural Statutes of Lord Lao; DZ 786).[240]

The nine practices are:[241]

  1. Nonaction (wúwéi 無為)
  2. Softness and weakness (róuruò 柔弱)
  3. Guarding the feminine (shǒucí 行守)
  4. Being nameless (wúmíng 無名)
  5. Clarity and stillness (qīngjìng 清靜)
  6. Being adept (zhūshàn 諸善)
  7. Being desireless (wúyù 無欲)
  8. Knowing how to stop and be content (zhī zhǐzú 知止足)
  9. Yielding and withdrawing (tuīràng 推讓)

Rituals Edit

 
A Taoist ritual at the Gray Goat Temple (Qingyang Gong, 青羊宫) in Chengdu, Sichuan.
 
Taoist ritual specialists in a procession, Taiwan.

Ancient Chinese religion made much use of sacrifices to gods and ancestors. This could include slaughtered animals, such as pigs and ducks, or fruit. The Daoist Celestial Master Zhang Daoling rejected food and animal sacrifices to the gods. Today, many Daoist Temples reject animal sacrifice.[242] Sacrifices to the deities remains a key element of Daoist rituals however. There are various kinds of Daoist rituals, which may include presenting offerings, scripture reading, sacrifices, incantations, purification rites, confession, petitions and announcements to the gods, observing the ethical precepts, memorials, chanting, lectures and communal feasts.[243][244]

On particular holidays, such as the Qingming/Ching Ming festival, street parades take place. These are lively affairs that involve firecrackers, the burning of hell money, and flower-covered floats broadcasting traditional music. They also variously include lion dances and dragon dances; human-occupied puppets (often of the "Seventh Lord" and "Eighth Lord"), gongfu and palanquins carrying images of deities. The various participants are not considered performers, but rather possessed by the gods and spirits in question.[245]

Ethical precepts Edit

Taking up and living by sets of ethical precepts is another important practice in Taoism. By the Tang dynasty, Daoism had created a system of lay discipleship in which one took a set of Ten precepts (Taoism).

The Five precepts (Taoism) are identical to the Buddhist five precepts (which are to avoid: killing [both human and non-human animals], theft, sexual misconduct, lying, and intoxicants like alcohol.) The other five were a set of five injuctions:[74]

(6) I will maintain harmony with my ancestors and family and never disregard my kin; (7) When I see someone do good, I will support him with joy and delight; (8) When I see someone unfortunate, I will support him with dignity to recover good fortune; (9) When someone comes to do me harm, I will not harbor thoughts of revenge; (10) As long as all beings have not attained the Dao, I will not expect to do so myself.

Apart from these common ethical precepts, Taoist traditions also have larger sets of precepts which are often reserved for ordained priests or monastics.

Divination and magic Edit

A key part of many Taoist traditions is the practice of divination. There are many methods used by Chinese Taoists including I Ching divination, Chinese astrological divination, feng shui (geomantic divination) and the interpretation of various omens.[246][247]

Mediumship and exorcism is also a key element of some Taoist traditions. These can include tongji mediumship and the practice of planchette writing or spirit writing.[247]

Longevity practices Edit

 
Sun Simiao as depicted by Gan Bozong, woodblock print, Tang dynasty (618–907)
 
Reconstructed drawings of guiding and pulling (Daoyin) exercises from the Mawangdui Silk Texts.

Daoist longevity methods are closely related to ancient Chinese medicine. Many of these methods date back to Tang dynasty figures like alchemist Sun Simiao (582–683) and the Highest Clarity Patriarch Sima Chengzhen (647–735).[248] The goal of these methods range from better health and longevity to immortality. Key elements of these "nourishing life" (yangsheng) methods include: moderation in all things (drink, food, etc), adapting to the cycles of the seasons by following injunctions regarding healing exercises (daoyin) and breathwork.[249]

A number of physical practices, like modern forms of qigong, as well as modern internal martial arts (i.e. neijia) like Taijiquan, Baguazhang, Xingyiquan, Liuhebafa, are practiced by Daoists as methods of cultivating health and longevity as well as eliciting internal alchemical transformations.[250][251][252] However, these methods are not specifically daoist, and are often practiced outside of Daoist contexts.[253]

Another key longevity method is "ingestion", which focuses on what one absorbs or consumes from one's environment, which is seen as affecting what one becomes.[254] Diatectics, closely influenced by Chinese medicine, is a key element of ingestion practice, and there are numerous Daoist diet regimens for different effects (such as ascetic diets, monastic diets, therapeutic diets and alchemical diets that use herbs and minerals).[255] One common practice is the avoidance of grains (bigu).[256] In certain cases, practices like vegetarianism and true fasting is also adopted (which may also be termed bigu).[257]

"Qi ingestion" (fu qi) is a special practice which entails the absorption of environmental qi as well as the light of the sun, moon and stars (and other astral effulgences and cosmic ethers) as a way to enhance health and longevity.[258]

Some Taoists thought of the human body as a spiritual nexus with thousands of shen[176] (often 36,000),[259] gods who were likely thought of as at least somewhat mental in nature because of the word's other meaning of consciousness, that could be communed with by doing various methods to manipulate the yin and yang of the body, as well as its qi.[176] These Taoists also thought of the human body as a metaphorical existence where three "cinnabar fields"[176] that represented a higher level of reality and/or a spiritual kind of cinnabar that does not exist in normal reality. A method of meditation used by these Taoists was "visualizing light" which was thought to be qi or another kind of life energy a Taoist substituted for qi[176] or believed in the existence of instead. The light was then channeled through the three cinnabar fields, forming a "microcosmic orbit", or through the hands and feet for a "macrocosmic orbit".[176]

The 36,000 shen regulated the body and bodily functions through a bureaucratic system "modeled after the Chinese system of government".[259] Death occurs only when these gods leave, but life can be extended by meditating while visualizing them, doing good deeds, and avoiding meat and wine.[259]

Meditation Edit

 
Illustration of Daoist meditation.

There are many methods of Daoist meditation (often referred to as "stillness practice", jinggong), some of which were strongly influenced by Buddhist methods.[248][252]

Some of the key forms of Daoist meditation are:[260][252]

  • Apophatic or quietistic meditation, which was the main method of classical Daoism and can be found in classic texts like the Zhuangzi, where it is termed "fasting the heartmind" (xinzhai).[261] This practice is also variously termed "embracing the one" (baoyi), "guarding the one" (shouyi), "quiet sitting" (jingzuo) and "sitting forgetfulness" (zuowang).[262] According to Komjathy, this type of meditation "emphasizes emptiness and stillness; it is contentless, non-conceptual, and non-dualistic. One simply empties the heart-mind of all emotional and intellectual content."[262] The texts of classical Daoism state that this meditation leads to the dissolution of the self and any sense of separate dualistic identity.[263] Sima Chengzhen's Zuowang lun is a key text which outlines this method.[263] The practice is also closely connected with the virtue of wuwei (inaction).[264]
  • Concentration meditation, focusing the mind on one theme, like the breath, a sound, a part of the body (like one of the dantiens), a diagram, or a mental image, a deity etc. A subset of this is called "guarding the one" which is interpreted in different ways.
  • Observation (guan) – According to Kohn this method "encourages openness to all sorts of stimuli and leads to a sense of free-flowing awareness. It often begins with the recognition of physical sensations and subtle events in the body but may also involve paying attention to outside occurrences."[265] Guan is associated with deep listening and energetic sensitivity.[266] The term most often refers to "inner observation" (neiguan), a practice which developed through Buddhist influence (see: Vipaśyanā).[252] Neiguan entails developing introspection of one's body and mind, which includes being aware of the various parts of the body as well as the various deities residing in the body.[260]
  • Zhan zhuang ("post standing") – standing meditation in various postures
  • Visualization (cunxiang) of various mental images, including deities, cosmic patterns, the lives of saints, various lights in the bodies organs, etc. This method is associated with the Supreme Clarity school, which first developed it.[252]

Alchemy Edit

 
Illustration of Daoist neidan from the Xingming guizhi (Pointers on Spiritual Nature and Bodily Life), c. 1615 (Wanli era).

A key element of many schools of Daoism are alchemical practices, which include various rituals, meditations, exercises, and the creation of various alchemical substances. The goals of alchemy include physical and spiritual transformation, aligning oneself spiritually with cosmic forces, undertaking ecstatic spiritual journeys, improving physical health and extending one's life, and even becoming an immortal (xian).[267]

Daoist alchemy can be found in early Daoist scriptures like the Taiping Jing and the Baopuzi.[268] There are two main kinds of alchemy, internal alchemy (neidan) and external alchemy (waidan). Internal alchemy (neidan, literally: "internal elixir"), which focuses on the transformation and increase of qi in the body, developed during the late imperial period (especially during the Tang), and is found in almost all Daoist schools today, though it is most closely associated with the Quanzhen school.[269][270] There are many systems of internal alchemy with different methods such as visualization, breathwork.[269] In the late Imperial period, neidan developed into complex systems which drew on numerous elements, including: classic Daoist texts and meditations, yangsheng, Yijing symbology, daoist cosmology, external alchemy concepts and terms, Chinese medicine, and Buddhist influences.[271] Neidan systems tend to be passed on through oral master-disciple lineages and to often be secret.[264]

Livia Kohn writes that the main goal of internal alchemy is generally understood as a set of three transformations: "from essence (jing) to energy (qi), from energy to spirit (shen), and from spirit to Dao."[272] Common methods for this include engaging the subtle body and activating the microcosmic orbit.[272][264][176] Komjathy adds that neidan seeks to create a transcendent spirit, usually called the "immortal embryo" (xiantai) or "yang spirit" (yangshen).[271]

Texts Edit

 
A part of a Taoist manuscript, ink on silk, 2nd century BCE, Han Dynasty, unearthed from Mawangdui tomb 3rd

Some religious Daoist movements view traditional texts as scriptures considered sacred, authoritative, and binding, as well as divinely inspired or revealed.[273][274][275] However, the Daodejing was originally viewed as "human wisdom" and "written by humans for humans."[275] It and other important texts "acquired authority...that caused them to be regarded...as sacred."[275]

Perhaps the most influential texts are the Daodejing and the Zhuangzi.[276][277]

Daodejing Edit

 
1770 Wang Bi edition of the Tao Te Ching

Throughout the history of Daoism, the Daodejing has been a central text, used for ritual, self-cultivation, as well as philosophical purposes.[278][279]

According to legend, the Daodejing (Scripture of the Dao and its power, also known as the Laozi) was written by Laozi.[280] Authorship, precise date of origin, and even unity of the text are still subject of debate,[281] and will probably never be known with certainty.[282] The earliest manuscripts of this work (written on bamboo tablets) date back to the late 4th century BCE and these contain significant differences from the later received edition (of Wang Bi c. 226–249).[283][284] Apart from the Guodian text and the Wang Bi edition, another alternative version exists, the Mawangdui Daodejings.[285]

Luis Komjathy writes that the Daodejing is "actually a multi-vocal anthology consisting of a variety of historical and textual layers; in certain respects, it is a collection of oral teachings of various members of the inner cultivation lineages."[279] Meanwhile, Kirkland argues that the text arose out of "various traditions of oral wisdom" from the state of Chu that were written, circulated, edited and rewritten by different hands. He also suggests that authors from the Jixia academy may have been involved in the editing process.[286]

The Daodejing is not organized in any clear fashion and is a collection of different sayings on various themes.[287] The leading themes of the Daodejing revolve around the nature of Dao, how to attain it and De, the inner power of Dao, as well as the idea of wei wu-wei.[288][289] Dao is said to be ineffable and accomplishes great things through small, lowly, effortless and "feminine" (yin) ways (which are compared to the behavior of water).[288][289]

Ancient commentaries on the Daodejing are important texts in their own right. Perhaps the oldest one, the Heshang Gong commentary, was most likely written in the 2nd century CE.[290] Other important commentaries include the one from Wang Bi and the Xiang'er commentary.[291]

Zhuangzi Edit

The Zhuangzi (Book of Master Zhuang, 莊子), named after its supposed author Zhuang Zhou, is a highly influential composite text of multi-vocal writings from various sources and historical periods.[292] The commentator and editor Guo Xiang (c. CE 300) helped establish the text as an important source for Daoist thought. One traditional view is that a sage called Zhuang zhou wrote the first seven chapters (the "inner chapters") and his students and related thinkers were responsible for the other parts (the outer and miscellaneous chapters). However, some modern scholars like Russell Kirkland argue that Guo Xiang is actually the creator of the 33-chapter Zhuangzi text and that there is no solid historical data for the existence of Zhuang zhou himself (other than the sparse and unreliable mentions in Sima Qian).[293]

The Zhuangzi uses anecdotes, parables and dialogues to express one of its main themes – avoiding cultural constructs and instead living in a spontaneous way aligned with the natural world.[294][295] This way of living might be perceived as "useless" by most people who follow their own "common sense" and social and political rules, but this uselessness is actually a wiser alternative, since it is more in accord with reality.[296]

Chinese classics Edit

 
Daoist deity Zhenwu with the Eight Trigrams (bagua) from the Yijing and the Northern Dipper, surrounded by Daoist talismans.

Daoism draws on numerous Chinese classics which are not themselves "Daoist" texts but remain important sources for Daoists. Perhaps the most important of these is the ancient divination text called the Yijing (circa 1150 BCE).[297] The divination method in the Yijing and its associated concepts of yin and yang mapped into 64 "hexagrams" – combinations of the 8 trigrams – has influenced Daoism from its inception until today.[298][299]

Taoism also drew on other non-Taoist Chinese classic texts including:[5][6][7]

  • The Mozi, which was later adopted as a Taoist text by Taoists (who also saw master Mo – Mozi – as a Taoist immortal and included the Mozi into the Taoist canon).[300]
  • The Hanfeizi (Writings of Master Han Fei), a "legalist" work which also contains themes which are key to Daoism, such as wu-wei
  • (Confucian) classics like the Analects and the Mengzi
  • Master Lü's Spring and Autumn Annals (Lüshi Chunqiu), which is widely quoted in early Daoist sources
  • Huángdì Nèijīng (The Inner Canon of the Yellow Emperor), an ancient Chinense medical text which was influential on Daoist inner cultivation theory.
  • Huainanzi (circa 139 BCE), an ancient source which includes Taoist, Confucianist, and Legalist ideas.
  • Guanzi, which discusses Daoist ideas in several chapters.

Other important Taoist texts Edit

There are many other important Taoist texts, including:

  • Liezi (列子, Writings of Master Lie), a 4th century BCE classic Taoist work which during the Tang was seen as the third great Taoist work alongside the Daodejing and Zhuangzi.[292]
  • Neiye (內業, Inward Training, 4th century BCE), an important and ancient text which describes Taoist self-cultivation, Taoist meditation, how to work with qi and how to train one's heart-mind (xin) as well as one's body.[301] The ideas found in this text influenced later Daoist conceptions of internal alchemy.[302]
  • Wénzǐ; (文子, Book of Master Wen) a Daoist classic attributed to a Disciple of Laozi but which likely dates to the Han dynasty.
  • Huahujing (Classic on converting the barbarians), an old text (5th–6th century) which claims that Laozi traveled to China and is thus the source of Buddhism.
  • The Taipingjing (Great Peace Scripture), a key source for Han dynasty Daoism.
  • Liexian Zhuan (Biographies of Immortals), a Han dynasty text which is the earliest Daoist hagiography of Daoist immortals.
  • The Baopuzi neipian (Inner Chapters of Master Embracing Simplicity) a work attributed to Ge Hong, also known as Baopu (Master who embraces simplicity) This text is a major source for Shangqing Daoism and its inner-cultivation practices.[303]
  • The Daodong zhenjing (Perfect Scripture of the Great Cavern) and the Lingshu ziwen (Purple Texts Inscribed by the Spirits), the two most influential Supreme Clarity scriptures.[304]
  • Cāntóng qì (Kinship of the Three) – one of the earliest sources on Daoist internal alchemy (neidan).
  • The Yellow Court Classic (Huang Ting Jing, 黄庭经) is a work on Daoist meditation revealed by Lady Wei Huacun of the Shangqing school in the 288 CE. It remained an influential Shangqin text and was also important for Lu Dongbin.
  • Wupian zhenwen (Perfect Writings in Five Sections), the first of the Lingbao scriptures.[305]
  • Ling Bao Bi Fai (Complete Methods of the Numinous Treasure), a manual of longevity practices and neidan.
  • Zuowanglun (坐忘論 ), a work on zuòwàng ("sitting forgetting") meditation by Sima Chengzhen (647–735) which is influenced by Buddhism.[306]
  • Huángdì Yǐnfújīng (黃帝陰符經, c. 8th century CE), a text on internal alchemy and astrology.
  • Huàshū (化書), a 10th century classic on internal alchemy.
  • Qīngjìng Jīng (清静经, Classic of Clarity and Stillness) which Daoist teachings from the Daodejing with Mahayana Buddhist ideas. The text was adopted as one of the key scriptures of the Quanzhen school.[307]
  • Yinfu jing (Scripture on the Inner Talisman), a sixth century text which was adopted by Quanzen school as one of their key scriptures.[307]
  • Wùzhēn piān (悟真篇, Folios on Awakening to Reality) is a work on internal alchemy written by Zhang Boduan (張伯端; 987?–1082), a Song era scholar of the three teachings.
  • The Lijiao shiwu lun (Fifteen discourses to Establish the Teachings) of Wang Chongyang, the founder of Quanzhen.[307]
  • The Book of Balance and Harmony (Zhong he ji, 中和集) a 13th century anthology by Daochun Li which outlines the teachings and practices of the Quanzhen School.
  • Taishang Ganying Pian (Treatise of the Exalted One on Response and Retribution, C. 12th century) discusses sin and ethics, and has become a popular morality tract in the last few centuries.[308] It asserts that those in harmony with Tao will live long and fruitful lives. The wicked, and their descendants, will suffer and have shortened lives.[288]
  • The Secret of the Golden Flower (太乙金華宗旨; Tàiyǐ Jīnhuá Zōngzhǐ), an influential neidan text from the late 17th century.
  • The key texts of the Dragon Gate School (Longmen Pai) composed by the founder Wang Changyue (1622?–80) which focus on Daoist monasticism: Chuzhen jie (Precepts for Novices), Zhongji jie (Precepts of the Central Pole), Tianxian jie (Precepts for Celestial Immortals) and Longmen xinfa (Central Teachings of Dragon Gate).[309]

The Taoist Canon Edit

The Taoist Canon (道藏, Treasury of Tao) is also referred to as the Daozang. It was originally compiled during the Jin, Tang, and Song dynasties. The extant version was published during the Ming Dynasty.[310] The Ming Daozang includes almost 1500 texts.[311] Following the example of the Buddhist Tripiṭaka, it is divided into three dong (, "caves", "grottoes"). They are arranged from "highest" to "lowest":[312]

  1. The Zhen ("real" or "truth" ) grotto. Includes the Shangqing texts.
  2. The Xuan ("mystery" ) grotto. Includes the Lingbao scriptures.
  3. The Shen ("divine" ) grotto. Includes texts predating the Maoshan (茅山) revelations.

Taoist generally do not consult published versions of the Daozang, but individually choose, or inherit, texts included in the Daozang. These texts have been passed down for generations from teacher to student.[313]

The Shangqing School has a tradition of approaching Taoism through scriptural study. It is believed that by reciting certain texts often enough one will be rewarded with immortality.[314]

Symbols and images Edit

 
A spider web ceiling depicting a taijitu surrounded by the Bagua
 
Chinese dragon at Guan Di Taoist Temple, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
 
Chinese Daoist Priest's Robe, 19th century. Aside from Daoist symbols like the dragon, it also adopts the eight auspicious symbols from Buddhism.

The Taijitu (太極圖; tàijítú; commonly known as the "yin and yang symbol" or simply the "yin yang") and the Bagua 八卦 ("Eight Trigrams") are important symbols in Daoism, since they represent key elements of Daoist cosmology (see above).[315][316] Many Daoist (as well as non-Daoist) organizations make use of these symbols and they may appear on flags and logos, temple floors, or stitched into clerical robes. According to Song dynasty sources, it originated around the 10th century CE.[317]

The tiger and dragon are more ancient symbols for yin and yang respectively, and these two animals are still widely used in Daoist art.[317] Daoist temples in southern China and Taiwan may often be identified by their roofs, which feature dragons, tigers, and phoenixes (with the phoenix also standing for yin) made from multicolored ceramic tiles. In general though, Chinese Daoist architecture lacks universal features that distinguish it from other structures.[318]

Daoist temples may fly square or triangular flags. They typically feature mystical writing, talismans or diagrams and are intended to fulfill various functions including providing guidance for the spirits of the dead, bringing good fortune, increasing life span, etc.[319] Other flags and banners may be those of the gods or immortals themselves.[320]

Drawings of the Big Dipper (also called the Bushel) are also important symbols.[321] In the Shang Dynasty of the 2nd millennium BCE, Chinese thought regarded the Big Dipper as a deity, while, in later periods, it came to symbolize Taiji.[322][321] A related symbol is the flaming pearl, which stands for the pole star and may be seen on such roofs between two dragons, as well as on the hairpin of a Celestial Master.[323][321]

Some Taoists saw the stars as "knots in the 'net of heaven'" that connected everything in "heaven and earth".[324]

Many Taoists saw the Tao as "the [metaphorical] pearl of the sage" and a "conjunction between yin...[and] yang."[325] Taoists also revered pearls more generally, seeing lung dragon celestials as emerging from the glint of light off of a pearl that existed "in the mists of chaos" and trapped in an endless cycle where they continually retrieve the pearl that makes them out of the mists.[326] Some Internal Alchemy Daoists worshipped mercury as "divine water" and an embodiment of conciousness that was a "'flowing pearl'".[326]

In the later Qing dynasty, Taoists and intellectuals who leaned towards Taoism used the wuxing as symbols of leadership and good governance, using old religious texts and various historiographies made in prior dynasties to assign a phase from the five wuxing to different Chinese dynasties.[327]

Symbols which represent longevity and immortality are particularly popular, and these include: cranes, pine trees, and the peaches of immortality (associated with the goddess Xiwangmu).[321] Natural symbols are also common, and include gourds, caves, clouds, mountains and the animals of the Chinese zodiac.[321] Other symbols used by Daoists include: the Yellow River Map (hetu), the Luo Sho square, Yijing coins, Daoist talismans (fulu), the Four Symbols (mythical creatures), and various Chinese characters, such as the character for Dao and the shòu ("longevity") character.

Daoist priests also wear distinctive robes, such as the Daojiao fushi and Daoist versions of the Daopao, which symbolize their status and school affiliation.

Society Edit

 
Laojun Mountain temple of Laozi
 
The White Cloud Temple in Beijing
 
Xianguting Temple, a Taoguan in Weihai, Shandong, China

Daoist communities can include a wide variety of people and groups, including lay priests (daoshi), hermits, monastics, teachers, householders, ascetics, family lineages, teacher-disciple lineages, urban associations, temples and monasteries.[328]

According to Kirkland, throughout most of its history, most Taoist traditions "were founded and maintained by aristocrats, or by members of the later well-to-do 'gentry' class".[329] The only real exception is the Celestial Masters movement, which had a strong basis in the lower classes (though even this movement had a hereditary leadership made up of figures of the Chang clan for generations).[329]

Adherents Edit

The number of Taoists is difficult to estimate, due to a variety of factors including defining Taoism. According to a survey of religion in China in 2010, the number of people practicing some form of Chinese folk religion is near to 950 million, which is 70% of Chinese.[330] Among these, 173 million (13%) claim an affiliation with Taoist practices.[330] 12 million people stated that they were "Daoists", a term traditionally used exclusively for initiates, priests and experts of Taoist rituals and methods.[330]

Most Chinese people and many others have been influenced in some way by Taoist traditions. Since the creation of the People's Republic of China, the government has encouraged a revival of Taoist traditions in codified settings. In 1956, the Chinese Daoist Association was formed to administer the activities of all registered Daoist orders, and received official approval in 1957.[331]

It was disbanded during the Cultural Revolution under Mao Zedong, but was reestablished in 1980. The headquarters of the association are at the Baiyunguan, or White Cloud Temple of Beijing, belonging to the Longmen branch of the Quanzhen tradition.[331] Since 1980, many Daoist monasteries and temples have been reopened or rebuilt, both belonging to the Zhengyi or Quanzhen schools, and clergy ordination has been resumed.

Daoist literature and art has influenced the cultures of Korea, Japan, and Vietnam. Organized Taoism seems not to have attracted a large non-Chinese following until modern times. In Taiwan, 7.5 million people, 33% of the population, identify themselves as Taoists.[332] Data collected in 2010 for religious demographics of Hong Kong[333] and Singapore[334] show that, respectively, 14% and 11% of the people of these cities identify as Taoists.

Followers of Daoism are present in Chinese émigré communities outside Asia. It has attracted followers with no Chinese heritage. For example, in Brazil there are Daoist temples in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro which are affiliated with the Taoist Society of China. Membership of these temples is entirely of non-Chinese ancestry.[335]

Art and poetry Edit

 
Carved Jade boulder with a Daoist paradise.
 
A 16th century painting of the immortal Liezi by Zhang Lu (1464–1538).

Throughout Chinese history, there have been many examples of art being influenced by Daoism.[34] Notable painters influenced by Daoism include Wu Wei, Huang Gongwang, Mi Fu, Muqi Fachang, Shitao, Ni Zan, Tang Mi, and Wang Zengzu.[336] Daoist arts and belles-lettres represents the diverse regions, dialects, and time spans that are commonly associated with Daoism. Ancient Daoist art was commissioned by the aristocracy; however, scholars masters and adepts also directly engaged in the art themselves.[337]

Political aspects Edit

Daoism never had a unified political theory. While Huang-Lao's positions justified a strong emperor as the legitimate ruler,[338] the Daoist "primitivists" (of chapters 8–11 of the Zhuangzi) argued for a kind of anarchism. A more moderate position is presented in the Inner Chapters of the Zhuangzi in which the political life is presented with disdain and some kind of pluralism or perspectivism is preferred.[339]

The syncretist position found in texts like the Huainanzi and some of the Outer Chapters of the Zhuangzi blend Daoist positions with Confucian views.[340]

Relations with other traditions Edit

 
A painting in the litang style portraying "three laughs at tiger brook" which illustrates the unity of the three teachings, 12th century, Song dynasty.
 
The Hanging Temple, a temple which contains elements from all three teachings

Many scholars believe Daoism arose as a countermovement to Confucianism.[341] The philosophical terms Dao and De are indeed shared by both Daoism and Confucianism.[342] Zhuangzi explicitly criticized Confucian and Mohist tenets in his work. In general, Daoism rejects the Confucian emphasis on rituals, hierarchical social order, and conventional morality, and favors "naturalness", spontaneity, and individualism instead.[343]

The entry of Buddhism into China was marked by significant interaction and syncretism with Daoism.[344] Originally seen as a kind of "foreign Daoism", Buddhism's scriptures were translated into Chinese using the Taoist vocabulary.[345] Representatives of early Chinese Buddhism, like Sengzhao and Tao Sheng, knew and were deeply influenced by the Taoist keystone texts.[346]

Daoism especially shaped the development of Chan (Zen) Buddhism,[347][295] introducing elements like the concept of naturalness, distrust of scripture and text, and emphasis on embracing "this life" and living in the "every-moment".[348] Zhuangzi's statements that the Dao was omnipresent and that creation escorts animals and humans to death influenced Chinese Buddhist practitioners and scholars, especially Chan Buddhists.[295] On the other hand, Taoism also incorporated Buddhist elements during the Tang dynasty. Examples of such influence include monasteries, vegetarianism, prohibition of alcohol, the doctrine of emptiness, and collecting scripture in tripartite organization in certain sects.[citation needed]

Ideological and political rivals for centuries, Daoism, Confucianism, and Buddhism deeply influenced one another.[349] For example, Wang Bi, one of the most influential philosophical commentators on Laozi (and the I Ching), was a Confucian.[350] The three rivals also share some similar values, with all three embracing a humanist philosophy emphasizing moral behavior and human perfection. In time, most Chinese people identified to some extent with all three traditions simultaneously.[351] This became institutionalized when aspects of the three schools were synthesized in the Neo-Confucian school.[352]

Christian and Taoist contact often took place in the Tang dynasty,[353] and some scholars believe that the Church of the East influenced Taoist thought on the Three Pure Ones.[354] Emperor Taizong encouraged this, and Taoists who agreed with him and his laws incorporated elements of Christianity, Islam, Manichaeism, Judaism, Confucianism, and Buddhism into their faith.[353]

Comparisons with other religions Edit

Comparisons between Daoism and Epicureanism have focused on the absence of a creator or gods controlling the forces of nature in both.[355] Lucretius' poem De rerum natura describes a naturalist cosmology where there are only atoms and void (a primal duality which mirrors Ying/Yang in its dance of assertion/yielding), and where nature takes its course with no gods or masters. Other parallels include the similarities between Daoist "wu wei" (effortless action) and Epicurean "lathe biosas" (live unknown), focus on naturalness (ziran) as opposed to conventional virtues, and the prominence of the Epicurus-like Chinese sage Yang Chu in the foundational Daoist writings.

Some authors have undertaken comparative studies of Daoism and Christianity. This has been of interest for students of the history of religion such as J. J. M. de Groot,[356] among others. A comparison of the teachings of Laozi and Jesus of Nazareth has been made by several authors, such as Martin Aronson,[357] and Toropov & Hansen (2002), who believe that there are parallels that should not be ignored.[358] In the opinion of J. Isamu Yamamoto, the main difference is that Christianity preaches a personal God while Daoism does not.[359] Yet, a number of authors, including Lin Yutang,[360] have argued that some moral and ethical tenets of the religions are similar.[361][362] In neighboring Vietnam, Daoist values have been shown to adapt to social norms and formed emerging sociocultural beliefs together with Confucianism.[363]

Taoist traditions Edit

 
Chart of Taoist Talismans, Japan, Muromachi period, 1553, anonymous woodblock print, James Michener Collection, Honolulu Museum of Art

Today, there are various living Taoist traditions, the largest and most influential are Quanzhen Taoism (Complete Perfection), particularly the Dragon Gate sect, and Zhengyi ("Orthodox Unity") Taoism.[364] Quanzhen lineages are mainly monastic and ascetic tradition, based on meditation and internal cultivation, while the Orthodox Unity tradition is based on a lay priests (daoshi) who are expected to master an extensive ritual repertoire.[365] These two traditions developed during the Song dynasty and grew to become recognized by the imperial government during late imperial China.[365]

"Some sects are concerned with the ritual control of spirits and the cosmic currents of yin and yang; others specialize in inner disciplines of meditation or breath control and mind-body exercise regimes."[366]

There are also various smaller Daoist groups and traditions of practice. Eva Wong divides the major "systems" of Daoism into the following categories: Magical Daoism, Divinational Daoism, Ceremonial Daoism, Internal-Alchemical Daoism and Action and Karma Daoism.[367]

Magical Taoism Edit

Magical Taoism is one of the oldest systems of Taoism and its practices are similar to the shamans and sorcerers of ancient China.[368] Magical Taoism believes there are various natural powers, deities and spirits (benevolent and malevolent) in the universe that can be made use of by specialists who know the right methods.[196][198] Their magic can include rainmaking, protection, exorcism, healing, traveling to the underworld to help the dead and mediumship.[368]

Protection magic can include the use of amulets and fulu, as well as specific rites.[369] Protection rites often include ritual petitions to the celestial deities of the northern bushel.[370] Divination is also a widespread practice. A commonly used method of divination in magical Taoism is sandwriting (planchette writing).[371]

According to Eva Wong, the main sects of magical Taoism today are the Maoshan sect (a very secretive sect, not to be confused with Shangqing), the Celestial Masters and the Kun-Lun sect (which is strongly influenced by Tibetan magic and make use of Daoist and Buddhist deities).[372]

Divinational Taoism Edit

 
Three luopans (geomantic compasses) used in feng shui.

Divinational Taoism focuses on various divination techniques to help one predict the future and live accordingly. This practice can also carry deeper spiritual significance, since it can help one appreciate the flux of the Tao.[373] This form of Taoism owes much to the ancient fang-shih, the Yin and yang school of thought and often relies on the classic Chinese divination text, the Yijing.[374]

This tradition also relies on the cosmology of Wuji and Taiji, along with the teachings of yin and yang, the five elements and the Chinese calendar.[375] There many forms of Daoist divination, they include: celestial divination (which include various systems of Chinese astrology, like Tzu-wei tu-su), terrestrial divination (feng shui), the casting of incense sticks with hexagrams on them and the interpretation of omens.[246]

Contemporary divinational Taoism is practiced in temples and monasteries by various individuals and may not be sect specific (it is even practiced by non-daoists).[376] This Daoist practice can be found in the Mao-shan sorcerers, the Celestial Masters sect and the Longmen and Wutang-shan sects.[376] There are also many lay practitioners that are not affiliated with any specific sect. These lay Daoist practitioners are called "kui-shih".[377]

Ceremonial Taoism Edit

 
Interior of the Xiaomen Zhengyi Temple

Ceremonial Taoism focuses on ritual and devotion towards various celestial deities and spirits. The basic belief of ceremonial Daoism is that through various rites, human beings can honor the deities and these deities may then grant them with power, protection and blessings.[243] Rituals and festivals can include chanting, offerings, and the reading of scripture.[243] These rites are mostly performed by ritual masters who have trained extensively for this role and who may, through their mastery of ritual, intercede on behalf of laypersons.[378]

There are various kinds of festivals in Ceremonial Taoism, including "Great Services" (chai-chiao) and Ritual Gatherings (fa-hui) that can last for days and can focus on repentance, rainmaking, disaster aversion or petitioning.[379] There are feast days which honor specific deities. 164 Funerals and birthday blessings are a common service.[380]

There is a complex and large pantheon in Taoism. It includes various deities classified into various ranks within an administrative structure, at the top of which are the celestial lords (t'ien-tsun). These include judges, heralds, officers, generals, clerks and messengers.[381] The main division is between "earlier heaven" deities, who have existed since the beginning of time and "later heaven" deities, mortals who later became immortal.[382]

146 Key earlier heaven deities include the Three Pure Ones, the Jade Emperor, the Queen Mother of the West, the Mother of the Bushel of Stars, the Seven Star Lords of the Northern Bushel and the Three Officials (Celestial, Earth, and Water).[382] Some key later heaven deities include: Immortal Lu Tung-pin, and Emperor Kuan (Kuan-yu).[383] Taoists may also honor local spirits and deities, as well Buddhist deities (like Guanyin, Amitabha, etc).[384]

The largest and most prominent sect of Ceremonial Taoism is the Way of the Celestial Masters, also known as "Orthodox Unity" (Zhengyi).[380] The patriarch of this sect resides in Taiwan and this tradition performs numerous ceremonies which are often sponsored by the Taiwanese government.[380] The training for Zhengyi priesthood, who are not celibate, focuses mainly on learning extensive rituals and liturgy, so that they can perform them flawlessly.[385]

Ceremonies are practiced, to a lesser extent, in the Longmen (Dragon Gate) sect of Quanzhen and in the Hsien-t'ien Dao (Earlier Heaven Way) sect, though these schools understand ritual as mainly a way to develop internal alchemy.[385] During the Song dynasty, a popular form of ceremonial Taoism was the Thunder Rites (leifa), which focused on exorcism and protection.[82]

Internal Alchemy Taoism Edit

 
Wang Chongyang, the founder of Quanzhen Daoism, and his seven disciples, depicted in Changchun Temple, Wuhan.

Internal Alchemy Daoism or Transformation Daoism focuses on internal transformation through the use of various self-cultivation techniques like Qigong, Neidan (internal alchemy), Yangsheng and so forth.[386]

The basic worldview of this Taoist tradition is that all beings are born with certain forms of energy (mainly the three treasures of jing, qi and shen), which become dissipated, weak and lost as we age.[387] To prevent this and to increase our inner vital energies, one must practice various methods of "internal alchemy" (neidan) to harmonize the internal energy in one's body and refine the "golden elixir" (jindan) inside the body. These meditative inner alchemical practices are believed to lead to greater longevity and even immortality (union with the Dao at death).[388]

Another worldview is that beings must "harmonize yin and yang forces internally to achieve immortality."[366][389] A term used by some Taoists that sums up traditions that do not use these practices is "singular path".[389] Most traditions follow the "singular path". These include the Longmen (Dragon Gate) sect of Quanzhen Daoism, the Hsien-t'ien Dao (Earlier Heaven Way) sect, the Wu-liu sect, and the Wudang quan sect.[390]

The Quanzhen School was founded by Wang Chongyang (1112–1170), a hermit in the Zhongnan mountains who was said in legends to have met and learned secret methods from two immortals: Lu Dongbin and Zhongli Quan.[84] He then moved to Shandong and preached his teachings, founding various religious communities.[84] His school popularized Internal Alchemy Daoism and the usage of the term.[83]

One of his "seven perfected" disciples, Qiu Chuji (1148–1227), founded the Longmen (Dragon Gate) lineage. Chuji was also made the leader of all religions in China by Chinggis Khan, making his tradition the most powerful in all of China, and contributing to Longmen's lasting influence.[88] Another important Quanzhen lineage is the Qingjing pai, founded by the nun Sun Buer (1119–1182), the only female member of the "seven perfected".[88] Today, Quanzhen is mainly made up of celibate monastics who practice vegetarianism, sobriety, internal alchemy and recite daily liturgies. The largest lineage is Longmen.[391]

Much like Daoists who see writings made by influential members of their faith as having a divine nature, some Daoists view self-cultivation as a way for emotions and self to partake in divinity,[259] and a smaller subset of these[citation needed] view some mythological beings such as xian as being divine.[196] Xian were viewed in many lights and as completely different types of beings over different times and in different places. They were sometimes viewed as deities, parts of the celestial hierarchy, metaphorical ideals that people should strive to be like, reclusive Taoist masters who know how to control and harness spiritual energies, and/or shamans.[citation needed]

Hygiene Taoism Edit

Hygiene Taoism is a Taoist tradition meant to increase life and "physical and mental harmony".[259] Some Daoists from the "Hygiene School" believed that they could survive only on their own breath and saliva to purify their bodies.[259]

Karmic Taoism Edit

Karmic Daoism, or "Action and Karma Taoism", according to Wong, focuses on ethics and is grounded in the idea that the sacred celestial powers aid and reward those who do good and punish those who do evil.[392] This tradition can be traced back to Song dynasty Taoist Li Ying-chang and his Laozu Treatise on the Response of the Tao (T'ai-shang kan-ying p'ien).[392] Li sparked a popular movement which focused on the everyday life of ordinary persons instead of on temples, monasteries and sages.[392] At the core of this tradition is living in harmony with the Dao and with the Way of Heaven, which means acting with benevolence, kindness and compassion.[393] Doing evil is considered a transgression against the way and this evil will be punished by deities, celestial ministers and judges.[393]

These ideas are quite ancient, the Taiping Jing (Scripture of Great Peace) states: "accumulate good deeds, and prosperity will come to you from the Dao".[393] Besides wealth and prosperity, Karmic Taoism also believes that doing good increases longevity, while doing evil decreases it.[394] Another common idea in this group of Taoist traditions is that there deities, like the Kitchen Lord, who monitor our actions and report to Heaven and the Jade Emperor (who tallies them and metes out punishment and reward).[395]

Karmic Taoism is a nonsectarian tradition adopted by many Taoist sects. The Laozu Treatise on the Response of the Dao is studied in Quanzhen Daoism, Hsien-t'ien Dao and in the Wu-Liu sect.[396] All major schools of Daoism view ethics as the foundation for spirituality.[396] Furthermore, there are those who are not affiliated with a Daoist sect who may still follow Karmic Taoism in daily life.[396]

Other divisions of Taoism Edit

Taoism has traditionally been divided into religious Taoism and philosophical Taoism (Dàojiào and Dàojiā), respectively.

Religious Taoism Edit

Some Daoist sects are expressly religious in the Western sense.[citation needed] "Lord Heaven" and "Jade Emperor" were terms for a Taoist supreme deity also used in Confucianism and Chinese folk religion,[397] and some conceptions of this deity thought of the two names as synonymous.

The Taoist Jade Emperor in the first millennium AD was a primary deity among polytheists who had a heaven that contained numerous ministries and officials and which was "modelled on...the earthly emperor['s rule]".[398]

Polytheist Daoists venerated one or more of these kinds of spiritual entities:[399][229] "deified heroes...forces of nature"[229] and "nature spirits",[399] xian,[229] spirits,[229] gods,[229] devas and other celestial beings from Chinese Buddhism, Indian Buddhism, and Chinese folk religion,[229][400][401][402][197] various kinds of beings occupying heaven,[229] members of the celestial bureaucracy,[229] ghosts,[83] "mythical emperors",[403] Laozi,[403] a trinity of high gods that varied in how it was thought of,[229] and the Three Pure Ones.[229] Some Daoists chose not to worship beings they saw as gods,[48] and only worshipped guardian spirits[49] or "celestials",[229] such as devas, various kinds of beings occupying heaven, members of the celestial bureaucracy, and xian.[229] In some Daoist sects, the Dao was the primary thing that was venerated and beings that would be gods in other sects were merely treated as supernatural beings similar to gods who could only act in accordance with the Dao's wishes.[403]

When the Tao Te Ching was written, many Taoists told stories and legends about heroes "whose bodies had been rendered invulnerable".[404] This could be achieved by making contact with "dragon's blood" or a river in the afterlife, or drinking the "waters of the 'Well of Life' and eating the 'fungus or immortality'".[404]

Ordinary Chinese in the early Tang dynasty often worshipped local gods, Buddhist gods and devas, and Taoist gods simultaneously,[197] and this population included a significant amount of the Taoists who have ever worshipped devas throughout history.[further explanation needed]

The trinity is thought by scholars to have evolved into the Three Pure Ones.[229] It was thought of in the early Han dynasty as the three gods Tianyi, Diyi, and "the Taiyi".[229] These beings were varyingly interpreted as relatively simple heavenly, earthly, and all-purpose gods respectively,[citation needed] the "supreme deity" (an intangible god that represented the mind of the Dao), "his disciple", the Lord Dao (a more physical god representing the Dao), and Lord Lao (Laozi "deified"),[229] or an emanation of the Dao that was ultimately singular in nature.

An unrelated trinity was the Three Great Emperor-Officials, three of the highest shen in some branches of religious Taoism thought to be able to pardon sins.[405]

The Tao was not worshipped alone,[189][406] although gods do exist that anthropomorphize it in various ways. Laozi was sometimes thought to be a god or "the image of the Tao".[189]

"Some Taoist adepts" worshipped thousands of gods that were thought to exist in the body.[259]

See also Edit

Schools and organizations Edit

Concepts and objects Edit

Practice Edit

Deities Edit

Texts Edit

Regional Taoism Edit

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Yin, Binyong. "Proper Nouns in Hanyu Pinyin" (PDF). Chinese Romanization: Pronunciation and Orthography. Translated by Felley, Mary. p. 176.
  2. ^ a b Elizabeth Pollard; Clifford Rosenberg; Robert Tignor (16 December 2014). Worlds Together, Worlds Apart: A History of the World – From the Beginnings of Humankind to the Present. W.W. Norton. p. 164. ISBN 978-0-393-91847-2.
  3. ^ Creel (1982), p. 2.
  4. ^ Woodhead, Partridge, & Kawanmi, Linda, Christopher, & Hiroko (2016). Religions in the Modern World. New York: Routledge. p. 146. ISBN 978-0-415-85880-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ a b c Kirkland (2004), p. 2-10.
  6. ^ a b c d Kohn (2008), p. 23–33.
  7. ^ a b c d Robinet (1997), p. 6
  8. ^ "Religion in China". Council on Foreign Relations. 11 October 2018.
  9. ^ . American Institute on Taiwan. US Federal Government. 29 May 2018. Archived from the original on 18 June 2020. Retrieved 17 June 2020.
  10. ^ Carr (1990), pp. 63–65. "Converting the various pronunciation respelling systems into IPA, British dictionaries (1933–1989, Table 3) give 9 /taʊ.ɪzəm/, 2 /taʊ.ɪzəm, daʊ.ɪzəm/, and 1 /daʊ.ɪzəm/; American dictionaries (1948–1987, Table 4) give 6 /daʊ.ɪzəm, taʊ.ɪzəm/, 2 /taʊ.ɪzəm, daʊ.ɪzəm/, 2 /taʊ.ɪzəm/, and 1 /daʊ.ɪzəm/".
  11. ^ Pregadio (2008), Vol. 1, p. xvi.
  12. ^ a b Pregadio (2008), Vol. 1, p. 327, "Taoshih".
  13. ^ Robinet (1997), p. xxix.
  14. ^ Kohn (2000), p. 44.
  15. ^ a b Chad Hansen. "Taoism". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, CSLI, Stanford University. from the original on 24 June 2013. Retrieved 1 October 2008.
  16. ^ a b Graham (1989), pp. 170–171
  17. ^ "Daoist Philosophy | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy". Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  18. ^ Hansen, Chad (2020), "Daoism", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2020 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 27 January 2022
  19. ^ Robinet (1997), p. 3; Kohn (2000), p. xi
  20. ^ Mair (2001), p. 174.
  21. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 2.
  22. ^ a b c d e Komjathy (2014), p. 4.
  23. ^ a b Meister, Chad; Copan, Paul, eds. (2010). The Routledge companion to philosophy of religion. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415435536.
  24. ^ a b Robinet (1997), p. 103
  25. ^ Robinet (1997), p. 2.
  26. ^ a b Komjathy (2014), p. 8.
  27. ^ Pregadio (2008), Vol. 1, p. 326, "Taoshih".
  28. ^ a b Wu (2014), pp. 105–106.
  29. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 8, 24.
  30. ^ a b Komjathy (2014), p. 24.
  31. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 20-33, 75.
  32. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 23–33.
  33. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 61.
  34. ^ a b c d Bellingham, David; Whittaker, Clio; Grant, John (1992). Myths and Legends. Secaucus, New Jersey: Wellfleet Press. p. 124. ISBN 1-55521-812-1. OCLC 27192394.
  35. ^ Hackett, Conrad; Grim, Brian J. (18 December 2012). "Other Religions". Pew Research Center. The Global Religious Landscape. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  36. ^ a b Robinet (1997), p. 25.
  37. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 62.
  38. ^ Windridge, Charles (2003). Tong Sing: The Book of Wisdom: Based on the Ancient Chinese Almanac. Consulting work done by Cheng Kam Fong (Revised and Updated ed.). New York: Barnes & Noble Books. pp. 59, 107. ISBN 978-0-7607-4535-9. OCLC 54439373.
  39. ^ a b Salamone, Frank A. (2004). Levinson, David (ed.). Encyclopedia of Religious Rites, Rituals, and Festivals. New York: Routledge. p. 431. ISBN 0-415-94180-6.
  40. ^ "Huangdi". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  41. ^ Demerath (2003), p. 149; Hucker (1995), pp. 203–204
  42. ^ a b Robinet (1997), p. 36
  43. ^ Robinet (1997), p. 39.
  44. ^ Catherine Despeux. "Women in Taoism". In Kohn (2000), pp. 403–404.
  45. ^ a b Nadeau (2012), p. 42.
  46. ^ Cleary, Thomas F. (1998). The Essential Tao: An Initiation Into the Heart of Taoism Through the Authentic Tao Te Ching and the Inner Teachings of Chuang-Tzu. Edison, New Jersey: Castle Books. p. 161. ISBN 0-7858-0905-8. OCLC 39243466.
  47. ^ Cleary, Thomas F. (1998). The Essential Tao: An Initiation Into the Heart of Taoism Through the Authentic Tao Te Ching and the Inner Teachings of Chuang-Tzu. Edison, New Jersey: Castle Books. pp. 123–124. ISBN 0-7858-0905-8. OCLC 39243466.
  48. ^ a b c Harari, Yuval Noah (2015). Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind. Translated by Harari, Yuval Noah; Purcell, John; Watzman, Haim. London: Penguin Random House UK. p. 249. ISBN 978-0-09-959008-8. OCLC 910498369.
  49. ^ a b Sanders, Tao Tao Liu (1980). Dragons, Gods & Spirits from Chinese Mythology. New York: Peter Bedrick Books. p. 73. ISBN 0-87226-922-1.
  50. ^ Eno, Robert (2010). "4.8 Huang-Lao Ideology". Indiana University, History G380.
  51. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 76-81.
  52. ^ Kohn, p. 6
  53. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 82.
  54. ^ Robinet (1997), p. 54.
  55. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 65.
  56. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 83.
  57. ^ Legge, James (1911). "Lâo-Tsze". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 194.
  58. ^ a b Robinet (1997), p. 1.
  59. ^ Robinet (1997), p. 50.
  60. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 26-27.
  61. ^ Chan, Alan. "Neo-Daoism", Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  62. ^ Robinet 1997, p. 78
  63. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 67.
  64. ^ Robinet (1997), p. 115
  65. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 86-87.
  66. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 68; Robinet (1997), p. xvi; Robinet (1997), p. 150.
  67. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 69.
  68. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 28-29.
  69. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 69-70.
  70. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 71-72.
  71. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 87.
  72. ^ a b Kirkland (2004), p. 90.
  73. ^ Robinet (1997), p. 184
  74. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 74.
  75. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 91.
  76. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 94.
  77. ^ a b Kirkland (2004), p. 163.
  78. ^ Robinet (1997), p. 185
  79. ^ Centre, UNESCO World Heritage. "Ancient Building Complex in the Wudang Mountains". whc.unesco.org.
  80. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 75.
  81. ^ Robinet (1997), p. 213
  82. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 153.
  83. ^ a b c d e Wang, Wei (16 August 2022). "On the Historical Background and Ideological Resources of the Confluence of Islam and Confucianism". Religions. 13 (8): 13. doi:10.3390/rel13080748. ISSN 2077-1444 – via MDPI.
  84. ^ a b c Kohn (2008), p. 154.
  85. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 29.
  86. ^ Littlejohn, Ronnie (n.d.). "Taoist Philosophy". The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. ISSN 2161-0002.
  87. ^ Eskildsen (2004), p. 17.
  88. ^ a b c Kohn (2008), p. 155.
  89. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 103-104.
  90. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 105.
  91. ^ Kohn (2000), p. xvii
  92. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 178.
  93. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 163.
  94. ^ a b c Zhongjian Mou (2003). A Brief History of the Relationship Between Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism, p. 389. Springer Nature.
  95. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 108-109, 165.
  96. ^ a b Kirkland (2004), p. 165.
  97. ^ Schipper (1993), p. 19
  98. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 110.
  99. ^ Esposito (2001)[pages needed]
  100. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 112
  101. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 168.
  102. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 202-203.
  103. ^ Schipper (1993), p. 220
  104. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 185.
  105. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 184.
  106. ^ Dean, Kenneth (1993). Taoist Ritual and Popular Cults of Southeast China, p. 40. Princeton: Princeton University.
  107. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 205.
  108. ^ Reid, Gilbert (February 1917). "Taoism, an Appreciation". The Biblical World. University of Chicago Press. 49 (2): 87. doi:10.1086/475692. ISSN 0190-3578. JSTOR 3136462. S2CID 145738732.
  109. ^ Wile, Douglas (1995). Lost T'ai-chi Classics from the Late Ch'ing Dynasty (Chinese Philosophy and Culture). State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-2654-8.[page needed]
  110. ^ Wile, Douglas. Taijiquan and Daoism: From Religion to Martial Art and Martial Art to Religion. Journal of Asian Martial Arts (Vol. 16, Issue 4).
  111. ^ Dean, Kenneth (1993). Taoist Ritual and Popular Cults of Southeast China, p. 41. Princeton: Princeton University.
  112. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 211.
  113. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 212.
  114. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 March 2009. (30.6 KB) An address given to the Delegation EU–China of the European Parliament.
  115. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 183.
  116. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 185-187.
  117. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 215-216.
  118. ^ a b c Komjathy (2014), p. 201.
  119. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 219.
  120. ^ Herman, Jonathan R. (2001), "Taoist Environmentalism in the West: Ursula K. Le Guin's Reception and Transmission of Taoism," in Taoism and Ecology, ed. by N. J. Girardot et al., Harvard University Press, 391, 392.
  121. ^ Komjathy, Louis (2004), Tracing the Contours of Daoism in North America 2011-12-26 at the Wayback Machine, Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions, 8.2, 6.
  122. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 207-208.
  123. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 208.
  124. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 220.
  125. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 222-224.
  126. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 210.
  127. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 208.
  128. ^ DeFrancis (1996), p. 113.
  129. ^ a b c d e f Kohn (2008), p. 20.
  130. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 2.
  131. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 95.
  132. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 98.
  133. ^ Chan (1963), p. 136.
  134. ^ A. Chan, cited in Kohn (2000), p. 20
  135. ^ LaFargue (1994), p. 283.
  136. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 83.
  137. ^ Chan, Alan, "Neo-Daoism", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2019 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.)
  138. ^ Assandri, Friederike (2020). "Buddhist–Daoist Interaction as Creative Dialogue: The Mind and Dào in Twofold Mystery Teaching". In Anderl, Christoph; Wittern, Christian (eds.). Chán Buddhism in Dūnhuáng and Beyond: A Study of Manuscripts, Texts, and Contexts in Memory of John R. McRae. Numen Book Series. Vol. 165. Leiden and Boston: Brill Publishers. pp. 363–390. doi:10.1163/9789004439245_009. ISBN 978-90-04-43191-1. ISSN 0169-8834. S2CID 242842933.
  139. ^ Sharot (2001), pp. 77–78, 88
  140. ^ Maspero (1981), p. 32
  141. ^ Watson, Burton. The Complete Works of Chuang Tzu. p. 25. Columbia University Press. 1968. ISBN 978-0-231-03147-9
  142. ^ a b c d Komjathy (2014), p. 108.
  143. ^ a b Dr Zai, J. Taoism and Science: Cosmology, Evolution, Morality, Health and more 17 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine. Ultravisum, 2015.
  144. ^ a b Fowler (2005), p. 122.
  145. ^ a b c Kohn (2008), p. 21.
  146. ^ Slingerland (2003), p. 97.
  147. ^ a b Girardot (1988), p. 56.
  148. ^ Fowler (2005), p. 121; Girardot (1988), p. 56.
  149. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 30.
  150. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 21, 39.
  151. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 39.
  152. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 40.
  153. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 37.
  154. ^ Kraemer (1986), p. 286.
  155. ^ Girardot (1988), p. 70.
  156. ^ a b c Van Voorst (2005), p. 170
  157. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 85.
  158. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 60.
  159. ^ Oldmeadow 2007, p. 109.
  160. ^ a b c Fasching & deChant (2001), p. 35.
  161. ^ Chan (1963), p. 137.
  162. ^ Living in the Tao: The Effortless Path of Self-Discovery, Mantak Chia
  163. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 190.
  164. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 115.
  165. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 116.
  166. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 116-117.
  167. ^ a b Komjathy (2014), p. 117.
  168. ^ Salamone, Frank A. (2004). Levinson, David (ed.). Encyclopedia of Religious Rites, Rituals, and Festivals. New York: Routledge. p. 430. ISBN 0-415-94180-6.
  169. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 109.
  170. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 110-111, 122–125.
  171. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 50.
  172. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 51.
  173. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 53.
  174. ^ a b Komjathy (2014), p. 112.
  175. ^ Blofeld, John. Taoism. Shambhala, 2000.
  176. ^ a b c d e f g h World Religions: Eastern Traditions. Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby (2nd ed.). Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press. 2002. p. 397. ISBN 0-19-541521-3. OCLC 46661540.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  177. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 125.
  178. ^ Chan (1963).
  179. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 147.
  180. ^ Carrasco, David; Warmind, Morten; Hawley, John Stratton; Reynolds, Frank; Giarardot, Norman; Neusner, Jacob; Pelikan, Jaroslav; Campo, Juan; Penner, Hans; et al. (Authors) (1999). Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of World Religions. Edited by Wendy Doniger. United States: Merriam-Webster. p. 691. ISBN 9780877790440.
  181. ^ a b c Zürcher, Erik (1980). "Buddhist Influence on Early Taoism: A Survey of Scriptural Evidence". T'oung Pao. 66 (1/3): 108. doi:10.1163/156853280X00039. ISSN 0082-5433. JSTOR 4528195 – via JSTOR.
  182. ^ a b c Stefon, Matt (5 December 2016). "ren". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 23 April 2023.
  183. ^ Carrasco, David; Warmind, Morten; Hawley, John Stratton; Reynolds, Frank; Giarardot, Norman; Neusner, Jacob; Pelikan, Jaroslav; Campo, Juan; Penner, Hans; et al. (Authors) (1999). Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of World Religions. Edited by Wendy Doniger. United States: Merriam-Webster. p. 1058. ISBN 9780877790440.
  184. ^ Waley (1958), p. 225
  185. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 123.
  186. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 99.
  187. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 175-183.
  188. ^ a b World Religions: Eastern Traditions. Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby (2nd ed.). Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press. 2002. p. 395. ISBN 0-19-541521-3. OCLC 46661540.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  189. ^ a b c d "Taoism". National Geographic Society. 30 January 2023. Retrieved 30 April 2023.
  190. ^ World Religions: Eastern Traditions. Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby (2nd ed.). Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press. 2002. pp. 392, 395. ISBN 0-19-541521-3. OCLC 46661540.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  191. ^ World Religions: Eastern Traditions. Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby (2nd ed.). Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press. 2002. p. 396. ISBN 0-19-541521-3. OCLC 46661540.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  192. ^ "青山王的秘書長-陰陽司公 | 保庇網". NOWnews今日新聞 (in Chinese). 16 November 2017. Retrieved 9 May 2023.
  193. ^ a b c Wilkinson, Philip (1999). Spilling, Michael; Williams, Sophie; Dent, Marion (eds.). Illustrated Dictionary of Religions (First American ed.). New York: DK. pp. 67, 68, 70. ISBN 0-7894-4711-8.
  194. ^ Wilson, Andrew, ed. (1995). World Scripture: A Comparative Anthology of Sacred Texts (1st paperback ed.). St. Paul, Minnesota: Paragon House Publishers. pp. 467–468. ISBN 978-1-55778-723-1.
  195. ^ a b Minford, John (2018). Tao Te Ching: The Essential Translation of the Ancient Chinese Book of the Tao. New York: Viking Press. pp. ix–x. ISBN 978-0-670-02498-8.
  196. ^ a b c d e f g "xian". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 21 February 2023.
  197. ^ a b c d Chua, Amy (2007). Day of Empire: How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance–and Why They Fall (1st ed.). New York: Doubleday. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-385-51284-8. OCLC 123079516.
  198. ^ a b c Lagerwey, John (21 May 2018). "Xian". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 30 April 2023.
  199. ^ Wilson, Andrew, ed. (1995). World Scripture: A Comparative Anthology of Sacred Texts (1st paperback ed.). St. Paul, Minnesota: Paragon House Publishers. p. 20. ISBN 978-1-55778-723-1.
  200. ^ a b Murrell, Jasmyn (January 2017). "Virtuous Life, Honored Afterlife and the Evolution of Confucianism". History in the Making. California State University. 10 (7): 89, 97.
  201. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 183.
  202. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 23.
  203. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 80.
  204. ^ "zhenren". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 23 April 2023.
  205. ^ Lagerway, John (2005). "Zhenren". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 23 April 2023.
  206. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 23-24.
  207. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 184.
  208. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 162-163.
  209. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 163.
  210. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 163-166.
  211. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 80.
  212. ^ Robinet (1997), p. 7
  213. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 87.
  214. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 22.
  215. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 81.
  216. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 82.
  217. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 83.
  218. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 85.
  219. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 94.
  220. ^ a b Robinet (1997), p. 8
  221. ^ Robinet (1997), p. 9.
  222. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 115.
  223. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 88.
  224. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 90.
  225. ^ Kohn (2000), p. 825
  226. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 128.
  227. ^ Occhiogrosso (1994), p. 171.
  228. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 99-100.
  229. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p World Religions: Eastern Traditions. Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby (2nd ed.). Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press. 2002. p. 392. ISBN 0-19-541521-3. OCLC 46661540.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  230. ^ Robinet (1997), p. 63.
  231. ^ Maspero (1981), p. 41
  232. ^ Segal (2006), p. 50
  233. ^ Maspero (1981), p. 92
  234. ^ Vuong, Quan-Hoang (2018). "Cultural additivity: behavioural insights from the interaction of Confucianism, Buddhism and Taoism in folktales". Palgrave Communications. 4 (1): 143. doi:10.1057/s41599-018-0189-2. S2CID 54444540.
  235. ^ Martinson (1987), pp. 168–169.
  236. ^ a b Komjathy (2014), p. 131.
  237. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 74.
  238. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 191-93.
  239. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 182-92.
  240. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 85-86.
  241. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 86.
  242. ^ David "Race" Bannon, "Chinese Medicine: From Temples to Taoism," T’ai Chi, Vol. 20, No. 3 (1996): 28–33.
  243. ^ a b c Wong (2011), p. 145.
  244. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 143.
  245. ^ Schipper (1993), pp. 28–29
  246. ^ a b Wong (2011), p. 133-142.
  247. ^ a b Silvers (2005), pp. 129–132
  248. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 131.
  249. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 132-135.
  250. ^ Silvers (2005), pp. 135–137
  251. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 174.
  252. ^ a b c d e Komjathy (2014), p. 133.
  253. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 150-51.
  254. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 138-39.
  255. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 139.
  256. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 140.
  257. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 142-43.
  258. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 145.
  259. ^ a b c d e f g Stevenson, Jay (2000). The Complete Idiot's Guide to Eastern Philosophy. Indianapolis: Alpha Books. p. 226. ISBN 9780028638201.
  260. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 136-140.
  261. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 133-134.
  262. ^ a b Komjathy (2014), p. 134.
  263. ^ a b Komjathy (2014), p. 135.
  264. ^ a b c Komjathy (2014), p. 137.
  265. ^ Kohn (2008), p. 137.
  266. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 132.
  267. ^ Kohn (2000), p. 672; Robinet (1997), p. 228 & 103
  268. ^ Schipper & Verellen (2004), pp. 70–71; Robinet (1997), p. 73
  269. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 170.
  270. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 133-136.
  271. ^ a b Komjathy (2014), p. 136.
  272. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 171.
  273. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 31.
  274. ^ World Religions: Eastern Traditions. Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby (2nd ed.). Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press. 2002. pp. 392, 394. ISBN 0-19-541521-3. OCLC 46661540.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  275. ^ a b c Stefon, Matt (2 April 2023). "Scripture". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  276. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 31-32.
  277. ^ Miller (2003), p. ix
  278. ^ Kohn & LaFargue (1998), p. 158.
  279. ^ a b Komjathy (2014), p. 32.
  280. ^ "Taoism: Overview". Patheos. from the original on 16 October 2009. Retrieved 16 May 2011.
  281. ^ Eliade (1984), p. 26.
  282. ^ Watts (1975), p. xxiii.
  283. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 53-.
  284. ^ "Laozi". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Stanford University. 2018. The discovery of two Laozi silk manuscripts at Mawangdui, near Changsha, Hunan province in 1973 marks an important milestone in modern Laozi research. The manuscripts, identified simply as "A" (jia) and "B" (yi), were found in a tomb that was sealed in 168 B.C. The texts themselves can be dated earlier, the "A" manuscript being the older of the two, copied in all likelihood before 195 B.C.
    Until recently, the Mawangdui manuscripts have held the pride of place as the oldest extant manuscripts of the Laozi. In late 1993, the excavation of a tomb (identified as M1) in Guodian, Jingmen city, Hubei province, has yielded among other things some 800 bamboo slips, of which 730 are inscribed, containing over 13,000 Chinese characters. Some of these, amounting to about 2,000 characters, match the Laozi. The tomb...is dated around 300 B.C.
  285. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 53-55.
  286. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 65-66.
  287. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 54.
  288. ^ a b c Van Voorst (2005), p. 165.
  289. ^ a b Kirkland (2004), p. 59.
  290. ^ Schipper & Verellen (2004), p. 73
  291. ^ Schipper & Verellen (2004), pp. 74–77
  292. ^ a b Idema & Haft (1997), p. 90.
  293. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 34-35.
  294. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 34-37.
  295. ^ a b c Ware, James Hamilton. "Zhuangzi". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
  296. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 37-38.
  297. ^ Pittman, Allen. Walking the I Ching 18 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine. Blue Snake Books, 2008. p. 21
  298. ^ Wing, R. L. The I Ching Workbook 17 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine Doubleday, 1979. pp. 15, 20.
  299. ^ e.g. Cleary, Thomas, tr. The Taoist I Ching 1 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine. Shambhala, 1986. p. 6.
  300. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 26.
  301. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 41-46.
  302. ^ Kirkland (2004), p. 44-46.
  303. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 19.
  304. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 35.
  305. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 20.
  306. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 36.
  307. ^ a b c Komjathy (2014), p. 37.
  308. ^ . Weber.ucsd.edu. Archived from the original on 16 February 2007. Retrieved 16 May 2011.
  309. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 22-23.
  310. ^ Schipper & Verellen (2004), pp. 1, 30
  311. ^ Schipper & Verellen (2004), p. 36
  312. ^ Schipper & Verellen (2004), p. 15; Little & Eichman (2000), p. 46
  313. ^ Schipper & Verellen (2004), p. 44
  314. ^ Robinet (1997), p. 132
  315. ^ Little & Eichman (2000), p. 131–139
  316. ^ Feuchtwang, Stephan (2016). Religions in the Modern World (Third ed.). New York: Routhledge. p. 150.
  317. ^ a b Little & Eichman (2000), p. 131
  318. ^ Little & Eichman (2000), p. 74.
  319. ^ Kohn (2004), p. 116
  320. ^ Kohn (2004), p. 119
  321. ^ a b c d e "Taoism Ritual, Worship, Devotion, Symbolism, Taoism Symbolism". www.patheos.com. Retrieved 20 February 2023.
  322. ^ Little & Eichman (2000), p. 128.
  323. ^ Schipper (1993), p. 21.
  324. ^ Carlson, Kathie; Flanagin, Michael N.; Martin, Kathleen; Martin, Mary E.; Mendelsohn, John; Rodgers, Priscilla Young; Ronnberg, Ami; Salman, Sherry; Wesley, Deborah A.; et al. (Authors) (2010). Arm, Karen; Ueda, Kako; Thulin, Anne; Langerak, Allison; Kiley, Timothy Gus; Wolff, Mary (eds.). The Book of Symbols: Reflections on Archetypal Images. Köln: Taschen. p. 518. ISBN 978-3-8365-1448-4.
  325. ^ Carlson, Kathie; Flanagin, Michael N.; Martin, Kathleen; Martin, Mary E.; Mendelsohn, John; Rodgers, Priscilla Young; Ronnberg, Ami; Salman, Sherry; Wesley, Deborah A.; et al. (Authors) (2010). Arm, Karen; Ueda, Kako; Thulin, Anne; Langerak, Allison; Kiley, Timothy Gus; Wolff, Mary (eds.). The Book of Symbols: Reflections on Archetypal Images. Köln: Taschen. pp. 784–785. ISBN 978-3-8365-1448-4.
  326. ^ a b Carlson, Kathie; Flanagin, Michael N.; Martin, Kathleen; Martin, Mary E.; Mendelsohn, John; Rodgers, Priscilla Young; Ronnberg, Ami; Salman, Sherry; Wesley, Deborah A.; et al. (Authors) (2010). Arm, Karen; Ueda, Kako; Thulin, Anne; Langerak, Allison; Kiley, Timothy Gus; Wolff, Mary (eds.). The Book of Symbols: Reflections on Archetypal Images. Köln: Taschen. p. 784. ISBN 978-3-8365-1448-4.
  327. ^ Li, Dun J. (1965). The Ageless Chinese: A History. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 333–334.
  328. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 41-43.
  329. ^ a b Kirkland (2004), p. 81.
  330. ^ a b c 2010 Chinese Spiritual Life Survey, Purdue University's Center on Religion and Chinese Society. Data reported in Wenzel-Teuber & Strait (2012), p. 29–54
  331. ^ a b "Taoism: Modern Age". Patheos. from the original on 15 November 2011. Retrieved 16 May 2011.
  332. ^ . Taiwan Government Information Office, Department of Civil Affairs, Ministry of the Interior. 2006. Archived from the original on 8 July 2007.
  333. ^ "2010 Yearbook – Religion" (PDF). Hong Kong Government. (PDF) from the original on 30 June 2014. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  334. ^ (PDF). Singapore Department of Statistics. 12 January 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2011.
  335. ^ Murray, Daniel M. & Miller, James. "The Taoist Society of Brazil and the Globalization of Orthodox Unity Taoism." Journal of Taoist Studies, vol. 6, 2013, pp. 93–114. doi:10.1353/Tao.2013.0003; Murray, Daniel M., and James Miller. "TRADUÇAO: A Sociedade Taoísta do Brasil e a globalizaçao do Taoismo da Ortodoxia Unitária." Religare: Revista Do Programa De Pós Graduaç Ao Em Ciências Das Religi Oes Da Ufpb 12 (2016): 315–43.
  336. ^ Chang (1968).
  337. ^ Augustin, Birgitta. "Taoism and Taoist Art". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 16 July 2014.
  338. ^ Hansen (2000), pp. 224–226, 370–374.
  339. ^ Graham (1989), pp. 172, 306–311.
  340. ^ Roth, Harold D. (27 September 2014). "Huainanzi: The Pinnacle of Classical Taoist Syncretism". Tao Companion to Taoist Philosophy. Dao Companions to Chinese Philosophy. Vol. 6. Springer Netherlands. pp. 341–365. doi:10.1007/978-90-481-2927-0_15. ISBN 9789048129263.
  341. ^ Fisher (1997), p. 167.
  342. ^ Markham & Ruparell (2001), p. 254.
  343. ^ Maspero (1981), p. 39.
  344. ^ Maspero (1981), p. 46.
  345. ^ Prebish (1975), p. 192.
  346. ^ Dumoulin, Heisig & Knitter (2005), pp. 70, 74.
  347. ^ Mollier (2008).
  348. ^ Dumoulin, Heisig & Knitter (2005), pp. 68, 70–73, 167–168.
  349. ^ Markham & Ruparell (2001), pp. 248–249.
  350. ^ Schipper (1993), p. 192.
  351. ^ Windows on Asia 2009-02-20 at the Wayback Machine Asian Studies Center, Michigan State University.
  352. ^ Moore (1967), pp. 133, 147.
  353. ^ a b Chua, Amy (2007). Day of Empire: How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance–and Why They Fall (1st ed.). New York: Doubleday. p. 71. ISBN 978-0-385-51284-8. OCLC 123079516.
  354. ^ World Religions: Eastern Traditions. Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby (2nd ed.). Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press. 2002. p. 393. ISBN 0-19-541521-3. OCLC 46661540.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  355. ^ [1] Contemplations on the Tao Series
  356. ^ Werblowsky (2002), p. 25.
  357. ^ Aronson (2002), p. [page needed].
  358. ^ Toropov & Hansen (2002), pp. 169–181.
  359. ^ Yamamoto (1998), pp. 69–70.
  360. ^ Ruokanen & Zhanzhu Huang (2010), p. 137.
  361. ^ Zhiming (2010), p. [page needed].
  362. ^ Chung (2001), p. 141–145.
  363. ^ Napier et al. (2018).
  364. ^ Chan (2005), p. 93.
  365. ^ a b Kohn (2008), p. 149.
  366. ^ a b Bowker, John (2021). World Religions: The Great Faiths Explored & Explained. New York: DK. p. 169. ISBN 978-0-7440-3475-2.
  367. ^ Wong (2011), p. 99-198.
  368. ^ a b Wong (2011), p. 99.
  369. ^ Wong (2011), p. 103.
  370. ^ Wong (2011), p. 105-106.
  371. ^ Wong (2011), p. 107.
  372. ^ Wong (2011), p. 115-117.
  373. ^ Wong (2011), p. 119.
  374. ^ Wong (2011), p. 115-121.
  375. ^ Wong (2011), p. 124-131.
  376. ^ a b Wong (2011), p. 123.
  377. ^ Wong (2011), p. 124.
  378. ^ Wong (2011), p. 146.
  379. ^ Wong (2011), p. 163.
  380. ^ a b c Wong (2011), p. 164.
  381. ^ Wong (2011), p. 146, 159.
  382. ^ a b Wong (2011), p. 147-154.
  383. ^ Wong (2011), p. 155-157.
  384. ^ Wong (2011), p. 159.
  385. ^ a b Wong (2011), p. 169.
  386. ^ Wong (2011), p. 172-173.
  387. ^ Wong (2011), p. 173.
  388. ^ Wong (2011), p. 173-174.
  389. ^ a b Wong (2011), p. 183.
  390. ^ Wong (2011), p. 184.
  391. ^ Komjathy (2014), p. 30.
  392. ^ a b c Wong (2011), p. 190.
  393. ^ a b c Wong (2011), p. 191.
  394. ^ Wong (2011), p. 192.
  395. ^ Wong (2011), p. 193.
  396. ^ a b c Wong (2011), p. 194.
  397. ^ World Religions: Eastern Traditions. Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby (2nd ed.). Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press. 2002. pp. 326, 393, 401. ISBN 0-19-541521-3. OCLC 46661540.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  398. ^ Storm, Rachel (2011). Sudell, Helen (ed.). Myths & Legends of India, Egypt, China & Japan (2nd ed.). Wigston, Leicestershire: Lorenz Books. p. 176.
  399. ^ a b Cleary, Thomas F. (1998). The Essential Tao: An Initiation Into the Heart of Taoism Through the Authentic Tao Te Ching and the Inner Teachings of Chuang-Tzu. Edison, New Jersey: Castle Books. p. 166. ISBN 0-7858-0905-8. OCLC 39243466.
  400. ^ Bellingham, David; Whittaker, Clio; Grant, John (1992). Myths and Legends. Secaucus, New Jersey: Wellfleet Press. p. 126. ISBN 1-55521-812-1. OCLC 27192394.
  401. ^ Zürcher, Erik (1980). "Buddhist Influence on Early Taoism: A Survey of Scriptural Evidence". T'oung Pao. 66 (1/3): 125–126. doi:10.1163/156853280X00039. ISSN 0082-5433. JSTOR 4528195 – via JSTOR.
  402. ^ STEVENS, KEITH (1998). "Images of Sinicised Vedic Deities on Chinese Altars". Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. 38: 62, 77–78, 85. ISSN 0085-5774. JSTOR 23889810 – via JSTOR.
  403. ^ a b c Szostak, Rick (22 October 2020). Making Sense of World History. London: Routledge. p. 466. doi:10.4324/9781003013518. ISBN 9781003013518. S2CID 224902752.
  404. ^ a b Mackenzie, Donald Alexander (1986). China & Japan (Myths and Legends). New York: Avenel Books. pp. 317–318. ISBN 9780517604465.
  405. ^ "Sanguan". Encyclopedia Britannica. 3 February 2010. Retrieved 30 April 2023.
  406. ^ "Gods and spirits". BBC. 12 November 2009. Retrieved 4 May 2023.

General sources Edit

  • Aronson, Martin (2002). . Ulysses Press. ISBN 978-1569753194. Archived from the original on 24 November 2015.
  • The Divine Classic of Nan-Hua; Being the Works of Chuang Tsze, Taoist Philosopher. Translated by Balfour, Frederic Henry. Kelly & Walsh. 1881.
  • Bishop, Donald H., ed. (1995). Chinese Thought: An Introduction. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 9788120811393. Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  • Carr, Michael (1990). "Whence the Pronunciation of Taoism?". Dictionaries. 12: 55–74. doi:10.1353/dic.1990.0004. S2CID 201790095.
  • Chan, Wing-tsit (1963). A Source Book in Chinese Philosophy. Princeton. ISBN 0-691-01964-9.
  • Chan, Kim-Kwong (2005). "Religion in China in the Twenty-first Century: Some Scenarios". Religion, State & Society. 33 (2): 87–119. doi:10.1080/09637490500118570. S2CID 73530576.
  • Chang, Chung-yuan (1968). Creativity and Taoism, A Study of Chinese Philosophy, Art, and Poetry. New York: Harper Torchbooks. ISBN 978-0-06-131968-6.
  • Ching, Julia; Guisso, R. W. L., eds. (1991). Sages and Filial Sons: Mythology and Archaeology in Ancient China. Chinese University Press. ISBN 978-962-201-469-5.

taoism, this, article, about, traditional, religion, from, china, chinese, philosophy, taoist, philosophy, religious, movement, concept, western, world, history, west, daoism, listen, listen, chinese, philosophy, well, chinese, traditions, religions, that, emp. This article is about Taoism as a traditional religion from China For Taoism as a Chinese philosophy see Taoist philosophy For Taoism as a new religious movement concept in Western world see History of Taoism Taoism in the West Taoism or Daoism ˈ t aʊ ɪ z em listen i or ˈ d aʊ ɪ z em listen i is a Chinese philosophy as well as a set of Chinese traditions and religions that emphasize living in harmony with the Tao Chinese 道 pinyin Dao Wade Giles Tao 4 lit Way Path The Tao is generally defined as the source of everything and the ultimate principle underlying reality 2 3 The Tao Te Ching and the Zhuangzi are widely considered key Taoist texts and are distinctly philosophical in nature and theme TaoismTao a Chinese word signifying way path route road or sometimes more loosely doctrineChinese nameChinese道教Hanyu PinyinDaojiao 1 Literal meaning Religion of the Way TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinDaojiao 1 Bopomofoㄉㄠˋ ㄐㄧㄠˋGwoyeu RomatzyhDawjiawWade GilesTao4 chiao4Yale RomanizationDaujyauIPA ta ʊ tɕja ʊ WuRomanizationDoh入 goh平Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationDouhgaauJyutpingDou6gaau3IPA tou kaːu Southern MinHokkien POJTō kauTai loTō kauMiddle ChineseMiddle Chinesedaw kae wOld ChineseBaxter Sagart 2014 ke l ˤuʔ s kˤraw sVietnamese nameVietnamese alphabetĐạo giaoChữ Han道教Korean nameHangul도교Hanja道敎TranscriptionsRevised Romanizationdo gyoJapanese nameKanji道教HiraganaどうきょうTranscriptionsRomanizationDō kyōTaoism includes various self cultivation methods including meditation internal alchemy and various rituals Common aims include becoming one with the natural flow of the Dao longevity becoming a sage zhenren and even an immortal xian 2 4 Taoist ethics vary depending on the particular school but they generally tend to emphasize virtues such as inaction 无为 無爲 wuwei naturalness or spontaneity 自然 ziran simplicity 朴 樸 pǔ and the three treasures compassion 慈 ci frugality 俭 儉 jiǎn and humility 不敢为天下先 不敢爲天下先 bu gǎn wei tianxia xian The roots of Taoism go back at least to the 4th century BCE Early Taoism drew its cosmological notions from the School of Yinyang also known as the Naturalists Other influences include Shang and Zhou dynasty religion Mohism Confucianism Legalist theorists like Shen Buhai and Han Fei and the Chinese classics especially the I Ching and the Lushi Chunqiu 5 6 7 Taoism has had a profound influence on Chinese culture in the course of the centuries and Dao masters 道士 daoshi a title traditionally attributed only to the clergy and not to their lay followers usually take care to note the distinction between their ritual tradition and the practices of Chinese folk religion and non Taoist vernacular ritual orders which are often mistakenly identified as pertaining to Taoism Chinese alchemy especially internal alchemy neidan Chinese astrology Chan Zen Buddhism several Chinese martial arts including Tai chi traditional Chinese medicine feng shui and many styles of Qigong have been associated with Taoism throughout history Today the Taoist religion is one of the five religious doctrines officially recognized by the People s Republic of China PRC including in its special administrative regions SARs of Hong Kong and Macau 8 It is also a major religion in Taiwan 9 as well as throughout the Sinosphere including Korea Japan and Vietnam and it has a significant number of adherents in a number of other societies throughout East and Southeast Asia particularly in Malaysia Singapore Taoism also has adherents in the West which includes East or Southeast Asian immigrants as well as Western convert Taoists Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Spelling and pronunciation 1 2 Categorization and terminology 1 3 Taoists 2 History 2 1 Classical Taoism and its sources 2 2 Early Organized Taoism 2 3 Three Kingdoms and Six Dynasties eras 2 4 Later Imperial Dynasties 2 5 Early modern Taoism 2 6 Late modern Taoism 3 Teachings 3 1 Tao 3 2 De 3 3 Ziran 3 4 Wu wei 3 5 Aspects of the self xing xin and ming 3 6 The Taoist body 3 7 Ethics 3 8 Soteriology and religious goals 3 9 Cosmology 3 10 Theology 4 Practices 4 1 The nine practices 4 2 Rituals 4 3 Ethical precepts 4 4 Divination and magic 4 5 Longevity practices 4 6 Meditation 4 7 Alchemy 5 Texts 5 1 Daodejing 5 2 Zhuangzi 5 3 Chinese classics 5 4 Other important Taoist texts 5 5 The Taoist Canon 6 Symbols and images 7 Society 7 1 Adherents 7 2 Art and poetry 7 3 Political aspects 7 4 Relations with other traditions 7 5 Comparisons with other religions 8 Taoist traditions 8 1 Magical Taoism 8 2 Divinational Taoism 8 3 Ceremonial Taoism 8 4 Internal Alchemy Taoism 8 4 1 Hygiene Taoism 8 5 Karmic Taoism 8 6 Other divisions of Taoism 8 6 1 Religious Taoism 9 See also 9 1 Schools and organizations 9 2 Concepts and objects 9 3 Practice 9 4 Deities 9 5 Texts 9 6 Regional Taoism 9 6 1 China 9 6 2 Japan 9 6 3 Southeast Asia 9 6 4 Europe 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 General sources 11 Further reading 11 1 Popular nonacademic interpretations of Taoism 12 External linksDefinition Edit The birthplaces of notable Chinese philosophers from the Hundred Schools of Thought in the Zhou Dynasty Philosophers of Taoism are marked by triangles in dark green Spelling and pronunciation Edit Main article Daoism Taoism romanization issue Since the introduction of the Pinyin system for romanizing Mandarin Chinese there have been those who have felt that Taoism would be more appropriately spelled as Daoism The Mandarin Chinese pronunciation for the word 道 way path is spelled as tao4 in the older Wade Giles romanization system from which the spelling Taoism is derived while it is spelled as dao in the newer Pinyin romanization system from which the spelling Daoism is derived The Wade Giles tao4 and the Pinyin dao are pronounced identically in Mandarin Chinese like the unaspirated t in stop despite this Taoism and Daoism are often pronounced differently in English vernacular 10 Categorization and terminology Edit The word Taoism is used to translate different Chinese terms 11 Teachings of the Dao 道教 Daojiao lit teachings of the Tao often interpreted as the Taoist religion proper or the liturgical aspect of Taoism 12 a family of organized religious movements sharing concepts or terminology from Taoist philosophy 13 the first of these being the Celestial Masters school Philosophical School of the Dao 道家 Daojia lit school or family of the Tao sometimes Taoist philosophy or Taology 道學 daoxue lit study of the Tao or the mystical aspect 12 the philosophical doctrines based on the texts of the I Ching the Tao Te Ching 道德經 daodejing and the Zhuangzi 莊子 zhuangzi One of the hundred schools of thought during the Warring States period The earliest recorded uses of the term Tao to refer to a philosophy or a school of thought are found in the works of classical historians during Han Dynasty 14 15 These works include The Commentary of Zhuo 左传 zuǒ zhuan by Zuo Qiuming 左丘明 and in the Records of the Grand Historian 史記 Shǐji by Sima Tan This usage of the term to narrowly denote a school of thought precedes the emergence of the Celestial Masters and associated later religions It is unlikely that Zhuangzi was familiar with the text of the Tao Te Ching 15 16 and Zhuangzi himself may have died before the term was in use 16 The use of the term Daojia dates back to the Han dynasty around 100 BCE and was used to refer to the supposed authors of texts like the Tao Te Ching and the Zhuangzǐ 17 18 The distinction between Taoist philosophy 道家 and religion 道教 is an ancient one one rooted in Chinese history and language even though both share concepts The earliest references to the 道 Dao are philosophical relating either to metaphysics or to the conditions for human flourishing and are completely devoid of liturgical aspects This distinction has been rearticulated by experts on Chinese history and philosophy like Feng Youlan 馮友蘭 1895 1990 and Wing tsit Chan 陳榮捷 1901 1994 and is accepted amongst modern Chinese and observed in everyday language This distinction is rejected by the majority of Western and Japanese scholars of religion some of who claim that their interpretive procedures and hermeneutic techniques have superior validity to those of Feng Youlan and Chan Wing Tsit as well as the prevailing understanding in modern China 19 These claims which emphasize that Taoist religion and philosophy are inseparable and cannot be distinguished are being made by Western scholars of religion rather than by scholars of history or philosophy Furthermore the nature of the text of the Dao DeJing and the Zhuangzi as well as early Chinese encyclopedias and discussions identify Taoism as originally being a school of thought with no cultic significance It can be nonetheless said that religious Taoism emerged from the latter day synthesis of folk religion and the appropriation of the ideas of secular philosophical Taoism Because the ideas in original philosophical Taoism were entertained free of cultic aspect by pre Han and Han thinkers and continued to inform the lives and actions of Song dynasty neo Confucianists and others who rejected the state sanctioned and private cults that later called themselves Taoist or that were labelled as such it has been proven useful to distinguish between the two This distinction is observed in the Chinese language 道家 the Daoist philosophy and 道教 the Daoist religion This distinction is contested by hermeneutic interpretive difficulties in the categorization of the different Taoist schools sects and movements 20 Regarding this distinction Russell Kirkland writes that most scholars who have seriously studied Taoism both in Asia and in the West have abandoned this simplistic dichotomy 21 Others would argue that to confute the two would be to ignore the way Chinese people currently think and use language and the way that they have actually thought in the past Neo Confucianists and politicians might identify themselves as Taoist without subscribing to any Taoist rituals For instance both Shen Kuo and Kuo Hsiang were non religious Similarly religious Taoism emerged from the synthesis of folk religion and the appropriation of the ideas of secular philosophical Taoism Louis Komjathy writes that this is an untenable misconception because the association of daojia with thought sixiang and of daojiao with religion zongjiao is a modern Chinese construction largely rooted in earlier Chinese literati European colonialist and Protestant missionary interpretations 22 Komjathy argues that none of these terms were understood in this bifurcated philosophy religion manner in the pre modern era Daojia was a taxonomical category for Taoist texts that was eventually applied in the early medieval period for Taoist movements and priests 22 Meanwhile Daojiao was originally used to distinguish Taoist tradition from Buddhism Thus Daojiao included daojia 22 Komjathy notes that the earliest Taoist texts also reveal a religious community composed of master disciple lineages 22 Thus according to Komjathy Taoism was a religious tradition from the beginning 22 The Chinese American philosopher Chung ying Cheng also views Taoism as a religion one that has been embedded into Chinese history and tradition while also assuming many different forms including forms of philosophy and practical wisdom 23 Chung ying Cheng also noted that the Taoist view of heaven flows mainly from observation and meditation though the teaching of the way Dao can also include the way of heaven independently of human nature 23 Taoism can also not be classified as a mere variant of Chinese folk religion This is because while the two share some similar concepts much of Chinese folk religion is quite different from the tenets and core teachings of Taoism 24 Scholars continue to disagree on the nature of Taoist religion For example sinologists like Isabelle Robinet and Livia Kohn agree that Taoism has never been a unified religion and has constantly consisted of a combination of teachings based on a variety of original revelations 25 Meanwhile Komjathy sees Taoism as a unified religious tradition characterized by complexity and diversity 26 Taoists Edit Traditionally the Chinese language does not have terms defining lay people adhering to the doctrines or the practices of Taoism who fall instead within the field of folk religion Taoist in Western sinology is traditionally used to translate daoshi taoshih 道士 master of the Dao thus strictly defining the priests of Taoism ordained clergymen of a Taoist institution who represent Taoist culture on a professional basis are experts of Taoist liturgy and therefore can employ this knowledge and ritual skill for the benefit of a community 27 This role of Taoist priests reflects the definition of Taoism as a liturgical framework for the development of local cults in other words a scheme or structure for Chinese religion proposed first by the scholar and Taoist initiate Kristofer Schipper in The Taoist Body 1986 28 Taoshi are comparable to the non Taoist ritual masters 法師 of vernacular traditions the so called Faism within Chinese religion 28 The term daojiaotu 道敎徒 follower of Dao with the meaning of Taoist as lay member or believer of Taoism is a modern invention that goes back to the introduction of the Western category of organized religion in China in the 20th century but it has no significance for most of Chinese society in which Taoism continues to be an order of the larger body of Chinese religion History EditMain article History of Taoism Laozi Riding an Ox by Zhang Lu c 1464 1538 Illustration of The Debate on the Joy of Fish from the ZhuangziClassical Taoism and its sources Edit Scholars like Harold Roth argue that early Taoism was a series of inner cultivation lineages of master disciple communities According to Roth these practitioners emphasized a contentless and nonconceptual apophatic meditation as a way of achieving union with the Dao 29 According to Louis Komjathy their worldview emphasized the Dao as sacred and the universe and each individual being as a manifestation of the Dao 30 These communities were also closely related to and intermixed with the fangshi method master communities 26 Other scholars like Russell Kirkland argue that before the Han dynasty there were no real Taoists or Taoism Instead there were various sets of behaviors practices and interpretative frameworks like the ideas of the Yijing yin yang thought as well as Mohist Legalist and Confucian ideas which were eventually synthesized in the medieval era into the first forms of Taoism 31 Some of the main early Taoist sources include the Neiye the Zhuangzi and the Tao Te Ching 32 The Tao Te Ching which is attributed to Lao Tzu the Old Master is dated by scholars to sometime between the 4th and 6th century BCE 33 34 According to tradition many Taoists believe that Lao Tzu founded Taoism 35 Laozi s historicity is disputed with many scholars seeing him as a legendary founding figure 36 37 While Taoism is often regarded in the West as arising from Laozi many Chinese Taoists claim that the Yellow Emperor formulated many of their precepts 38 including the quest for long life 39 Traditionally the Yellow Emperor s founding of Taoism was said to have been because he dreamed of an ideal kingdom whose tranquil inhabitants lived in harmonious accord with the natural law and possessed virtues remarkably like those espoused by early Taoism On waking from his dream Huangdi sought to bring about these virtues in his own kingdom to ensure order and prosperity among the inhabitants 40 Early Taoism drew on the ideas found in the religion of the Shang dynasty and the Zhou dynasty such as their use of divination and ancestor worship and the idea of Heaven Tian and its relationship to humanity 6 According to modern scholars of Taoism such as Russell Kirkland and Livia Kohn Taoist philosophy also developed by drawing on numerous schools of thought from the Warring States Period 4th to 3rd centuries BCE including Mohism Confucianism Legalist theorists like Shen Buhai and Han Fei which speak of Wu wei the School of Naturalists from which Taoism draws its main cosmological ideas yin and yang and the five phases and the Chinese classics especially the I Ching and the Lushi Chunqiu 5 6 7 Meanwhile Isabelle Robinet identifies four components in the emergence of Taoism the teachings found in the Daodejing and Zhuangzi techniques for achieving ecstasy practices for achieving longevity and becoming an immortal xian and practices for exorcism 36 Robinet states that some elements of Taoism may be traced to prehistoric folk religions in China 41 In particular many Taoist practices drew from the Warring States era phenomena of the wu Chinese shamans and the fangshi method masters which probably derived from the archivist soothsayers of antiquity 42 Both terms were used to designate individuals dedicated to magic medicine divination methods of longevity and to ecstatic wanderings as well as exorcism 42 The fangshi were philosophically close to the School of Naturalists and relied greatly on astrological and calendrical speculations in their divinatory activities 43 Female shamans played an important role in the early Taoist tradition which was particularly strong in the southern state of Chu Early Taoist movements developed their own tradition in contrast to shamanism while also absorbing shamanic elements 44 During the early period some Daoists lived as hermits or recluses who did not participate in political life while others sought to establish a harmonious society based on Daoist principles 30 Zhuang Zhou c 370 290 BCE was the most influential of the Daoist hermits Some scholars holds that since he lived in the south he may have been influenced by Chinese shamanism 45 Zhuang Zhou and his followers insisted they were the heirs of ancient traditions and the ways of life of by then legendary kingdoms 46 Pre Daoist philosophers and mystics whose activities may have influenced Daoism included shamans naturalists skilled in understanding the properties of plants and geology diviners early environmentalists tribal chieftains court scribes and commoner members of governments members of the nobility in Chinese states and the descendants of refugee communities 47 Significant movements in early Daoism disregarded the existence of gods and many who believed in gods thought they were subject to the natural law of the Tao in a similar nature to all other life 48 49 Early Taoists studied the natural world in attempts to find what they thought were supernatural laws that governed existence 34 Taoists created scientific principles that were the first of their kind in China and the belief system has been known to merge scientific philosophical and religious conceits from close to its beginning 34 Early Organized Taoism Edit Zhang Daoling the first Celestial MasterBy the Han dynasty 206 BCE 220 CE the various sources of Taoism had coalesced into a coherent tradition of ritualists in the state of Shu modern Sichuan 45 One of the earliest forms of Taoism was the Han era 2nd century BCE Huang Lao movement which was an influential school of thought at this time 50 The Huainanzi and the Taipingjing are important sources from this period 51 Also during the Han the earliest extant commentaries on the Daodejing were written the Heshang Gong commentary and the Xiang er commentary 52 53 The first organized form of Taoism was the Way of the Celestial Masters Tianshi Dao which developed from the Five Pecks of Rice movement at the end of the 2nd century CE The latter had been founded by Zhang Taoling who was said to have had a vision of Laozi in 142 CE and claimed that the world was coming to an end 54 55 Zhang sought to teach people to repent and prepare for the coming cataclysm after which they would become the seeds of a new era of great peace taiping It was a mass movement in which men and women could act as libationers and tend to the commoners 56 A related movement arose in Shandong called the Way of Great Peace seeking to create a new world by replacing the Han dynasty This movement led to the Yellow Turban Rebellion and after years of bloody war they were crushed 55 The Celestial Masters movement survived this period and did not take part in attempting to replace the Han As such they grew and became an influential religion during the Three Kingdoms period focusing on ritual confession and petition as well as developing a well organized religious structure 57 The Celestial Masters school was officially recognized by the warlord Cao Cao in 215 CE legitimizing Cao Cao s rise to power in return 58 Laozi received imperial recognition as a divinity in the mid 2nd century BCE 59 Another important early Taoist movement was Taiqing Great Clarity which was a tradition of external alchemy weidan that sought immortality through the concoction of elixirs often using toxic elements like cinnabar lead mercury and realgar as well as ritual and purificatory practices 60 After this point Taoism did not have nearly as significant an effect on the passing of law as the syncretic Confucian Legalist tradition citation needed Three Kingdoms and Six Dynasties eras Edit A Taoist talisman from one of the Lingbao Scriptures The Three Kingdoms Period saw the rise of the Xuanxue Mysterious Learning or Deep Wisdom tradition which focused on philosophical inquiry and integrated Confucian teachings with Taoist thought The movement included scholars like Wang Bi 226 249 He Yan d 249 Xiang Xiu 223 300 Guo Xiang d 312 and Pei Wei 267 300 61 Another later influential figure was the 4th century alchemist Ge Hong who wrote a key Taoist work on inner cultivation the Baopuzi Master Embracing Simplicity 62 The Six Dynasties 316 589 era saw the rise of two new Taoist traditions Shangqing Supreme Clarity and Lingbao Numinous Treasure Shangqing was based on a series of revelations by gods and spirits to a certain Yang Xi between 364 and 370 As Livia Kohn writes these revelations included detailed descriptions of the heavens as well as specific methods of shamanic travels or ecstatic excursions visualizations and alchemical concoctions 63 The Shangqing revelations also introduced many new Taoist scriptures 64 Similarly between 397 and 402 Ge Chaofu compiled a series of scriptures that later served as the foundation of the Lingbao school which was most influential during the later Song dynasty 960 1279 and focused on scriptural recitation and the use of talismans for harmony and longevity 65 66 The Lingbao school practiced purification rituals called purgations zhai in which talismans were empowered Lingbao also adopted Mahayana Buddhist elements According to Kohn they integrated aspects of Buddhist cosmology worldview scriptures and practices and created a vast new collection of Taoist texts in close imitation of Buddhist sutras 67 Louis Komjathy also notes that they adopted the Mahayana Buddhist universalism in its promotion of universal salvation pudu 68 During this period Louguan the first Taoist monastic institution influenced by Buddhist monasticism was established in the Zhongnan mountains by a local Taoist master named Yin Tong This tradition was called the Northern Celestial masters and their main scripture was the Xisheng jing Scripture of Western Ascension 69 During the sixth century Taoists attempted to unify the various traditions into one integrated Taoism that could compete with Buddhism and Confucianism To do this they adopted the schema known as the three caverns first developed by the scholar Lu Xiujing 406 477 based on the three vehicles of Buddhism The three caverns were Perfection Dongzhen associated with the Three Sovereigns Mystery Dongxuan associated with Lingbao and Spirit Dongshen associated with the Supreme Clarity tradition 70 Lu Xiujing also used this schema to arrange the Taoist scriptures and Taoist deities Lu Xiujing worked to compile the first edition of the Daozang the Taoist Canon which was published at the behest of the Chinese emperor Thus according to Russell Kirkland in several important senses it was really Lu Hsiu ching who founded Taoism for it was he who first gained community acceptance for a common canon of texts which established the boundaries and contents of the teachings of the Tao Tao chiao Lu also reconfigured the ritual activities of the tradition and formulated a new set of liturgies which continue to influence Taoist practice to the present day 71 This period also saw the development of the Three Pure Ones which merged the high deities from different Taoist traditions into a common trinity that has remained influential until today 70 Later Imperial Dynasties Edit A temple in the Wudangshan a sacred space in Taoism The new Integrated Taoism now with a united Taoist identity gained official status in China during the Tang dynasty This tradition was termed HP Daojiao WP Taochiao the teaching of the Tao 72 The Tang was the height of Taoist influence during which Taoism led by the Patriarch of Supreme Clarity was the dominant religion in China 73 74 72 According to Russell Kirkland this new Taoist synthesis had its main foundation in the Lingbao school s teachings which was appealing to all classes of society and drew on Mahayana Buddhism 75 Perhaps the most important figure of the Tang was the court Taoist and writer Du Guangting 850 933 Du wrote numerous works about Taoist rituals history myth and biography He also reorganized and edited the Taotsang after a period of war and loss 76 During the Tang several emperors became patrons of Taoism inviting priests to court to conduct rituals and enhance the prestige of the sovereign 77 The Gaozong Emperor even decreed that the Daodejing was to be a topic in the imperial examinations 78 During the reign of the 7th century Emperor Taizong the Five Dragons Temple the first temple at the Wudang Mountains was constructed 79 Wudang would eventually become a major center for Taoism and a home for Taoist martial arts Wudang quan Emperor Xuanzong r 712 755 was also a devoted Taoist who wrote various Taoist works and according to Livia Kohn had frequent meetings with senior masters ritual specialists Taoist poets and official patriarchs such as Sima Chengzhen 80 He reorganized imperial rituals based on Taoist forms sponsored Taoist shrines and monasteries and introduced a separate examination system based on Taoism 80 Another important Taoist figure of the Tang dynasty was Lu Dongbin who is considered the founder of the jindan meditation tradition and an influential figure in the development of neidan internal alchemy practice Likewise several Song dynasty emperors most notably Huizong were active in promoting Taoism collecting Taoist texts and publishing updated editions of the Daozang 81 The Song era saw new scriptures and new movements of ritualists and Taoist rites the most popular of which were the Thunder Rites leifa The Thunder rites were protection and exorcism rites that evoked the celestial department of thunder and they became central to the new Heavenly Heart Tianxin tradition as well as for the Youthful Incipience Tongchu school 82 Qiu Chuji 1503 by Guo XuIn the 12th century the Quanzhen Complete Perfection School was founded in Shandong by the sage Wang Chongyang 1113 1170 to compete with religious Taoist traditions that worshipped ghosts and gods and largely displaced them 83 The school focused on inner transformation 83 mystical experience 83 monasticism and asceticism 84 85 Quanzhen flourished during the 13th and 14th centuries and during the Yuan dynasty The Quanzhen school was syncretic combining elements from Buddhism and Confucianism with Taoist tradition According to Wang Chongyang the three teachings Buddhism Confucianism Taoism when investigated prove to be but one school 86 Quanzhen became the largest and most important Taoist school in China when master Qiu Chuji met with Genghis Khan who ended up making him the leader of all Chinese religions as well as exempting Quanzhen institutions from taxation 87 88 Another important Quanzhen figure was Zhang Boduan author of the Wuzhen pian a classic of internal alchemy and the founder of the southern branch of Quanzhen During the Song era the Zhengyi tradition properly developed in Southern China among Taoists of the Chang clan 89 This liturgically focused tradition would continue to be supported by later emperors and survives to this day 90 Under the Ming dynasty 1368 1644 aspects of Confucianism Taoism and East Asian Buddhism were consciously synthesized in the Neo Confucian school which eventually became Imperial orthodoxy for state bureaucratic purposes 91 Taoist ideas also influenced Neo Confucian thinkers like Wang Yangming and Zhan Ruoshui 92 During the Ming the legends of the Eight Immortals the most important of which is Lu Dongbin rose to prominence being part of local plays and folk culture 93 Ming emperors like the Hongwu Emperor continued to invite Taoists to court and hold Taoist rituals that were believed to enhance the power of the throne The most important of these were connected with the Taoist deity Xuanwu Perfect Warrior which was the main dynastic protector deity of the Ming 77 The Ming era saw the rise of the Jingming Pure Illumination school to prominence which merged Taoism with Buddhist and Confucian teachings and focused on purity clarity loyalty and filial piety 94 95 The school derided internal and external alchemy fasting bigu and breathwork Instead the school focused on using mental cultivation to return to the mind s original purity and clarity which could become obscured by desires and emotions 94 Key figures of this school include Xu Xun Liu Yu Huang Yuanji Xu Yi and Liu Yuanran Some of these figures taught at the imperial capital and were awarded titles 94 Their emphasis on practical ethics and self cultivation in everyday life rather than ritual or monasticism made it very popular among the literati class 96 The Qing dynasty 1644 1912 mainly promoted Buddhism as well as Neo Confucianism 96 Thus during this period the status and influence of Taoism declined During the 18th century the Qing imperial library excluded virtually all Taoist books 97 The Qing era also saw the birth of the Longmen Dragon Gate 龍門 school of Wang Kunyang 1552 1641 a branch of Quanzhen from southern China that became established at the White Cloud Temple 98 99 Longmen authors like Liu Yiming 1734 1821 and Min Yide 1758 1836 worked to promote and preserve Taoist inner alchemy practices through books like The Secret of the Golden Flower 100 The Longmen school synthesized the Quanzhen and neidan teachings with the Chan Buddhist and Neo Confucian elements that the Jingming tradition had developed making it widely appealing to the literati class 101 Early modern Taoism Edit Yang Chengfu practicing Tai chi English language Chinese Health magazines with Taoist and Qigong contentDuring the 19th and 20th centuries Taoism suffered much destruction as a result of religious persecution and numerous wars and conflicts that beset China in the so called century of humiliation This period of persecution was caused by numerous factors including Confucian prejudices anti traditional Chinese modernist ideologies European and Japanese colonialism and Christian missionization 102 By the 20th century only one complete copy of the Tao Tsang survived intact stored at the White Cloud Monastery in Beijing 103 A key Taoist figure during this period was Chen Yingning 1880 1969 He was a key member of the early Chinese Taoist Association and wrote numerous books promoting Taoist practice 104 During the Cultural Revolution 1966 1976 many Taoist priests were laicized and sent to work camps and many Taoist sites and temples were destroyed or converted to secular use 105 106 This period saw an exodus of Taoists out of China They immigrated to Korea Malaysia Singapore Taiwan Thailand and to Europe and North America Thus the communist repression had the consequence of making Taoism a world religion by disseminating Taoists throughout the world 107 In the 1910s Taoist doctrine about immortals and waiting until after death to live in the dwelling of the immortals was one of the faith s most popular and influential beliefs 108 The 20th century was also a creative period for Taoism despite its many setbacks The Taoist influenced practice of Tai Chi developed during this time led by figures like Yang Chengfu and Sun Lutang 109 Early proponents of Tai Chi Quan like Sun Lutang claimed that Tai Chi was a Taoist internal practice created by the Taoist immortal Zhang Sanfeng though modern scholars note that this claim lacks credible historical evidence 110 Late modern Taoism Edit Wong Tai Sin Temple one of the most important Taoist temples in Hong KongTaoism began to recover during the Reform and Opening up period beginning in 1979 after which it experienced increased religious freedom in mainland China 111 This led to the restoration of many temples and communities the publishing of Taoist literature and the preservation of Taoist material culture 112 Several Chinese intellectuals like Hu Fuchen Chinese Academy of Social Studies and Liu Xiaogan Chinese University of Hong Kong have worked to developed a New Daojia xin daojia which parallels the rise of New Confucianism 113 During the 1980s and 1990s China experienced the so called Qigong fever which saw a surge in the popularity of Qigong practice throughout China During this period many new Taoist and Taoist influenced religions sprung up the most popular being those associated with Qigong such as Zangmigong Tantric Qigong influenced by Tibetan Buddhism Zhonggong Central Qigong and Falungong which came to be outlawed and repressed by the Chinese Communist Party CCP 104 Today Taoism is one of five official recognized religions in the People s Republic of China In mainland China the government regulates its activities through the Chinese Taoist Association 114 Regarding the status of Taoism in mainland China Livia Kohn writes Taoist institutions are state owned monastics are paid by the government several bureaus compete for revenues and administrative power and training centers require courses in Marxism as preparation for full ordination Still temple compounds are growing on the five sacred mountains on Taoist mountains and in all major cities 115 The White Cloud Temple at Beijing remains the most important center for the training of Taoist monastics on the mainland while the five sacred mountains of China also contain influential Taoist centers Other key sites include Wudangshan Mount Longhu Mount Qiyun Mount Qingcheng Mount Tai Zhongnan mountains Mount Mao and Mount Lao 116 Meanwhile Taoism is also practiced much more freely in Taiwan and Hong Kong where it is a major religion and retains unique features and movements that differ from mainland Taoism 117 Taoism is also practiced throughout the wider East Asian cultural sphere 118 The Temple among the Trees Beneath the Clouds 雲林廟 also known as Weaverville Joss House State Historic Park the oldest Chinese temple in California and an active Taoist center Outside of China many traditionally Taoist practices have spread especially through Chinese emigration as well as conversion by non Chinese 118 Taoist influenced practices like Tai chi and qigong are also popular around the world 119 As such Taoism is now a diverse world religion with a global distribution 118 During the late 20th century Taoism began to spread to the Western world leading to various forms of Taoist communities in the West with Taoist publications websites meditation and Tai chi centers and translations of Taoist texts by western scholars as well as non specialists 120 Taoist classics like the Daodejing have also became popular in the New Age movement and in popular Western Taoism a kind of popularized hybrid spirituality 121 According to Louis Komjathy this popular Western Taoism is associated with popular translations and interpretations of the Daodejing and the work of popular figures like James Legge Alan Watts John Blofeld Gia fu Feng and Bruce Lee 122 This popular spirituality also draws on Chinese martial arts which are often unrelated to Taoism proper American Transcendentalism 1960s counterculture New Age spirituality the perennial philosophy and alternative medicine 123 On the other hand traditionally minded Taoists in the West are often either ethnically Chinese or generally assume some level of sinification especially the adoption of Chinese language and culture This is because for most traditional Taoists the religion is not seen as separate from Chinese ethnicity and culture As such most Western convert Taoist groups are led either by Chinese teachers or by teachers who studied with Chinese teachers 124 Some prominent Western Taoist associations include Associacion de Taoism de Espana Association Francaise Daoiste British Daoist Association Daoist Foundation San Diego California American Taoist and Buddhist Association New York Ching Chung Taoist Association San Francisco Universal Society of the Integral Way Ni Hua Ching and Sociedade Taoista do Brasil 125 Particularly popular in the West are groups that focus on internal martial arts like Taijiquan as well as qigong and meditation A smaller set of groups also focus around internal alchemy such as Mantak Chia s Healing Dao 126 While traditional Daoism initially arrived in the West through Chinese immigrants more recently Western run Daoist temples have also appeared such as the Taoist Sanctuary in San Diego and the Dayuan Circle in San Francisco Kohn notes that all of these centers combine traditional ritual services with Daodejing and Yijing philosophy as well as with various health practices such as breathing diet meditation qigong and soft martial arts 127 Teachings EditMain articles Taoist philosophy and Five precepts Taoism Tao Edit Main article Tao Bronze script for tao 道Tao or Dao can mean way road channel path doctrine or line 128 Livia Kohn describes the Dao as the underlying cosmic power which creates the universe supports culture and the state saves the good and punishes the wicked Literally the way Dao refers to the way things develop naturally the way nature moves along and living beings grow and decline in accordance with cosmic laws 129 The Dao is ultimately indescribable and transcends all analysis and definition Thus the Tao Te Ching begins with The Dao that can be told is not eternal Dao 129 Likewise Louis Komjathy writes that the Dao has been described by Taoists as dark xuan indistinct hu obscure huang and silent mo 130 According to Komjathy the Dao has four primary characteristics 1 Source of all existence 2 Unnamable mystery 3 All pervading sacred presence and 4 Universe as cosmological process 131 As such Taoist thought can be seen as monistic the Dao is one reality panenhenic seeing nature as sacred and panentheistic the Dao is both the sacred world and what is beyond it immanent and transcendent 132 Similarly Wing Tsit Chan describes the Dao as an ontological ground and as the One which is natural spontaneous eternal nameless and indescribable It is at once the beginning of all things and the way in which all things pursue their course 133 134 The Dao is thus an organic order which is not a willful or self conscious creator but an infinite and boundless natural pattern 129 Furthermore the Dao is something that individuals can find immanent in themselves as well as in natural and social patterns 135 129 Thus the Dao is also the innate nature xing of all people a nature which is seen by Taoists as being ultimately good 136 In a naturalistic sense the Dao as visible pattern the Dao that can be told that is the rhythmic processes and patterns of the natural world that can be observed and described 129 Thus Kohn writes that Dao can be explained as twofold the transcendent ineffable mysterious Dao and the natural visible and tangible Dao 129 Throughout Taoist history Taoists have developed different metaphysical views regarding the Dao For example while the Xuanxue thinker Wang Bi described Dao as wu nothingness negativity not being Guo Xiang rejected wu as the source and held that instead the true source was spontaneous self production zisheng 自生 and self transformation zihua 自化 137 Another school the Chongxuan Twofold Mystery developed a metaphysics influenced by Buddhist Madhyamaka philosophy 138 De Edit Main article De Chinese The active expression of Dao is called De 德 de also spelled Te or Teh often translated with virtue or power 139 in a sense that De results from an individual living and cultivating the Tao 140 The term De can be used to refer to ethical virtue in the conventional Confucian sense as well as to a higher spontaneous kind of sagely virtue or power that comes from following the Dao and practicing wu wei Thus it is a natural expression of the Dao s power and not anything like conventional morality 141 Louis Komjathy describes De as the manifestation of one s connection to the Dao which is a beneficial influence of one s cosmological attunement 142 Ziran Edit Zhuang zhou in front of a waterfall The natural downward flow of water is a common metaphor for naturalness in Taoism Main article Ziran Ziran 自然 ziran tzu jan lit self so self organization 143 is regarded as a central concept and value in Taoism and as a way of flowing with the Dao 144 145 It describes the primordial state of all things 146 as well as a basic character of the Dao 147 and is usually associated with spontaneity and creativity 148 According to Kohn in the Zhuangzi ziran refers to the fact that there is thus no ultimate cause to make things what they are The universe exists by itself and of itself it is existence just as it is Nothing can be added or substracted from it it is entirely sufficient upon itself 149 To attain naturalness one has to identify with the Dao and flow with its natural rhythms as expressed in oneself 147 150 This involves freeing oneself from selfishness and desire and appreciating simplicity 144 It also involves understanding one s nature and living in accordance with it without trying to be something one is not or overthinking one s experience 151 One way of cultivating ziran found in the Zhuangzi is to practice the fasting of the mind a kind of Taoist meditation in which one empties the mind It is held that this can also activate qi vital energy 152 In some passages found in the Zhuangzi and in the Tao Te Ching naturalness is also associated with rejection of the state anarchism and a desire to return to simpler pre technological times primitivism 153 An often cited metaphor for naturalness is pu 樸 pǔ pu p u lit uncut wood the uncarved log which represents the original nature prior to the imprint of culture of an individual 154 It is usually referred to as a state one may return to 155 Wu wei Edit Illustration of the parable of the adept butcher Ding from the Zhuangzi Butcher Ding was so expert at butchering a carcass that he barely had to use any force to cut the meat Main article Wu wei The polysemous term wu wei or wuwei 無爲 wuwei constitutes the leading ethical concept in Taoism 156 Wei refers to any intentional or deliberated action while wu carries the meaning of there is no or lacking without Common translations are nonaction effortless action action without intent noninterference and nonintervention 157 156 The meaning is sometimes emphasized by using the paradoxical expression wei wu wei action without action 158 Kohn writes that wuwei refers to letting go of egoistic concerns and to abstain from forceful and interfering measures that cause tensions and disruption in favor of gentleness adaptation and ease 145 In ancient Taoist texts wu wei is associated with water through its yielding nature and the effortless way it flows around obstacles 159 Taoist philosophy in accordance with the I Ching proposes that the universe works harmoniously according to its own ways When someone exerts their will against the world in a manner that is out of rhythm with the cycles of change they may disrupt that harmony and unintended consequences may more likely result rather than the willed outcome 160 Thus the Daodejing says act of things and you will ruin them Grasp for things and you will lose them Therefore the sage acts with inaction and has no ruin lets go of grasping and has no loss 145 Taoism does not identify one s will as the root problem Rather it asserts that one must place their will in harmony with the natural way of the universe 160 Thus a potentially harmful interference may be avoided and in this way goals can be achieved effortlessly 161 162 By wu wei the sage seeks to come into harmony with the great Tao which itself accomplishes by nonaction 156 Aspects of the self xing xin and ming Edit The Daoist view of the self is a holistic one that rejects the idea of a separate individualized self As Russell Kirkland writes Daoists generally assume that one s self cannot be understood or fulfilled without reference to other persons and to the broader set of realities in which all persons are naturally and properly embedded 163 In Daoism one s innate or fundamental nature xing is ultimately the Dao expressing or manifesting itself as an embodied person Innate nature is connected with one s heartmind xin which refers to consciousness the heart and one s spirit 142 The focus of Daoist psychology is the heartmind xin the intellectual and emotional center zhong of a person It is associated with the chest cavity the physical heart as well as with emotions thoughts consciousness and the storehouse of spirit shen 164 When the heartmind is unstable and separated from the Dao it is called the ordinary heartmind suxin On the other hand the original heartmind benxin pervades Dao and is constant and peaceful 165 The Neiye ch 14 calls this pure original heartmind the inner heartmind an awareness that precedes language and a lodging place of the numinous 166 Later Daoist sources also refer to it by other terms like awakened nature wuxing original nature benxing original spirit yuanshen and scarlet palace 167 This pure heartmind is seen as being characterized by clarity and stillness qingjing purity pure yang spiritual insight and emptiness 167 Taoists see life sheng as an expression of the Dao The Dao is seen as granting each person a ming life destiny which is one s corporeal existence one s body and vitality 142 Generally speaking Daoist cultivation seeks a holistic psychosomatic form of training that is described as dual cultivation of innate nature and life destiny xingming shuanxiu 142 Daoism believes in a pervasive spirit world that is both interlocked with and separate from the world of humans 168 The cultivation of innate nature is often associated with the practice of stillness jinggong or quiet meditation while the cultivation of life destiny generally revolves around movement based practices dongong like daoyin and health and longevity practices yangsheng 169 The Taoist body Edit The Neijing Tu a diagram which illustrates the complex Daoist schema of the body as a way to aid practitioners of inner cultivation See also Three Treasures traditional Chinese medicine Many Taoist practices work with ancient Chinese understandings of the body its organs and parts elixir fields dantien inner substances such as essence or jing animating forces like the hun and po and meridians qi channels The complex Daoist schema of the body and its subtle body components contains many parallels with Traditional Chinese medicine and is used for health practices as well as for somatic and spiritual transformation through neidan psychosomatic transmutation or internal alchemy 170 Taoist physical cultivation rely on purfying and transforming the body s qi vital breath energy in various ways such as dieting and meditation 171 According to Livia Kohn qi is the cosmic energy that pervades all The concrete aspect of Dao qi is the material force of the universe the basic stuff of nature 172 According to the Zhuangzi human life is the accumulation of qi death is its dispersal 172 Everyone has some amount of qi and can gain and lose qi in various ways Therefore Daoists hold that through various qi cultivation methods they can harmonize their qi and thus improve health and longevity and even attain magic powers social harmony and immortality 171 The Neiye Inward Training is one of the earliest texts that teach qi cultivation methods 173 Qi is one of the Three Treasures which is a specifically Daoist schema of the main elements in Daoist physical practices like qigong and neidan 174 The three are jing 精 essence the foundation for one s vitality qi 氣 and shen 神 spirit subtle consciousness a capacity to connect with the subtle spiritual reality 174 175 176 These three are further associated with the three elixir fields dantien and the organs in different ways 177 176 Ethics Edit Illustration of the tortoise in the mud parable from the Zhuangzi When some officials came to offer Zhuang zhou a job at court he replied he preferred to continue to live a life of solitary simplicity like a turtle who prefers to live in the mud than to be displayed at court Main article Three Treasures Taoism Daoist ethics tends to emphasize various themes from the Daoist classics such as naturalness pu spontaneity ziran simplicity detachment from desires and most important of all wu wei 178 The classic Daoist view is that humans are originally and naturally aligned with Dao thus their original nature is inherently good However one can fall away from this due to personal habits desires and social conditions Returning to one s nature requires active attunement through Daoist practice and ethical cultivation 179 Some popular Daoist beliefs such as the early Shangqing school do not believe this and believe that some people are irredeemably evil and destined to be so 180 Many Taoist movements from around the time Buddhist elements started being syncretized with Daoism had an extremely negative view of foreigners referring to them as yi or barbarians and some of these thought of foreigners as people who do not feel human feelings and who never live out the correct norms of conduct until they became Taoist 181 At this time China was widely viewed by Taoists as a holy land because of influence from the Chinese public that viewed being born in China as a privilege and that outsiders were enemies 181 Foreigners who joined these Taoist sects were made to repent for their sins in another life that caused them to be born in the frontier wilds because of Buddhist ideas of reincarnation coming into their doctrines 181 Some Daoist movements viewed human nature neutrally 182 However some of the movements that were dour or skeptical about human nature did not believe that evil is permanent and believed that evil people can become good Korean Daoists tended to think extremely positively of human nature 183 Some of the most important virtues in Daoism are the Three Treasures or Three Jewels 三寶 sanbǎo These are ci 慈 ci usually translated as compassion jian 儉 jiǎn usually translated as moderation and bugan wei tianxia xian 不敢爲天下先 bugǎn wei tianxia xian literally not daring to act as first under the heavens but usually translated as humility Arthur Waley applying them to the socio political sphere translated them as abstention from aggressive war and capital punishment absolute simplicity of living and refusal to assert active authority 184 Daoism also adopted the Buddhist doctrines of karma and reincarnation into its religious ethical system 185 Medieval Daoist thought developed the idea that ethics was overseen by a celestial administration that kept records of people s actions and their fate as well as handed out rewards and punishments through particular celestial administrators 186 Soteriology and religious goals Edit Illustrations of Daoist immortals at the White Cloud Temple The Daoist immortal Lu Dongbin crossing Lake Dongting dated to the Song dynasty Daoists have diverse religious goals that include Daoist conceptions of sagehood zhenren spiritual self cultivation a happy afterlife and or longevity and some form of immortality xian variously understood as a kind of transcendent post mortem state of the spirit 187 188 Daoists views about what happens in the afterlife tend to include the soul becoming a part of the cosmos 189 which was often thought of as an illusionary place where qi and physical matter were thought of as being the same in a way held together by the microcosm of the spirits of the human body and the macrocosm of the universe itself represented and embodied by the Three Pure Ones 188 somehow aiding the spiritual functions of nature or tian after death and or being saved by either achieving spiritual immortality in an afterlife or becoming a xian who can appear in the human world at will 190 but normally lives in another plane S acred forests and or mountains 191 or a yin yang 192 193 yin yang or Tao realm 193 inconceivable and incomprehensible by normal humans and even the virtuous Confucius and Confucianists 194 such as the mental realm sometimes called the Heavens where higher spiritual versions of Daoists such as Laozi were thought to exist when they were alive and absorb the purest Yin and Yang 195 were all possibilities for a potential xian to be reborn in These spiritual versions were thought to be abstract beings that can manifest in that world as mythical beings such as xian dragons who eat yin and yang energy and ride clouds and their qi 195 More specifically possibilities for the spirit of the body include join ing the universe after death 189 exploring 196 or serving various functions in parts of tian 197 or other spiritual worlds 196 198 or becoming a xian who can do one or more of those things 196 197 Taoist xian are often seen as being eternally young because of their life being totally at one with the Tao of nature 199 They are also often seen as being made up of pure breath and light and as being able to shapeshift and some Taoists believed their afterlife natural paradises were palaces of heaven 200 Taoists who sought to become one of the many different types of immortals such as xian or zhenren wanted to ensure complete physical and spiritual immortality 39 In the Quanzhen school of Wang Chongyang the goal is to become a sage which he equates with being a spiritual immortal shen xien and with the attainment of clarity and stillness qingjing through the integration of inner nature xing and worldly reality ming 201 Those who know the Dao who flow with the natural way of the Dao and thus embody the patterns of the Dao are called sages or perfected persons zhenren 202 203 This is what is often considered salvation in Daoist soteriology 196 204 205 They often are depicted as living simple lives as craftsmen or hermits In other cases they are depicted as the ideal rulers which practice ruling through non intervention and under which nations prosper peacefully 202 Sages are the highest humans mediators between heaven and earth and the best guides on the Daoist path They act naturally and simply with a pure mind and with wuwei They may have supernatural powers and bring good fortune and peace 206 Some sages are also considered to have become one of the immortals xian through their mastery of the Dao After shedding their mortal form spiritual immortals may have many superhuman abilities like flight 198 and are often said to live in heavenly realms 207 196 The sages as thus because they have attained the primary goal of Daoism a union with the Dao and harmonization or alignment with its patterns and flows 208 This experience is one of being attuned to the Dao and to our own original nature which already has a natural capacity for resonance ganying with Dao 209 This is the main goal that all Daoist practices are aiming towards and can be felt in various ways such as a sense of psychosomatic vitality and aliveness as well as stillness and a true joy zhenle or celestial joy that remains unaffected by mundane concerns like gain and loss 210 The Taoist quest for immortality was inspired by Confucian emphasis on filial piety and how worshipped ancestors were thought to exist after death 200 Becoming an immortal through the power of yin yang and heaven but also specifically Taoist interpretations of the Tao was sometimes thought of as possible in Chinese folk religion 193 and Taoist thoughts on immortality were sometimes drawn from Confucian views on heaven and its status as an afterlife that permeates the mortal world as well Cosmology Edit Further information School of Naturalists Qi and Taoism and death Zhou Dunyi s 1017 1073 CE cosmological Taijitu diagram The red circle is the formless Wuji which gives birth to the two yin and yang i e taiji Daoist cosmology is cyclic the universe is seen as being in constant change with various forces and energies qi affecting each other in different complex patterns 211 212 143 Daoist cosmology shares similar views with the School of Naturalists 7 Daoist cosmology focuses on the impersonal transformations zaohua of the universe which are spontaneous and unguided 213 Livia Kohn explains the basic Daoist cosmological theory as 214 the root of creation Dao rested in deep chaos ch 42 Next it evolved into the One a concentrated state cosmic unity that is full of creative potential and often described in Yijing terms as the Great Ultimate Taiji The One then brought forth the Two the two energies yin and yang which in turn merged in harmony to create the next level of existence the Three yin yang combined from which the myriad beings came forth From original oneness the world thus continued to move into ever greater states of distinction and differentiation The main distinction in Daoist cosmology is that between yin and yang which applies to various sets of complementary ideas bright dark light heavy soft hard strong weak above below ruler minister male female and so on 215 Cosmically these two forces exist in mutual harmony and interdependence 216 Yin and yang are further divided into five phases Wu Xing or five materials minor yang major yang yin yang minor yin major yin Each of these correlates with a specific substance wood fire earth metal and water respectively 217 This schema is used in many different ways in Daoist thought and practice from nourishing life yangsheng and medicine to astrology and divination 218 Daoists also generally see all things as being animated and constituted by qi vital air subtle breath which is seen as a force that circulates throughout the universe and throughout human bodies as both air in the lungs and as a subtle breath throughout the body s meridians and organs 219 Qi is in constant transformation between its condensed state life and diluted state potential 220 These two different states of qi are embodiments of yin and yang 220 two complementary forces that constantly play against and with each other and where one cannot exist without the other 221 Daoist texts present various creation stories and cosmogonies Classic cosmogonies are non theistic presenting a natural undirected process in which an apophatic undifferentiated potentiality called wuwuji without non differentiation naturally unfolds into wuji primordial oneness non differentiation which then evolves into yin yang taiji and then into the myriad beings as in the Daodejing 222 223 Later medieval models included the idea of a creator God mainly seen as Lord Lao representing order and creativity 222 Daoist cosmology influences Daoist soteriology which holds that one can return to the root guigen of the universe and of ourselves which is also the Dao the impersonal source yuan of all things 224 In Daoism human beings are seen as a microcosm of the universe 24 and thus the cosmological forces like the five phases are also present in the form of the zang fu organs 225 Another common belief is that there are various gods that reside in human bodies 226 As a consequence it is believed that a deeper understanding of the universe can be achieved by understanding oneself 227 Another important element of Daoist cosmology is the use of Chinese astrology 211 Theology Edit Xi Wangmu The Queen Mother of the West Main article Taoist theology See also Xian Taoism and Li Hong Taoist eschatology Daoist theology can be defined as apophatic given its philosophical emphasis on the formlessness and unknowable nature of the Dao and the primacy of the Way rather than anthropomorphic concepts of God This is one of the core beliefs that nearly all the sects share 58 However Daoism does include many deities and spirits and thus can also be considered animistic and polytheistic in a secondary sense since they are considered to be emanations from the impersonal and nameless ultimate principle 228 Some Daoist theology presents the Three Pure Ones at the top of the pantheon of deities which was a hierarchy emanating from the Dao 229 Laozi is considered the incarnation of one of the three and worshiped as the ancestral founder of Daoism 230 231 Different branches of Daoism often have differing pantheons of lesser deities where these deities reflect different notions of cosmology 232 Lesser deities also may be promoted or demoted for their activity 233 Some varieties of popular Chinese religion incorporate the Jade Emperor Yu Huang or Yu Di one of the Three Pure Ones as the highest God Historical Daoist figures and people who are considered to have become immortals xian are also venerated as well by both clergy and laypeople 234 Despite these hierarchies of deities most conceptions of Dao should not be confused with the Western sense of theism further explanation needed Being one with the Dao does not necessarily indicate a union with an eternal spirit in for example the Hindu theistic sense 235 160 Practices Edit Xuan Yuan Yellow Emperor Inquires of the Dao National Palace Museum Taipei Early Ming Dynasty 1368 1644 This silk scroll painting is based on the story that the Yellow Emperor went out to the Kongtong Mountains to meet with the famous Daoist sage GuangchengziSome key elements of Daoist practice include a commitment to self cultivation wu wei and attunement to the patterns of the Dao 236 Most Daoists throughout history have agreed on the importance of self cultivation through various practices which were seen as ways to transform oneself and integrate oneself to the deepest realities 237 Communal rituals are important in most Taoist traditions as are methods of self cultivation Daoist self cultivation practices tend to focus on the transformation of the heartmind together with bodily substances and energies like jing and qi and their connection to natural and universal forces patterns and powers 238 Despite the detachment from reality and dissent from Confucian humanism that the Daodejing teaches Taoists were and are generally not misanthropes or nihilists and saw humans as an important class of things in the world 182 However humans in most Daoist views were not held to be especially important in comparison to other aspects of the world and Taoist metaphysics that were seen as equally or more special 182 Similarly some Daoists had similar views on their gods or the gods of other religions 48 According to Komjathy Daoist practice is a diverse and complex subject and can include aesthetics art dietetics ethics health and longevity practice meditation ritual seasonal attunement scripture study and so forth 236 Throughout the history of Daoism mountains have occupied a special place for Daoist practice They are seen as sacred spaces and as the ideal places for Daoist cultivation and Daoist monastic or eremitic life which may include cloud wandering yunyou in the mountains and dwelling in mountain hermitages an or grottoes dong 239 Tao can serve as a life energy instead of qi in some Taoist belief systems citation needed The nine practices Edit One of the earliest schemas for Daoist practice was the nine practices or nine virtues jiǔxing 九行 which were taught in the Celestial Masters school These were drawn from classic Daoist sources mainly the Daodejing and are presented in the Laojun jinglu Scriptural Statutes of Lord Lao DZ 786 240 The nine practices are 241 Nonaction wuwei 無為 Softness and weakness rouruo 柔弱 Guarding the feminine shǒuci 行守 Being nameless wuming 無名 Clarity and stillness qingjing 清靜 Being adept zhushan 諸善 Being desireless wuyu 無欲 Knowing how to stop and be content zhi zhǐzu 知止足 Yielding and withdrawing tuirang 推讓 Rituals Edit A Taoist ritual at the Gray Goat Temple Qingyang Gong 青羊宫 in Chengdu Sichuan Taoist ritual specialists in a procession Taiwan Ancient Chinese religion made much use of sacrifices to gods and ancestors This could include slaughtered animals such as pigs and ducks or fruit The Daoist Celestial Master Zhang Daoling rejected food and animal sacrifices to the gods Today many Daoist Temples reject animal sacrifice 242 Sacrifices to the deities remains a key element of Daoist rituals however There are various kinds of Daoist rituals which may include presenting offerings scripture reading sacrifices incantations purification rites confession petitions and announcements to the gods observing the ethical precepts memorials chanting lectures and communal feasts 243 244 On particular holidays such as the Qingming Ching Ming festival street parades take place These are lively affairs that involve firecrackers the burning of hell money and flower covered floats broadcasting traditional music They also variously include lion dances and dragon dances human occupied puppets often of the Seventh Lord and Eighth Lord gongfu and palanquins carrying images of deities The various participants are not considered performers but rather possessed by the gods and spirits in question 245 Ethical precepts Edit Taking up and living by sets of ethical precepts is another important practice in Taoism By the Tang dynasty Daoism had created a system of lay discipleship in which one took a set of Ten precepts Taoism The Five precepts Taoism are identical to the Buddhist five precepts which are to avoid killing both human and non human animals theft sexual misconduct lying and intoxicants like alcohol The other five were a set of five injuctions 74 6 I will maintain harmony with my ancestors and family and never disregard my kin 7 When I see someone do good I will support him with joy and delight 8 When I see someone unfortunate I will support him with dignity to recover good fortune 9 When someone comes to do me harm I will not harbor thoughts of revenge 10 As long as all beings have not attained the Dao I will not expect to do so myself Apart from these common ethical precepts Taoist traditions also have larger sets of precepts which are often reserved for ordained priests or monastics Divination and magic Edit A key part of many Taoist traditions is the practice of divination There are many methods used by Chinese Taoists including I Ching divination Chinese astrological divination feng shui geomantic divination and the interpretation of various omens 246 247 Mediumship and exorcism is also a key element of some Taoist traditions These can include tongji mediumship and the practice of planchette writing or spirit writing 247 Longevity practices Edit Sun Simiao as depicted by Gan Bozong woodblock print Tang dynasty 618 907 Reconstructed drawings of guiding and pulling Daoyin exercises from the Mawangdui Silk Texts Daoist longevity methods are closely related to ancient Chinese medicine Many of these methods date back to Tang dynasty figures like alchemist Sun Simiao 582 683 and the Highest Clarity Patriarch Sima Chengzhen 647 735 248 The goal of these methods range from better health and longevity to immortality Key elements of these nourishing life yangsheng methods include moderation in all things drink food etc adapting to the cycles of the seasons by following injunctions regarding healing exercises daoyin and breathwork 249 A number of physical practices like modern forms of qigong as well as modern internal martial arts i e neijia like Taijiquan Baguazhang Xingyiquan Liuhebafa are practiced by Daoists as methods of cultivating health and longevity as well as eliciting internal alchemical transformations 250 251 252 However these methods are not specifically daoist and are often practiced outside of Daoist contexts 253 Another key longevity method is ingestion which focuses on what one absorbs or consumes from one s environment which is seen as affecting what one becomes 254 Diatectics closely influenced by Chinese medicine is a key element of ingestion practice and there are numerous Daoist diet regimens for different effects such as ascetic diets monastic diets therapeutic diets and alchemical diets that use herbs and minerals 255 One common practice is the avoidance of grains bigu 256 In certain cases practices like vegetarianism and true fasting is also adopted which may also be termed bigu 257 Qi ingestion fu qi is a special practice which entails the absorption of environmental qi as well as the light of the sun moon and stars and other astral effulgences and cosmic ethers as a way to enhance health and longevity 258 Some Taoists thought of the human body as a spiritual nexus with thousands of shen 176 often 36 000 259 gods who were likely thought of as at least somewhat mental in nature because of the word s other meaning of consciousness that could be communed with by doing various methods to manipulate the yin and yang of the body as well as its qi 176 These Taoists also thought of the human body as a metaphorical existence where three cinnabar fields 176 that represented a higher level of reality and or a spiritual kind of cinnabar that does not exist in normal reality A method of meditation used by these Taoists was visualizing light which was thought to be qi or another kind of life energy a Taoist substituted for qi 176 or believed in the existence of instead The light was then channeled through the three cinnabar fields forming a microcosmic orbit or through the hands and feet for a macrocosmic orbit 176 The 36 000 shen regulated the body and bodily functions through a bureaucratic system modeled after the Chinese system of government 259 Death occurs only when these gods leave but life can be extended by meditating while visualizing them doing good deeds and avoiding meat and wine 259 Meditation Edit Illustration of Daoist meditation There are many methods of Daoist meditation often referred to as stillness practice jinggong some of which were strongly influenced by Buddhist methods 248 252 Some of the key forms of Daoist meditation are 260 252 Apophatic or quietistic meditation which was the main method of classical Daoism and can be found in classic texts like theZhuangzi where it is termed fasting the heartmind xinzhai 261 This practice is also variously termed embracing the one baoyi guarding the one shouyi quiet sitting jingzuo and sitting forgetfulness zuowang 262 According to Komjathy this type of meditation emphasizes emptiness and stillness it is contentless non conceptual and non dualistic One simply empties the heart mind of all emotional and intellectual content 262 The texts of classical Daoism state that this meditation leads to the dissolution of the self and any sense of separate dualistic identity 263 Sima Chengzhen s Zuowang lun is a key text which outlines this method 263 The practice is also closely connected with the virtue of wuwei inaction 264 Concentration meditation focusing the mind on one theme like the breath a sound a part of the body like one of the dantiens a diagram or a mental image a deity etc A subset of this is called guarding the one which is interpreted in different ways Observation guan According to Kohn this method encourages openness to all sorts of stimuli and leads to a sense of free flowing awareness It often begins with the recognition of physical sensations and subtle events in the body but may also involve paying attention to outside occurrences 265 Guan is associated with deep listening and energetic sensitivity 266 The term most often refers to inner observation neiguan a practice which developed through Buddhist influence see Vipasyana 252 Neiguan entails developing introspection of one s body and mind which includes being aware of the various parts of the body as well as the various deities residing in the body 260 Zhan zhuang post standing standing meditation in various postures Visualization cunxiang of various mental images including deities cosmic patterns the lives of saints various lights in the bodies organs etc This method is associated with the Supreme Clarity school which first developed it 252 Alchemy Edit Illustration of Daoist neidan from the Xingming guizhi Pointers on Spiritual Nature and Bodily Life c 1615 Wanli era See also Taoist alchemy and Neidan A key element of many schools of Daoism are alchemical practices which include various rituals meditations exercises and the creation of various alchemical substances The goals of alchemy include physical and spiritual transformation aligning oneself spiritually with cosmic forces undertaking ecstatic spiritual journeys improving physical health and extending one s life and even becoming an immortal xian 267 Daoist alchemy can be found in early Daoist scriptures like the Taiping Jing and the Baopuzi 268 There are two main kinds of alchemy internal alchemy neidan and external alchemy waidan Internal alchemy neidan literally internal elixir which focuses on the transformation and increase of qi in the body developed during the late imperial period especially during the Tang and is found in almost all Daoist schools today though it is most closely associated with the Quanzhen school 269 270 There are many systems of internal alchemy with different methods such as visualization breathwork 269 In the late Imperial period neidan developed into complex systems which drew on numerous elements including classic Daoist texts and meditations yangsheng Yijing symbology daoist cosmology external alchemy concepts and terms Chinese medicine and Buddhist influences 271 Neidan systems tend to be passed on through oral master disciple lineages and to often be secret 264 Livia Kohn writes that the main goal of internal alchemy is generally understood as a set of three transformations from essence jing to energy qi from energy to spirit shen and from spirit to Dao 272 Common methods for this include engaging the subtle body and activating the microcosmic orbit 272 264 176 Komjathy adds that neidan seeks to create a transcendent spirit usually called the immortal embryo xiantai or yang spirit yangshen 271 Texts Edit A part of a Taoist manuscript ink on silk 2nd century BCE Han Dynasty unearthed from Mawangdui tomb 3rdSome religious Daoist movements view traditional texts as scriptures considered sacred authoritative and binding as well as divinely inspired or revealed 273 274 275 However the Daodejing was originally viewed as human wisdom and written by humans for humans 275 It and other important texts acquired authority that caused them to be regarded as sacred 275 Perhaps the most influential texts are the Daodejing and the Zhuangzi 276 277 Daodejing Edit Main article Daodejing 1770 Wang Bi edition of the Tao Te ChingThroughout the history of Daoism the Daodejing has been a central text used for ritual self cultivation as well as philosophical purposes 278 279 According to legend the Daodejing Scripture of the Dao and its power also known as the Laozi was written by Laozi 280 Authorship precise date of origin and even unity of the text are still subject of debate 281 and will probably never be known with certainty 282 The earliest manuscripts of this work written on bamboo tablets date back to the late 4th century BCE and these contain significant differences from the later received edition of Wang Bi c 226 249 283 284 Apart from the Guodian text and the Wang Bi edition another alternative version exists the Mawangdui Daodejings 285 Luis Komjathy writes that the Daodejing is actually a multi vocal anthology consisting of a variety of historical and textual layers in certain respects it is a collection of oral teachings of various members of the inner cultivation lineages 279 Meanwhile Kirkland argues that the text arose out of various traditions of oral wisdom from the state of Chu that were written circulated edited and rewritten by different hands He also suggests that authors from the Jixia academy may have been involved in the editing process 286 The Daodejingis not organized in any clear fashion and is a collection of different sayings on various themes 287 The leading themes of the Daodejing revolve around the nature of Dao how to attain it and De the inner power of Dao as well as the idea of wei wu wei 288 289 Dao is said to be ineffable and accomplishes great things through small lowly effortless and feminine yin ways which are compared to the behavior of water 288 289 Ancient commentaries on the Daodejing are important texts in their own right Perhaps the oldest one the Heshang Gong commentary was most likely written in the 2nd century CE 290 Other important commentaries include the one from Wang Bi and the Xiang er commentary 291 Zhuangzi Edit Main article Zhuangzi book The Zhuangzi Book of Master Zhuang 莊子 named after its supposed author Zhuang Zhou is a highly influential composite text of multi vocal writings from various sources and historical periods 292 The commentator and editor Guo Xiang c CE 300 helped establish the text as an important source for Daoist thought One traditional view is that a sage called Zhuang zhou wrote the first seven chapters the inner chapters and his students and related thinkers were responsible for the other parts the outer and miscellaneous chapters However some modern scholars like Russell Kirkland argue that Guo Xiang is actually the creator of the 33 chapter Zhuangzi text and that there is no solid historical data for the existence of Zhuang zhou himself other than the sparse and unreliable mentions in Sima Qian 293 The Zhuangzi uses anecdotes parables and dialogues to express one of its main themes avoiding cultural constructs and instead living in a spontaneous way aligned with the natural world 294 295 This way of living might be perceived as useless by most people who follow their own common sense and social and political rules but this uselessness is actually a wiser alternative since it is more in accord with reality 296 Chinese classics Edit Daoist deity Zhenwu with the Eight Trigrams bagua from the Yijing and the Northern Dipper surrounded by Daoist talismans Daoism draws on numerous Chinese classics which are not themselves Daoist texts but remain important sources for Daoists Perhaps the most important of these is the ancient divination text called the Yijing circa 1150 BCE 297 The divination method in the Yijing and its associated concepts of yin and yang mapped into 64 hexagrams combinations of the 8 trigrams has influenced Daoism from its inception until today 298 299 Taoism also drew on other non Taoist Chinese classic texts including 5 6 7 The Mozi which was later adopted as a Taoist text by Taoists who also saw master Mo Mozi as a Taoist immortal and included the Mozi into the Taoist canon 300 The Hanfeizi Writings of Master Han Fei a legalist work which also contains themes which are key to Daoism such as wu wei Confucian classics like the Analects and the Mengzi Master Lu s Spring and Autumn Annals Lushi Chunqiu which is widely quoted in early Daoist sources Huangdi Neijing The Inner Canon of the Yellow Emperor an ancient Chinense medical text which was influential on Daoist inner cultivation theory Huainanzi circa 139 BCE an ancient source which includes Taoist Confucianist and Legalist ideas Guanzi which discusses Daoist ideas in several chapters Other important Taoist texts Edit There are many other important Taoist texts including Liezi 列子 Writings of Master Lie a 4th century BCE classic Taoist work which during the Tang was seen as the third great Taoist work alongside the Daodejing and Zhuangzi 292 Neiye 內業 Inward Training 4th century BCE an important and ancient text which describes Taoist self cultivation Taoist meditation how to work with qi and how to train one s heart mind xin as well as one s body 301 The ideas found in this text influenced later Daoist conceptions of internal alchemy 302 Wenzǐ 文子 Book of Master Wen a Daoist classic attributed to a Disciple of Laozi but which likely dates to the Han dynasty Huahujing Classic on converting the barbarians an old text 5th 6th century which claims that Laozi traveled to China and is thus the source of Buddhism The Taipingjing Great Peace Scripture a key source for Han dynasty Daoism Liexian Zhuan Biographies of Immortals a Han dynasty text which is the earliest Daoist hagiography of Daoist immortals The Baopuzi neipian Inner Chapters of Master Embracing Simplicity a work attributed to Ge Hong also known as Baopu Master who embraces simplicity This text is a major source for Shangqing Daoism and its inner cultivation practices 303 The Daodong zhenjing Perfect Scripture of the Great Cavern and the Lingshu ziwen Purple Texts Inscribed by the Spirits the two most influential Supreme Clarity scriptures 304 Cantong qi Kinship of the Three one of the earliest sources on Daoist internal alchemy neidan The Yellow Court Classic Huang Ting Jing 黄庭经 is a work on Daoist meditation revealed by Lady Wei Huacun of the Shangqing school in the 288 CE It remained an influential Shangqin text and was also important for Lu Dongbin Wupian zhenwen Perfect Writings in Five Sections the first of the Lingbao scriptures 305 Ling Bao Bi Fai Complete Methods of the Numinous Treasure a manual of longevity practices and neidan Zuowanglun 坐忘論 a work on zuowang sitting forgetting meditation by Sima Chengzhen 647 735 which is influenced by Buddhism 306 Huangdi Yǐnfujing 黃帝陰符經 c 8th century CE a text on internal alchemy and astrology Huashu 化書 a 10th century classic on internal alchemy Qingjing Jing 清静经 Classic of Clarity and Stillness which Daoist teachings from the Daodejing with Mahayana Buddhist ideas The text was adopted as one of the key scriptures of the Quanzhen school 307 Yinfu jing Scripture on the Inner Talisman a sixth century text which was adopted by Quanzen school as one of their key scriptures 307 Wuzhen pian 悟真篇 Folios on Awakening to Reality is a work on internal alchemy written by Zhang Boduan 張伯端 987 1082 a Song era scholar of the three teachings The Lijiao shiwu lun Fifteen discourses to Establish the Teachings of Wang Chongyang the founder of Quanzhen 307 The Book of Balance and Harmony Zhong he ji 中和集 a 13th century anthology by Daochun Li which outlines the teachings and practices of the Quanzhen School Taishang Ganying Pian Treatise of the Exalted One on Response and Retribution C 12th century discusses sin and ethics and has become a popular morality tract in the last few centuries 308 It asserts that those in harmony with Tao will live long and fruitful lives The wicked and their descendants will suffer and have shortened lives 288 The Secret of the Golden Flower 太乙金華宗旨 Taiyǐ Jinhua Zōngzhǐ an influential neidan text from the late 17th century The key texts of the Dragon Gate School Longmen Pai composed by the founder Wang Changyue 1622 80 which focus on Daoist monasticism Chuzhen jie Precepts for Novices Zhongji jie Precepts of the Central Pole Tianxian jie Precepts for Celestial Immortals and Longmen xinfa Central Teachings of Dragon Gate 309 The Taoist Canon Edit Main article Daozang The Taoist Canon 道藏 Treasury of Tao is also referred to as the Daozang It was originally compiled during the Jin Tang and Song dynasties The extant version was published during the Ming Dynasty 310 The Ming Daozang includes almost 1500 texts 311 Following the example of the Buddhist Tripiṭaka it is divided into three dong 洞 caves grottoes They are arranged from highest to lowest 312 The Zhen real or truth 眞 grotto Includes the Shangqing texts The Xuan mystery 玄 grotto Includes the Lingbao scriptures The Shen divine 神 grotto Includes texts predating the Maoshan 茅山 revelations Taoist generally do not consult published versions of the Daozang but individually choose or inherit texts included in the Daozang These texts have been passed down for generations from teacher to student 313 The Shangqing School has a tradition of approaching Taoism through scriptural study It is believed that by reciting certain texts often enough one will be rewarded with immortality 314 Symbols and images Edit A spider web ceiling depicting a taijitu surrounded by the Bagua Chinese dragon at Guan Di Taoist Temple Kuala Lumpur Malaysia Chinese Daoist Priest s Robe 19th century Aside from Daoist symbols like the dragon it also adopts the eight auspicious symbols from Buddhism The Taijitu 太極圖 taijitu commonly known as the yin and yang symbol or simply the yin yang and the Bagua 八卦 Eight Trigrams are important symbols in Daoism since they represent key elements of Daoist cosmology see above 315 316 Many Daoist as well as non Daoist organizations make use of these symbols and they may appear on flags and logos temple floors or stitched into clerical robes According to Song dynasty sources it originated around the 10th century CE 317 The tiger and dragon are more ancient symbols for yin and yang respectively and these two animals are still widely used in Daoist art 317 Daoist temples in southern China and Taiwan may often be identified by their roofs which feature dragons tigers and phoenixes with the phoenix also standing for yin made from multicolored ceramic tiles In general though Chinese Daoist architecture lacks universal features that distinguish it from other structures 318 Daoist temples may fly square or triangular flags They typically feature mystical writing talismans or diagrams and are intended to fulfill various functions including providing guidance for the spirits of the dead bringing good fortune increasing life span etc 319 Other flags and banners may be those of the gods or immortals themselves 320 Drawings of the Big Dipper also called the Bushel are also important symbols 321 In the Shang Dynasty of the 2nd millennium BCE Chinese thought regarded the Big Dipper as a deity while in later periods it came to symbolize Taiji 322 321 A related symbol is the flaming pearl which stands for the pole star and may be seen on such roofs between two dragons as well as on the hairpin of a Celestial Master 323 321 Some Taoists saw the stars as knots in the net of heaven that connected everything in heaven and earth 324 Many Taoists saw the Tao as the metaphorical pearl of the sage and a conjunction between yin and yang 325 Taoists also revered pearls more generally seeing lung dragon celestials as emerging from the glint of light off of a pearl that existed in the mists of chaos and trapped in an endless cycle where they continually retrieve the pearl that makes them out of the mists 326 Some Internal Alchemy Daoists worshipped mercury as divine water and an embodiment of conciousness that was a flowing pearl 326 In the later Qing dynasty Taoists and intellectuals who leaned towards Taoism used the wuxing as symbols of leadership and good governance using old religious texts and various historiographies made in prior dynasties to assign a phase from the five wuxing to different Chinese dynasties 327 Symbols which represent longevity and immortality are particularly popular and these include cranes pine trees and the peaches of immortality associated with the goddess Xiwangmu 321 Natural symbols are also common and include gourds caves clouds mountains and the animals of the Chinese zodiac 321 Other symbols used by Daoists include the Yellow River Map hetu the Luo Sho square Yijing coins Daoist talismans fulu the Four Symbols mythical creatures and various Chinese characters such as the character for Dao and the shou longevity character Daoist priests also wear distinctive robes such as the Daojiao fushi and Daoist versions of the Daopao which symbolize their status and school affiliation Society Edit Laojun Mountain temple of Laozi The White Cloud Temple in Beijing Xianguting Temple a Taoguan in Weihai Shandong ChinaDaoist communities can include a wide variety of people and groups including lay priests daoshi hermits monastics teachers householders ascetics family lineages teacher disciple lineages urban associations temples and monasteries 328 According to Kirkland throughout most of its history most Taoist traditions were founded and maintained by aristocrats or by members of the later well to do gentry class 329 The only real exception is the Celestial Masters movement which had a strong basis in the lower classes though even this movement had a hereditary leadership made up of figures of the Chang clan for generations 329 Adherents Edit The number of Taoists is difficult to estimate due to a variety of factors including defining Taoism According to a survey of religion in China in 2010 the number of people practicing some form of Chinese folk religion is near to 950 million which is 70 of Chinese 330 Among these 173 million 13 claim an affiliation with Taoist practices 330 12 million people stated that they were Daoists a term traditionally used exclusively for initiates priests and experts of Taoist rituals and methods 330 Most Chinese people and many others have been influenced in some way by Taoist traditions Since the creation of the People s Republic of China the government has encouraged a revival of Taoist traditions in codified settings In 1956 the Chinese Daoist Association was formed to administer the activities of all registered Daoist orders and received official approval in 1957 331 It was disbanded during the Cultural Revolution under Mao Zedong but was reestablished in 1980 The headquarters of the association are at the Baiyunguan or White Cloud Temple of Beijing belonging to the Longmen branch of the Quanzhen tradition 331 Since 1980 many Daoist monasteries and temples have been reopened or rebuilt both belonging to the Zhengyi or Quanzhen schools and clergy ordination has been resumed Daoist literature and art has influenced the cultures of Korea Japan and Vietnam Organized Taoism seems not to have attracted a large non Chinese following until modern times In Taiwan 7 5 million people 33 of the population identify themselves as Taoists 332 Data collected in 2010 for religious demographics of Hong Kong 333 and Singapore 334 show that respectively 14 and 11 of the people of these cities identify as Taoists Followers of Daoism are present in Chinese emigre communities outside Asia It has attracted followers with no Chinese heritage For example in Brazil there are Daoist temples in Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro which are affiliated with the Taoist Society of China Membership of these temples is entirely of non Chinese ancestry 335 Art and poetry Edit Further information Taoist art Carved Jade boulder with a Daoist paradise A 16th century painting of the immortal Liezi by Zhang Lu 1464 1538 Throughout Chinese history there have been many examples of art being influenced by Daoism 34 Notable painters influenced by Daoism include Wu Wei Huang Gongwang Mi Fu Muqi Fachang Shitao Ni Zan Tang Mi and Wang Zengzu 336 Daoist arts and belles lettres represents the diverse regions dialects and time spans that are commonly associated with Daoism Ancient Daoist art was commissioned by the aristocracy however scholars masters and adepts also directly engaged in the art themselves 337 Political aspects Edit Daoism never had a unified political theory While Huang Lao s positions justified a strong emperor as the legitimate ruler 338 the Daoist primitivists of chapters 8 11 of the Zhuangzi argued for a kind of anarchism A more moderate position is presented in the Inner Chapters of the Zhuangzi in which the political life is presented with disdain and some kind of pluralism or perspectivism is preferred 339 The syncretist position found in texts like the Huainanzi and some of the Outer Chapters of the Zhuangzi blend Daoist positions with Confucian views 340 Relations with other traditions Edit See also Three teachings A painting in the litang style portraying three laughs at tiger brook which illustrates the unity of the three teachings 12th century Song dynasty The Hanging Temple a temple which contains elements from all three teachingsMany scholars believe Daoism arose as a countermovement to Confucianism 341 The philosophical terms Dao and De are indeed shared by both Daoism and Confucianism 342 Zhuangzi explicitly criticized Confucian and Mohist tenets in his work In general Daoism rejects the Confucian emphasis on rituals hierarchical social order and conventional morality and favors naturalness spontaneity and individualism instead 343 The entry of Buddhism into China was marked by significant interaction and syncretism with Daoism 344 Originally seen as a kind of foreign Daoism Buddhism s scriptures were translated into Chinese using the Taoist vocabulary 345 Representatives of early Chinese Buddhism like Sengzhao and Tao Sheng knew and were deeply influenced by the Taoist keystone texts 346 Daoism especially shaped the development of Chan Zen Buddhism 347 295 introducing elements like the concept of naturalness distrust of scripture and text and emphasis on embracing this life and living in the every moment 348 Zhuangzi s statements that the Dao was omnipresent and that creation escorts animals and humans to death influenced Chinese Buddhist practitioners and scholars especially Chan Buddhists 295 On the other hand Taoism also incorporated Buddhist elements during the Tang dynasty Examples of such influence include monasteries vegetarianism prohibition of alcohol the doctrine of emptiness and collecting scripture in tripartite organization in certain sects citation needed Ideological and political rivals for centuries Daoism Confucianism and Buddhism deeply influenced one another 349 For example Wang Bi one of the most influential philosophical commentators on Laozi and the I Ching was a Confucian 350 The three rivals also share some similar values with all three embracing a humanist philosophy emphasizing moral behavior and human perfection In time most Chinese people identified to some extent with all three traditions simultaneously 351 This became institutionalized when aspects of the three schools were synthesized in the Neo Confucian school 352 Christian and Taoist contact often took place in the Tang dynasty 353 and some scholars believe that the Church of the East influenced Taoist thought on the Three Pure Ones 354 Emperor Taizong encouraged this and Taoists who agreed with him and his laws incorporated elements of Christianity Islam Manichaeism Judaism Confucianism and Buddhism into their faith 353 Comparisons with other religions Edit Comparisons between Daoism and Epicureanism have focused on the absence of a creator or gods controlling the forces of nature in both 355 Lucretius poem De rerum natura describes a naturalist cosmology where there are only atoms and void a primal duality which mirrors Ying Yang in its dance of assertion yielding and where nature takes its course with no gods or masters Other parallels include the similarities between Daoist wu wei effortless action and Epicurean lathe biosas live unknown focus on naturalness ziran as opposed to conventional virtues and the prominence of the Epicurus like Chinese sage Yang Chu in the foundational Daoist writings Some authors have undertaken comparative studies of Daoism and Christianity This has been of interest for students of the history of religion such as J J M de Groot 356 among others A comparison of the teachings of Laozi and Jesus of Nazareth has been made by several authors such as Martin Aronson 357 and Toropov amp Hansen 2002 who believe that there are parallels that should not be ignored 358 In the opinion of J Isamu Yamamoto the main difference is that Christianity preaches a personal God while Daoism does not 359 Yet a number of authors including Lin Yutang 360 have argued that some moral and ethical tenets of the religions are similar 361 362 In neighboring Vietnam Daoist values have been shown to adapt to social norms and formed emerging sociocultural beliefs together with Confucianism 363 Taoist traditions Edit Chart of Taoist Talismans Japan Muromachi period 1553 anonymous woodblock print James Michener Collection Honolulu Museum of ArtToday there are various living Taoist traditions the largest and most influential are Quanzhen Taoism Complete Perfection particularly the Dragon Gate sect and Zhengyi Orthodox Unity Taoism 364 Quanzhen lineages are mainly monastic and ascetic tradition based on meditation and internal cultivation while the Orthodox Unity tradition is based on a lay priests daoshi who are expected to master an extensive ritual repertoire 365 These two traditions developed during the Song dynasty and grew to become recognized by the imperial government during late imperial China 365 Some sects are concerned with the ritual control of spirits and the cosmic currents of yin and yang others specialize in inner disciplines of meditation or breath control and mind body exercise regimes 366 There are also various smaller Daoist groups and traditions of practice Eva Wong divides the major systems of Daoism into the following categories Magical Daoism Divinational Daoism Ceremonial Daoism Internal Alchemical Daoism and Action and Karma Daoism 367 Magical Taoism Edit Magical Taoism is one of the oldest systems of Taoism and its practices are similar to the shamans and sorcerers of ancient China 368 Magical Taoism believes there are various natural powers deities and spirits benevolent and malevolent in the universe that can be made use of by specialists who know the right methods 196 198 Their magic can include rainmaking protection exorcism healing traveling to the underworld to help the dead and mediumship 368 Protection magic can include the use of amulets and fulu as well as specific rites 369 Protection rites often include ritual petitions to the celestial deities of the northern bushel 370 Divination is also a widespread practice A commonly used method of divination in magical Taoism is sandwriting planchette writing 371 According to Eva Wong the main sects of magical Taoism today are the Maoshan sect a very secretive sect not to be confused with Shangqing the Celestial Masters and the Kun Lun sect which is strongly influenced by Tibetan magic and make use of Daoist and Buddhist deities 372 Divinational Taoism Edit Three luopans geomantic compasses used in feng shui Divinational Taoism focuses on various divination techniques to help one predict the future and live accordingly This practice can also carry deeper spiritual significance since it can help one appreciate the flux of the Tao 373 This form of Taoism owes much to the ancient fang shih the Yin and yang school of thought and often relies on the classic Chinese divination text the Yijing 374 This tradition also relies on the cosmology of Wuji and Taiji along with the teachings of yin and yang the five elements and the Chinese calendar 375 There many forms of Daoist divination they include celestial divination which include various systems of Chinese astrology like Tzu wei tu su terrestrial divination feng shui the casting of incense sticks with hexagrams on them and the interpretation of omens 246 Contemporary divinational Taoism is practiced in temples and monasteries by various individuals and may not be sect specific it is even practiced by non daoists 376 This Daoist practice can be found in the Mao shan sorcerers the Celestial Masters sect and the Longmen and Wutang shan sects 376 There are also many lay practitioners that are not affiliated with any specific sect These lay Daoist practitioners are called kui shih 377 Ceremonial Taoism Edit Interior of the Xiaomen Zhengyi TempleCeremonial Taoism focuses on ritual and devotion towards various celestial deities and spirits The basic belief of ceremonial Daoism is that through various rites human beings can honor the deities and these deities may then grant them with power protection and blessings 243 Rituals and festivals can include chanting offerings and the reading of scripture 243 These rites are mostly performed by ritual masters who have trained extensively for this role and who may through their mastery of ritual intercede on behalf of laypersons 378 There are various kinds of festivals in Ceremonial Taoism including Great Services chai chiao and Ritual Gatherings fa hui that can last for days and can focus on repentance rainmaking disaster aversion or petitioning 379 There are feast days which honor specific deities 164 Funerals and birthday blessings are a common service 380 There is a complex and large pantheon in Taoism It includes various deities classified into various ranks within an administrative structure at the top of which are the celestial lords t ien tsun These include judges heralds officers generals clerks and messengers 381 The main division is between earlier heaven deities who have existed since the beginning of time and later heaven deities mortals who later became immortal 382 146 Key earlier heaven deities include the Three Pure Ones the Jade Emperor the Queen Mother of the West the Mother of the Bushel of Stars the Seven Star Lords of the Northern Bushel and the Three Officials Celestial Earth and Water 382 Some key later heaven deities include Immortal Lu Tung pin and Emperor Kuan Kuan yu 383 Taoists may also honor local spirits and deities as well Buddhist deities like Guanyin Amitabha etc 384 The largest and most prominent sect of Ceremonial Taoism is the Way of the Celestial Masters also known as Orthodox Unity Zhengyi 380 The patriarch of this sect resides in Taiwan and this tradition performs numerous ceremonies which are often sponsored by the Taiwanese government 380 The training for Zhengyi priesthood who are not celibate focuses mainly on learning extensive rituals and liturgy so that they can perform them flawlessly 385 Ceremonies are practiced to a lesser extent in the Longmen Dragon Gate sect of Quanzhen and in the Hsien t ien Dao Earlier Heaven Way sect though these schools understand ritual as mainly a way to develop internal alchemy 385 During the Song dynasty a popular form of ceremonial Taoism was the Thunder Rites leifa which focused on exorcism and protection 82 Internal Alchemy Taoism Edit Wang Chongyang the founder of Quanzhen Daoism and his seven disciples depicted in Changchun Temple Wuhan Internal Alchemy Daoism or Transformation Daoism focuses on internal transformation through the use of various self cultivation techniques like Qigong Neidan internal alchemy Yangsheng and so forth 386 The basic worldview of this Taoist tradition is that all beings are born with certain forms of energy mainly the three treasures of jing qi and shen which become dissipated weak and lost as we age 387 To prevent this and to increase our inner vital energies one must practice various methods of internal alchemy neidan to harmonize the internal energy in one s body and refine the golden elixir jindan inside the body These meditative inner alchemical practices are believed to lead to greater longevity and even immortality union with the Dao at death 388 Another worldview is that beings must harmonize yin and yang forces internally to achieve immortality 366 389 A term used by some Taoists that sums up traditions that do not use these practices is singular path 389 Most traditions follow the singular path These include the Longmen Dragon Gate sect of Quanzhen Daoism the Hsien t ien Dao Earlier Heaven Way sect the Wu liu sect and the Wudang quan sect 390 The Quanzhen School was founded by Wang Chongyang 1112 1170 a hermit in the Zhongnan mountains who was said in legends to have met and learned secret methods from two immortals Lu Dongbin and Zhongli Quan 84 He then moved to Shandong and preached his teachings founding various religious communities 84 His school popularized Internal Alchemy Daoism and the usage of the term 83 One of his seven perfected disciples Qiu Chuji 1148 1227 founded the Longmen Dragon Gate lineage Chuji was also made the leader of all religions in China by Chinggis Khan making his tradition the most powerful in all of China and contributing to Longmen s lasting influence 88 Another important Quanzhen lineage is the Qingjing pai founded by the nun Sun Buer 1119 1182 the only female member of the seven perfected 88 Today Quanzhen is mainly made up of celibate monastics who practice vegetarianism sobriety internal alchemy and recite daily liturgies The largest lineage is Longmen 391 Much like Daoists who see writings made by influential members of their faith as having a divine nature some Daoists view self cultivation as a way for emotions and self to partake in divinity 259 and a smaller subset of these citation needed view some mythological beings such as xian as being divine 196 Xian were viewed in many lights and as completely different types of beings over different times and in different places They were sometimes viewed as deities parts of the celestial hierarchy metaphorical ideals that people should strive to be like reclusive Taoist masters who know how to control and harness spiritual energies and or shamans citation needed Hygiene Taoism Edit Hygiene Taoism is a Taoist tradition meant to increase life and physical and mental harmony 259 Some Daoists from the Hygiene School believed that they could survive only on their own breath and saliva to purify their bodies 259 Karmic Taoism Edit Karmic Daoism or Action and Karma Taoism according to Wong focuses on ethics and is grounded in the idea that the sacred celestial powers aid and reward those who do good and punish those who do evil 392 This tradition can be traced back to Song dynasty Taoist Li Ying chang and his Laozu Treatise on the Response of the Tao T ai shang kan ying p ien 392 Li sparked a popular movement which focused on the everyday life of ordinary persons instead of on temples monasteries and sages 392 At the core of this tradition is living in harmony with the Dao and with the Way of Heaven which means acting with benevolence kindness and compassion 393 Doing evil is considered a transgression against the way and this evil will be punished by deities celestial ministers and judges 393 These ideas are quite ancient the Taiping Jing Scripture of Great Peace states accumulate good deeds and prosperity will come to you from the Dao 393 Besides wealth and prosperity Karmic Taoism also believes that doing good increases longevity while doing evil decreases it 394 Another common idea in this group of Taoist traditions is that there deities like the Kitchen Lord who monitor our actions and report to Heaven and the Jade Emperor who tallies them and metes out punishment and reward 395 Karmic Taoism is a nonsectarian tradition adopted by many Taoist sects The Laozu Treatise on the Response of the Dao is studied in Quanzhen Daoism Hsien t ien Dao and in the Wu Liu sect 396 All major schools of Daoism view ethics as the foundation for spirituality 396 Furthermore there are those who are not affiliated with a Daoist sect who may still follow Karmic Taoism in daily life 396 Other divisions of Taoism Edit Taoism has traditionally been divided into religious Taoism and philosophical Taoism Daojiao and Daojia respectively Religious Taoism Edit Some Daoist sects are expressly religious in the Western sense citation needed Lord Heaven and Jade Emperor were terms for a Taoist supreme deity also used in Confucianism and Chinese folk religion 397 and some conceptions of this deity thought of the two names as synonymous The Taoist Jade Emperor in the first millennium AD was a primary deity among polytheists who had a heaven that contained numerous ministries and officials and which was modelled on the earthly emperor s rule 398 Polytheist Daoists venerated one or more of these kinds of spiritual entities 399 229 deified heroes forces of nature 229 and nature spirits 399 xian 229 spirits 229 gods 229 devas and other celestial beings from Chinese Buddhism Indian Buddhism and Chinese folk religion 229 400 401 402 197 various kinds of beings occupying heaven 229 members of the celestial bureaucracy 229 ghosts 83 mythical emperors 403 Laozi 403 a trinity of high gods that varied in how it was thought of 229 and the Three Pure Ones 229 Some Daoists chose not to worship beings they saw as gods 48 and only worshipped guardian spirits 49 or celestials 229 such as devas various kinds of beings occupying heaven members of the celestial bureaucracy and xian 229 In some Daoist sects the Dao was the primary thing that was venerated and beings that would be gods in other sects were merely treated as supernatural beings similar to gods who could only act in accordance with the Dao s wishes 403 When the Tao Te Ching was written many Taoists told stories and legends about heroes whose bodies had been rendered invulnerable 404 This could be achieved by making contact with dragon s blood or a river in the afterlife or drinking the waters of the Well of Life and eating the fungus or immortality 404 Ordinary Chinese in the early Tang dynasty often worshipped local gods Buddhist gods and devas and Taoist gods simultaneously 197 and this population included a significant amount of the Taoists who have ever worshipped devas throughout history further explanation needed The trinity is thought by scholars to have evolved into the Three Pure Ones 229 It was thought of in the early Han dynasty as the three gods Tianyi Diyi and the Taiyi 229 These beings were varyingly interpreted as relatively simple heavenly earthly and all purpose gods respectively citation needed the supreme deity an intangible god that represented the mind of the Dao his disciple the Lord Dao a more physical god representing the Dao and Lord Lao Laozi deified 229 or an emanation of the Dao that was ultimately singular in nature An unrelated trinity was the Three Great Emperor Officials three of the highest shen in some branches of religious Taoism thought to be able to pardon sins 405 The Tao was not worshipped alone 189 406 although gods do exist that anthropomorphize it in various ways Laozi was sometimes thought to be a god or the image of the Tao 189 Some Taoist adepts worshipped thousands of gods that were thought to exist in the body 259 See also EditSchools and organizations Edit See also Taoist schools Dragon Gate Taoism Hong Kong Taoist Association Lingbao School Quanzhen Taoism Shangqing School Way of the Celestial Masters Way of the Five Pecks of Rice Yao Taoism Zhengyi Taoism Concepts and objects Edit Bagua Five precepts Ten precepts Pu Taiji Taoist coin charm Wu wei Zhizha Practice Edit Geomancy Feng shui Neidan Taoist diet Taoist music Taoist Tai Chi Deities Edit Three Pure Ones Four heavenly ministers Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors Texts Edit Baopuzi Daozang Liezi Qingjing Jing Tao Te Ching Zhuangzi Regional Taoism Edit China Edit Chinese culture Chinese gods and immortals Chinese ritual mastery traditions Chinese spiritual world concepts Taoism and Confucianism Taoism in Hong KongJapan Edit OnmyōdōSoutheast Asia Edit Taoism in Malaysia Taoism in Singapore Taoism in VietnamEurope Edit Taoist Church of ItalyReferences EditCitations Edit Yin Binyong Proper Nouns in Hanyu Pinyin PDF Chinese Romanization Pronunciation and Orthography Translated by Felley Mary p 176 a b Elizabeth Pollard Clifford Rosenberg Robert Tignor 16 December 2014 Worlds Together Worlds Apart A History of the World From the Beginnings of Humankind to the Present W W Norton p 164 ISBN 978 0 393 91847 2 Creel 1982 p 2 Woodhead Partridge amp Kawanmi Linda Christopher amp Hiroko 2016 Religions in the Modern World New York Routledge p 146 ISBN 978 0 415 85880 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c Kirkland 2004 p 2 10 a b c d Kohn 2008 p 23 33 a b c d Robinet 1997 p 6 Religion in China Council on Foreign Relations 11 October 2018 Taiwan 2017 International Religious Freedom Report American Institute on Taiwan US Federal Government 29 May 2018 Archived from the original on 18 June 2020 Retrieved 17 June 2020 Carr 1990 pp 63 65 Converting the various pronunciation respelling systems into IPA British dictionaries 1933 1989 Table 3 give 9 taʊ ɪzem 2 taʊ ɪzem daʊ ɪzem and 1 daʊ ɪzem American dictionaries 1948 1987 Table 4 give 6 daʊ ɪzem taʊ ɪzem 2 taʊ ɪzem daʊ ɪzem 2 taʊ ɪzem and 1 daʊ ɪzem Pregadio 2008 Vol 1 p xvi a b Pregadio 2008 Vol 1 p 327 Taoshih Robinet 1997 p xxix Kohn 2000 p 44 a b Chad Hansen Taoism Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab CSLI Stanford University Archived from the original on 24 June 2013 Retrieved 1 October 2008 a b Graham 1989 pp 170 171 Daoist Philosophy Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 27 January 2022 Hansen Chad 2020 Daoism in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Spring 2020 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 27 January 2022 Robinet 1997 p 3 Kohn 2000 p xi Mair 2001 p 174 Kirkland 2004 p 2 a b c d e Komjathy 2014 p 4 a b Meister Chad Copan Paul eds 2010 The Routledge companion to philosophy of religion London Routledge ISBN 978 0415435536 a b Robinet 1997 p 103 Robinet 1997 p 2 a b Komjathy 2014 p 8 Pregadio 2008 Vol 1 p 326 Taoshih a b Wu 2014 pp 105 106 Komjathy 2014 p 8 24 a b Komjathy 2014 p 24 Kirkland 2004 p 20 33 75 Kirkland 2004 p 23 33 Kirkland 2004 p 61 a b c d Bellingham David Whittaker Clio Grant John 1992 Myths and Legends Secaucus New Jersey Wellfleet Press p 124 ISBN 1 55521 812 1 OCLC 27192394 Hackett Conrad Grim Brian J 18 December 2012 Other Religions Pew Research Center The Global Religious Landscape Retrieved 20 May 2023 a b Robinet 1997 p 25 Kirkland 2004 p 62 Windridge Charles 2003 Tong Sing The Book of Wisdom Based on the Ancient Chinese Almanac Consulting work done by Cheng Kam Fong Revised and Updated ed New York Barnes amp Noble Books pp 59 107 ISBN 978 0 7607 4535 9 OCLC 54439373 a b Salamone Frank A 2004 Levinson David ed Encyclopedia of Religious Rites Rituals and Festivals New York Routledge p 431 ISBN 0 415 94180 6 Huangdi Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 22 May 2023 Demerath 2003 p 149 Hucker 1995 pp 203 204 a b Robinet 1997 p 36 Robinet 1997 p 39 Catherine Despeux Women in Taoism In Kohn 2000 pp 403 404 a b Nadeau 2012 p 42 Cleary Thomas F 1998 The Essential Tao An Initiation Into the Heart of Taoism Through the Authentic Tao Te Ching and the Inner Teachings of Chuang Tzu Edison New Jersey Castle Books p 161 ISBN 0 7858 0905 8 OCLC 39243466 Cleary Thomas F 1998 The Essential Tao An Initiation Into the Heart of Taoism Through the Authentic Tao Te Ching and the Inner Teachings of Chuang Tzu Edison New Jersey Castle Books pp 123 124 ISBN 0 7858 0905 8 OCLC 39243466 a b c Harari Yuval Noah 2015 Sapiens A Brief History of Humankind Translated by Harari Yuval Noah Purcell John Watzman Haim London Penguin Random House UK p 249 ISBN 978 0 09 959008 8 OCLC 910498369 a b Sanders Tao Tao Liu 1980 Dragons Gods amp Spirits from Chinese Mythology New York Peter Bedrick Books p 73 ISBN 0 87226 922 1 Eno Robert 2010 4 8 Huang Lao Ideology Indiana University History G380 Kirkland 2004 p 76 81 Kohn p 6harvnb error no target CITEREFKohn help Kirkland 2004 p 82 Robinet 1997 p 54 a b Kohn 2008 p 65 Kirkland 2004 p 83 Legge James 1911 Lao Tsze In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 194 a b Robinet 1997 p 1 Robinet 1997 p 50 Komjathy 2014 p 26 27 Chan Alan Neo Daoism Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Robinet 1997 p 78 Kohn 2008 p 67 Robinet 1997 p 115 Kirkland 2004 p 86 87 Kohn 2008 p 68 Robinet 1997 p xvi Robinet 1997 p 150 Kohn 2008 p 69 Komjathy 2014 p 28 29 Kohn 2008 p 69 70 a b Kohn 2008 p 71 72 Kirkland 2004 p 87 a b Kirkland 2004 p 90 Robinet 1997 p 184 a b Kohn 2008 p 74 Kirkland 2004 p 91 Kirkland 2004 p 94 a b Kirkland 2004 p 163 Robinet 1997 p 185 Centre UNESCO World Heritage Ancient Building Complex in the Wudang Mountains whc unesco org a b Kohn 2008 p 75 Robinet 1997 p 213 a b Kohn 2008 p 153 a b c d e Wang Wei 16 August 2022 On the Historical Background and Ideological Resources of the Confluence of Islam and Confucianism Religions 13 8 13 doi 10 3390 rel13080748 ISSN 2077 1444 via MDPI a b c Kohn 2008 p 154 Komjathy 2014 p 29 Littlejohn Ronnie n d Taoist Philosophy The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy ISSN 2161 0002 Eskildsen 2004 p 17 a b c Kohn 2008 p 155 Kirkland 2004 p 103 104 Kirkland 2004 p 105 Kohn 2000 p xvii Kohn 2008 p 178 Kohn 2008 p 163 a b c Zhongjian Mou 2003 A Brief History of the Relationship Between Confucianism Taoism and Buddhism p 389 Springer Nature Kirkland 2004 p 108 109 165 a b Kirkland 2004 p 165 Schipper 1993 p 19 Kirkland 2004 p 110 Esposito 2001 harvp error no target CITEREFEsposito2001 help pages needed Kirkland 2004 p 112 Kirkland 2004 p 168 Komjathy 2014 p 202 203 Schipper 1993 p 220 a b Kohn 2008 p 185 Kohn 2008 p 184 Dean Kenneth 1993 Taoist Ritual and Popular Cults of Southeast China p 40 Princeton Princeton University Komjathy 2014 p 205 Reid Gilbert February 1917 Taoism an Appreciation The Biblical World University of Chicago Press 49 2 87 doi 10 1086 475692 ISSN 0190 3578 JSTOR 3136462 S2CID 145738732 Wile Douglas 1995 Lost T ai chi Classics from the Late Ch ing Dynasty Chinese Philosophy and Culture State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 2654 8 page needed Wile Douglas Taijiquan and Daoism From Religion to Martial Art and Martial Art to Religion Journal of Asian Martial Arts Vol 16 Issue 4 Dean Kenneth 1993 Taoist Ritual and Popular Cults of Southeast China p 41 Princeton Princeton University Komjathy 2014 p 211 Komjathy 2014 p 212 Human Rights Without Frontiers Religious Freedom in China in 2006 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 27 March 2009 30 6 KB An address given to the Delegation EU China of the European Parliament Kohn 2008 p 183 Kohn 2008 p 185 187 Komjathy 2014 p 215 216 a b c Komjathy 2014 p 201 Kohn 2008 p 219 Herman Jonathan R 2001 Taoist Environmentalism in the West Ursula K Le Guin s Reception and Transmission of Taoism in Taoism and Ecology ed by N J Girardot et al Harvard University Press 391 392 Komjathy Louis 2004 Tracing the Contours of Daoism in North America Archived 2011 12 26 at the Wayback Machine Nova Religio The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions 8 2 6 Komjathy 2014 p 207 208 Komjathy 2014 p 208 Komjathy 2014 p 220 Komjathy 2014 p 222 224 Kohn 2008 p 210 Kohn 2008 p 208 DeFrancis 1996 p 113 a b c d e f Kohn 2008 p 20 Komjathy 2014 p 2 Komjathy 2014 p 95 Komjathy 2014 p 98 Chan 1963 p 136 A Chan cited in Kohn 2000 p 20 LaFargue 1994 p 283 Komjathy 2014 p 83 Chan Alan Neo Daoism The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2019 Edition Edward N Zalta ed Assandri Friederike 2020 Buddhist Daoist Interaction as Creative Dialogue The Mind and Dao in Twofold Mystery Teaching In Anderl Christoph Wittern Christian eds Chan Buddhism in Dunhuang and Beyond A Study of Manuscripts Texts and Contexts in Memory of John R McRae Numen Book Series Vol 165 Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers pp 363 390 doi 10 1163 9789004439245 009 ISBN 978 90 04 43191 1 ISSN 0169 8834 S2CID 242842933 Sharot 2001 pp 77 78 88 Maspero 1981 p 32 Watson Burton The Complete Works of Chuang Tzu p 25 Columbia University Press 1968 ISBN 978 0 231 03147 9 a b c d Komjathy 2014 p 108 a b Dr Zai J Taoism and Science Cosmology Evolution Morality Health and more Archived 17 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine Ultravisum 2015 a b Fowler 2005 p 122 a b c Kohn 2008 p 21 Slingerland 2003 p 97 a b Girardot 1988 p 56 Fowler 2005 p 121 Girardot 1988 p 56 Kohn 2008 p 30 Kohn 2008 p 21 39 Kohn 2008 p 39 Kohn 2008 p 40 Kohn 2008 p 37 Kraemer 1986 p 286 Girardot 1988 p 70 a b c Van Voorst 2005 p 170 Komjathy 2014 p 85 Kirkland 2004 p 60 Oldmeadow 2007 p 109 a b c Fasching amp deChant 2001 p 35 Chan 1963 p 137 Living in the Tao The Effortless Path of Self Discovery Mantak Chia Kirkland 2004 p 190 Komjathy 2014 p 115 Komjathy 2014 p 116 Komjathy 2014 p 116 117 a b Komjathy 2014 p 117 Salamone Frank A 2004 Levinson David ed Encyclopedia of Religious Rites Rituals and Festivals New York Routledge p 430 ISBN 0 415 94180 6 Komjathy 2014 p 109 Komjathy 2014 p 110 111 122 125 a b Kohn 2008 p 50 a b Kohn 2008 p 51 Kohn 2008 p 53 a b Komjathy 2014 p 112 Blofeld John Taoism Shambhala 2000 a b c d e f g h World Religions Eastern Traditions Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby 2nd ed Don Mills Ontario Oxford University Press 2002 p 397 ISBN 0 19 541521 3 OCLC 46661540 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Komjathy 2014 p 125 Chan 1963 Komjathy 2014 p 147 Carrasco David Warmind Morten Hawley John Stratton Reynolds Frank Giarardot Norman Neusner Jacob Pelikan Jaroslav Campo Juan Penner Hans et al Authors 1999 Merriam Webster s Encyclopedia of World Religions Edited by Wendy Doniger United States Merriam Webster p 691 ISBN 9780877790440 a b c Zurcher Erik 1980 Buddhist Influence on Early Taoism A Survey of Scriptural Evidence T oung Pao 66 1 3 108 doi 10 1163 156853280X00039 ISSN 0082 5433 JSTOR 4528195 via JSTOR a b c Stefon Matt 5 December 2016 ren Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 23 April 2023 Carrasco David Warmind Morten Hawley John Stratton Reynolds Frank Giarardot Norman Neusner Jacob Pelikan Jaroslav Campo Juan Penner Hans et al Authors 1999 Merriam Webster s Encyclopedia of World Religions Edited by Wendy Doniger United States Merriam Webster p 1058 ISBN 9780877790440 Waley 1958 p 225 Kohn 2008 p 123 Kohn 2008 p 99 Kirkland 2004 p 175 183 a b World Religions Eastern Traditions Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby 2nd ed Don Mills Ontario Oxford University Press 2002 p 395 ISBN 0 19 541521 3 OCLC 46661540 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c d Taoism National Geographic Society 30 January 2023 Retrieved 30 April 2023 World Religions Eastern Traditions Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby 2nd ed Don Mills Ontario Oxford University Press 2002 pp 392 395 ISBN 0 19 541521 3 OCLC 46661540 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link World Religions Eastern Traditions Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby 2nd ed Don Mills Ontario Oxford University Press 2002 p 396 ISBN 0 19 541521 3 OCLC 46661540 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link 青山王的秘書長 陰陽司公 保庇網 NOWnews今日新聞 in Chinese 16 November 2017 Retrieved 9 May 2023 a b c Wilkinson Philip 1999 Spilling Michael Williams Sophie Dent Marion eds Illustrated Dictionary of Religions First American ed New York DK pp 67 68 70 ISBN 0 7894 4711 8 Wilson Andrew ed 1995 World Scripture A Comparative Anthology of Sacred Texts 1st paperback ed St Paul Minnesota Paragon House Publishers pp 467 468 ISBN 978 1 55778 723 1 a b Minford John 2018 Tao Te Ching The Essential Translation of the Ancient Chinese Book of the Tao New York Viking Press pp ix x ISBN 978 0 670 02498 8 a b c d e f g xian Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 21 February 2023 a b c d Chua Amy 2007 Day of Empire How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance and Why They Fall 1st ed New York Doubleday p 65 ISBN 978 0 385 51284 8 OCLC 123079516 a b c Lagerwey John 21 May 2018 Xian Encyclopedia com Retrieved 30 April 2023 Wilson Andrew ed 1995 World Scripture A Comparative Anthology of Sacred Texts 1st paperback ed St Paul Minnesota Paragon House Publishers p 20 ISBN 978 1 55778 723 1 a b Murrell Jasmyn January 2017 Virtuous Life Honored Afterlife and the Evolution of Confucianism History in the Making California State University 10 7 89 97 Kirkland 2004 p 183 a b Kohn 2008 p 23 Komjathy 2014 p 80 zhenren Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 23 April 2023 Lagerway John 2005 Zhenren Encyclopedia com Retrieved 23 April 2023 Kohn 2008 p 23 24 Kirkland 2004 p 184 Komjathy 2014 p 162 163 Komjathy 2014 p 163 Komjathy 2014 p 163 166 a b Kohn 2008 p 80 Robinet 1997 p 7 Komjathy 2014 p 87 Kohn 2008 p 22 Kohn 2008 p 81 Kohn 2008 p 82 Kohn 2008 p 83 Kohn 2008 p 85 Komjathy 2014 p 94 a b Robinet 1997 p 8 Robinet 1997 p 9 a b Kohn 2008 p 115 Komjathy 2014 p 88 Komjathy 2014 p 90 Kohn 2000 p 825 Kohn 2008 p 128 Occhiogrosso 1994 p 171 Komjathy 2014 p 99 100 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p World Religions Eastern Traditions Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby 2nd ed Don Mills Ontario Oxford University Press 2002 p 392 ISBN 0 19 541521 3 OCLC 46661540 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Robinet 1997 p 63 Maspero 1981 p 41 Segal 2006 p 50 Maspero 1981 p 92 Vuong Quan Hoang 2018 Cultural additivity behavioural insights from the interaction of Confucianism Buddhism and Taoism in folktales Palgrave Communications 4 1 143 doi 10 1057 s41599 018 0189 2 S2CID 54444540 Martinson 1987 pp 168 169 a b Komjathy 2014 p 131 Kirkland 2004 p 74 Kirkland 2004 p 191 93 Komjathy 2014 p 182 92 Komjathy 2014 p 85 86 Komjathy 2014 p 86 David Race Bannon Chinese Medicine From Temples to Taoism T ai Chi Vol 20 No 3 1996 28 33 a b c Wong 2011 p 145 Kohn 2008 p 143 Schipper 1993 pp 28 29 a b Wong 2011 p 133 142 a b Silvers 2005 pp 129 132 a b Kohn 2008 p 131 Kohn 2008 p 132 135 Silvers 2005 pp 135 137 Kohn 2008 p 174 a b c d e Komjathy 2014 p 133 Komjathy 2014 p 150 51 Komjathy 2014 p 138 39 Komjathy 2014 p 139 Komjathy 2014 p 140 Komjathy 2014 p 142 43 Komjathy 2014 p 145 a b c d e f g Stevenson Jay 2000 The Complete Idiot s Guide to Eastern Philosophy Indianapolis Alpha Books p 226 ISBN 9780028638201 a b Kohn 2008 p 136 140 Komjathy 2014 p 133 134 a b Komjathy 2014 p 134 a b Komjathy 2014 p 135 a b c Komjathy 2014 p 137 Kohn 2008 p 137 Komjathy 2014 p 132 Kohn 2000 p 672 Robinet 1997 p 228 amp 103 Schipper amp Verellen 2004 pp 70 71 Robinet 1997 p 73 a b Kohn 2008 p 170 Komjathy 2014 p 133 136 a b Komjathy 2014 p 136 a b Kohn 2008 p 171 Komjathy 2014 p 31 World Religions Eastern Traditions Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby 2nd ed Don Mills Ontario Oxford University Press 2002 pp 392 394 ISBN 0 19 541521 3 OCLC 46661540 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c Stefon Matt 2 April 2023 Scripture Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 22 May 2023 Komjathy 2014 p 31 32 Miller 2003 p ix Kohn amp LaFargue 1998 p 158 a b Komjathy 2014 p 32 Taoism Overview Patheos Archived from the original on 16 October 2009 Retrieved 16 May 2011 Eliade 1984 p 26 Watts 1975 p xxiii Kirkland 2004 p 53 Laozi Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Stanford University 2018 The discovery of two Laozi silk manuscripts at Mawangdui near Changsha Hunan province in 1973 marks an important milestone in modern Laozi research The manuscripts identified simply as A jia and B yi were found in a tomb that was sealed in 168 B C The texts themselves can be dated earlier the A manuscript being the older of the two copied in all likelihood before 195 B C Until recently the Mawangdui manuscripts have held the pride of place as the oldest extant manuscripts of the Laozi In late 1993 the excavation of a tomb identified as M1 in Guodian Jingmen city Hubei province has yielded among other things some 800 bamboo slips of which 730 are inscribed containing over 13 000 Chinese characters Some of these amounting to about 2 000 characters match the Laozi The tomb is dated around 300 B C Kirkland 2004 p 53 55 Kirkland 2004 p 65 66 Kirkland 2004 p 54 a b c Van Voorst 2005 p 165 a b Kirkland 2004 p 59 Schipper amp Verellen 2004 p 73 Schipper amp Verellen 2004 pp 74 77 a b Idema amp Haft 1997 p 90 Kirkland 2004 p 34 35 Kirkland 2004 p 34 37 a b c Ware James Hamilton Zhuangzi Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 29 April 2023 Kirkland 2004 p 37 38 Pittman Allen Walking the I Ching Archived 18 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine Blue Snake Books 2008 p 21 Wing R L The I Ching Workbook Archived 17 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine Doubleday 1979 pp 15 20 e g Cleary Thomas tr The Taoist I Ching Archived 1 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine Shambhala 1986 p 6 Kirkland 2004 p 26 Kirkland 2004 p 41 46 Kirkland 2004 p 44 46 Komjathy 2014 p 19 Komjathy 2014 p 35 Komjathy 2014 p 20 Komjathy 2014 p 36 a b c Komjathy 2014 p 37 Jordan The Taoist Canon Weber ucsd edu Archived from the original on 16 February 2007 Retrieved 16 May 2011 Komjathy 2014 p 22 23 Schipper amp Verellen 2004 pp 1 30 Schipper amp Verellen 2004 p 36 Schipper amp Verellen 2004 p 15 Little amp Eichman 2000 p 46 Schipper amp Verellen 2004 p 44 Robinet 1997 p 132 Little amp Eichman 2000 p 131 139 Feuchtwang Stephan 2016 Religions in the Modern World Third ed New York Routhledge p 150 a b Little amp Eichman 2000 p 131 Little amp Eichman 2000 p 74 Kohn 2004 p 116 Kohn 2004 p 119 a b c d e Taoism Ritual Worship Devotion Symbolism Taoism Symbolism www patheos com Retrieved 20 February 2023 Little amp Eichman 2000 p 128 Schipper 1993 p 21 Carlson Kathie Flanagin Michael N Martin Kathleen Martin Mary E Mendelsohn John Rodgers Priscilla Young Ronnberg Ami Salman Sherry Wesley Deborah A et al Authors 2010 Arm Karen Ueda Kako Thulin Anne Langerak Allison Kiley Timothy Gus Wolff Mary eds The Book of Symbols Reflections on Archetypal Images Koln Taschen p 518 ISBN 978 3 8365 1448 4 Carlson Kathie Flanagin Michael N Martin Kathleen Martin Mary E Mendelsohn John Rodgers Priscilla Young Ronnberg Ami Salman Sherry Wesley Deborah A et al Authors 2010 Arm Karen Ueda Kako Thulin Anne Langerak Allison Kiley Timothy Gus Wolff Mary eds The Book of Symbols Reflections on Archetypal Images Koln Taschen pp 784 785 ISBN 978 3 8365 1448 4 a b Carlson Kathie Flanagin Michael N Martin Kathleen Martin Mary E Mendelsohn John Rodgers Priscilla Young Ronnberg Ami Salman Sherry Wesley Deborah A et al Authors 2010 Arm Karen Ueda Kako Thulin Anne Langerak Allison Kiley Timothy Gus Wolff Mary eds The Book of Symbols Reflections on Archetypal Images Koln Taschen p 784 ISBN 978 3 8365 1448 4 Li Dun J 1965 The Ageless Chinese A History New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 333 334 Komjathy 2014 p 41 43 a b Kirkland 2004 p 81 a b c 2010 Chinese Spiritual Life Survey Purdue University s Center on Religion and Chinese Society Data reported in Wenzel Teuber amp Strait 2012 p 29 54 a b Taoism Modern Age Patheos Archived from the original on 15 November 2011 Retrieved 16 May 2011 Taiwan Yearbook 2006 Taiwan Government Information Office Department of Civil Affairs Ministry of the Interior 2006 Archived from the original on 8 July 2007 2010 Yearbook Religion PDF Hong Kong Government Archived PDF from the original on 30 June 2014 Retrieved 20 October 2014 Census of population 2010 Statistical Release 1 on Demographic Characteristics Education Language and Religion PDF Singapore Department of Statistics 12 January 2011 Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2011 Murray Daniel M amp Miller James The Taoist Society of Brazil and the Globalization of Orthodox Unity Taoism Journal of Taoist Studies vol 6 2013 pp 93 114 doi 10 1353 Tao 2013 0003 Murray Daniel M and James Miller TRADUCAO A Sociedade Taoista do Brasil e a globalizacao do Taoismo da Ortodoxia Unitaria Religare Revista Do Programa De Pos Graduac Ao Em Ciencias Das Religi Oes Da Ufpb 12 2016 315 43 Chang 1968 Augustin Birgitta Taoism and Taoist Art The Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 16 July 2014 Hansen 2000 pp 224 226 370 374 Graham 1989 pp 172 306 311 Roth Harold D 27 September 2014 Huainanzi The Pinnacle of Classical Taoist Syncretism Tao Companion to Taoist Philosophy Dao Companions to Chinese Philosophy Vol 6 Springer Netherlands pp 341 365 doi 10 1007 978 90 481 2927 0 15 ISBN 9789048129263 Fisher 1997 p 167 Markham amp Ruparell 2001 p 254 Maspero 1981 p 39 Maspero 1981 p 46 Prebish 1975 p 192 Dumoulin Heisig amp Knitter 2005 pp 70 74 Mollier 2008 Dumoulin Heisig amp Knitter 2005 pp 68 70 73 167 168 Markham amp Ruparell 2001 pp 248 249 Schipper 1993 p 192 Windows on Asia Archived 2009 02 20 at the Wayback Machine Asian Studies Center Michigan State University Moore 1967 pp 133 147 a b Chua Amy 2007 Day of Empire How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance and Why They Fall 1st ed New York Doubleday p 71 ISBN 978 0 385 51284 8 OCLC 123079516 World Religions Eastern Traditions Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby 2nd ed Don Mills Ontario Oxford University Press 2002 p 393 ISBN 0 19 541521 3 OCLC 46661540 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link 1 Contemplations on the Tao Series Werblowsky 2002 p 25 Aronson 2002 p page needed Toropov amp Hansen 2002 pp 169 181 Yamamoto 1998 pp 69 70 Ruokanen amp Zhanzhu Huang 2010 p 137 Zhiming 2010 p page needed Chung 2001 p 141 145 Napier et al 2018 Chan 2005 p 93 a b Kohn 2008 p 149 a b Bowker John 2021 World Religions The Great Faiths Explored amp Explained New York DK p 169 ISBN 978 0 7440 3475 2 Wong 2011 p 99 198 a b Wong 2011 p 99 Wong 2011 p 103 Wong 2011 p 105 106 Wong 2011 p 107 Wong 2011 p 115 117 Wong 2011 p 119 Wong 2011 p 115 121 Wong 2011 p 124 131 a b Wong 2011 p 123 Wong 2011 p 124 Wong 2011 p 146 Wong 2011 p 163 a b c Wong 2011 p 164 Wong 2011 p 146 159 a b Wong 2011 p 147 154 Wong 2011 p 155 157 Wong 2011 p 159 a b Wong 2011 p 169 Wong 2011 p 172 173 Wong 2011 p 173 Wong 2011 p 173 174 a b Wong 2011 p 183 Wong 2011 p 184 Komjathy 2014 p 30 a b c Wong 2011 p 190 a b c Wong 2011 p 191 Wong 2011 p 192 Wong 2011 p 193 a b c Wong 2011 p 194 World Religions Eastern Traditions Edited by Willard Gurdon Oxtoby 2nd ed Don Mills Ontario Oxford University Press 2002 pp 326 393 401 ISBN 0 19 541521 3 OCLC 46661540 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Storm Rachel 2011 Sudell Helen ed Myths amp Legends of India Egypt China amp Japan 2nd ed Wigston Leicestershire Lorenz Books p 176 a b Cleary Thomas F 1998 The Essential Tao An Initiation Into the Heart of Taoism Through the Authentic Tao Te Ching and the Inner Teachings of Chuang Tzu Edison New Jersey Castle Books p 166 ISBN 0 7858 0905 8 OCLC 39243466 Bellingham David Whittaker Clio Grant John 1992 Myths and Legends Secaucus New Jersey Wellfleet Press p 126 ISBN 1 55521 812 1 OCLC 27192394 Zurcher Erik 1980 Buddhist Influence on Early Taoism A Survey of Scriptural Evidence T oung Pao 66 1 3 125 126 doi 10 1163 156853280X00039 ISSN 0082 5433 JSTOR 4528195 via JSTOR STEVENS KEITH 1998 Images of Sinicised Vedic Deities on Chinese Altars Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 38 62 77 78 85 ISSN 0085 5774 JSTOR 23889810 via JSTOR a b c Szostak Rick 22 October 2020 Making Sense of World History London Routledge p 466 doi 10 4324 9781003013518 ISBN 9781003013518 S2CID 224902752 a b Mackenzie Donald Alexander 1986 China amp Japan Myths and Legends New York Avenel Books pp 317 318 ISBN 9780517604465 Sanguan Encyclopedia Britannica 3 February 2010 Retrieved 30 April 2023 Gods and spirits BBC 12 November 2009 Retrieved 4 May 2023 General sources Edit Aronson Martin 2002 Jesus and Lao Tzu The Parallel Sayings Ulysses Press ISBN 978 1569753194 Archived from the original on 24 November 2015 The Divine Classic of Nan Hua Being the Works of Chuang Tsze Taoist Philosopher Translated by Balfour Frederic Henry Kelly amp Walsh 1881 Bishop Donald H ed 1995 Chinese Thought An Introduction Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 9788120811393 Retrieved 21 August 2017 Carr Michael 1990 Whence the Pronunciation of Taoism Dictionaries 12 55 74 doi 10 1353 dic 1990 0004 S2CID 201790095 Chan Wing tsit 1963 A Source Book in Chinese Philosophy Princeton ISBN 0 691 01964 9 Chan Kim Kwong 2005 Religion in China in the Twenty first Century Some Scenarios Religion State amp Society 33 2 87 119 doi 10 1080 09637490500118570 S2CID 73530576 Chang Chung yuan 1968 Creativity and Taoism A Study of Chinese Philosophy Art and Poetry New York Harper Torchbooks ISBN 978 0 06 131968 6 Ching Julia Guisso R W L eds 1991 Sages and Filial Sons Mythology and Archaeology in Ancient China Chinese University Press ISBN 978 962 201 469 5, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.