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Taiji (philosophy)

In Chinese philosophy, taiji (Chinese: 太極; pinyin: tàijí; Wade–Giles: t'ai chi; lit. 'greatest extent'; trans. "supreme ultimate") is a cosmological state of the universe and its affairs on all levels, involving the interaction of Yin and Yang, the Five Phases and finally, all the concrete things in the universe. More concretely, taiji is a conceptual current throughout religious and philosophical traditions indigenous to China, contemporaneously studied and applied in the profession of acupuncture, and within traditional Chinese medicine throughout and beyond the Sinosphere.

Taiji
A diagram illustrating the concept of taiji, called a taijitu. The above design, depicting interlocking swirls of yin and yang around a central void, is the symbol's original form as introduced by Ming-era philosopher Lai Zhide
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese太極
Simplified Chinese太极
Literal meaning"Supreme Pole/goal"
Vietnamese name
Vietnamese alphabetThái cực
Chữ Hán太極
Korean name
Hangul태극
Hanja太極
Transcriptions
Revised RomanizationTaegeuk
McCune–ReischauerT'aegŭk
Japanese name
Kanji太極
Kanaたいきょく
Transcriptions
RomanizationTaikyoku

Etymology edit

Taiji (太極) is a compound of "tai" () and "ji" (). Tai can be translated as "great; grand; supreme; extreme; very; too", and is a superlative form of the Chinese word meaning "big, large, great" (Chinese: ; pinyin: ). Ji literally translates as "pole; highest/utmost point; extreme", but just like "pole" in English, "ji" is also used to refer to geographical poles. Combining the two words, taiji could be understood as "the source, the beginning of the world".

Common English translations of the cosmological taiji are the "Supreme Ultimate" [1] or "Great Ultimate";[2] but other versions are the "Supreme Pole",[3] "Great Absolute", or "Supreme Polarity".[4]

Core concept edit

Scholars Zhang and Ryden explain the ontological necessity of taiji.

Any philosophy that asserts two elements such as the yin-yang of Chinese philosophy will also look for a term to reconcile the two, to ensure that both belong to the same sphere of discourse. The term 'supreme ultimate' performs this role in the philosophy of the Book of Changes. In the Song dynasty it became a metaphysical term on a par with the Way.[5]

Taiji is understood to be the highest conceivable principle from which existence flows. This is very similar to the Daoist idea "reversal is the movement of the Dao". The "supreme ultimate" creates yang and yin. Movement generates yang, and when its activity reaches its limit, it becomes tranquil. Through tranquility the supreme ultimate generates yin. When tranquility has reached its limit, there is a return to movement. Movement and tranquility, in alternation, become each the source of the other. The distinction between the yin and yang is determined and the two forms (that is, the yin and yang) stand revealed. By the transformations of the yang and the union of the yin, the 4 directions then the 5 phases (wuxing) of water, fire, earth and then wood, metal are produced. These 5 phases become diffused, which creates harmony. Once there is harmony the 5 seasons of winter, spring, summer, late summer and autumn can occur. Yin and yang construct and deconstructed all things; this process is enduring, eternal and never ending.[6]

Taiji is often translated as "polar", with polarity, revealing opposing features as in expanding/contracting, rising/falling, clockwise/ anticlockwise. However, taiji has sometimes been thought of as a monistic concept similar to wuji, as in the Wujitu diagram.[7] Wuji literally translates as "without roof pole", but means without limit, polarity, and/or opposite. Compared with wuji, taiji describes movement and change wherein limits do arise. While wuji is undifferentiated, timeless, absolute, infinite potential, taiji is often wrongly portrayed as conflictual, differentiated and dualistic, where as the core to this philosophy is their harmonious, relative and complementary natures.

Yin and yang are reflections and originate from wuji to become taiji.

In Chinese texts edit

Zhuangzi edit

The Daoist classic Zhuangzi introduced the taiji concept. One of the (ca. 3rd century BCE) "Inner Chapters" contrasts taiji (here translated as "zenith") with the liuji (六極). Liuji literally means "six ultimates; six cardinal directions", but here it is translated as "nadir".

The Way has attributes and evidence, but it has no action and no form. It may be transmitted but cannot be received. It may be apprehended but cannot be seen. From the root, from the stock, before there was heaven or earth, for all eternity truly has it existed. It inspirits demons and gods, gives birth to heaven and earth. It lies above the zenith but is not high; it lies beneath the nadir but is not deep. It is prior to heaven and earth, but is not ancient; it is senior to high antiquity, but it is not old.[8]

Huainanzi edit

The 2nd century BCE Huainanzi mentions a zhenren ("true person; perfected person") and the taiji that transcends categories like yin and yang, exemplified with the fusui and fangzhu mirrors.

The fu-sui 夫煫 (burning mirror) gathers fire energy from the sun; the fang-chu 方諸 (moon mirror) gathers dew from the moon. What are [contained] between Heaven and Earth, even an expert calculator cannot compute their number. Thus, though the hand can handle and examine extremely small things, it cannot lay hold of the brightness [of the sun and moon]. Were it within the grasp of one's hand (within one's power) to gather [things within] one category from the Supreme Ultimate (t'ai-chi 太極) above, one could immediately produce both fire and water. This is because Yin and Yang share a common ch'i and move each other.[9]

I Ching edit

Taiji also appears in the Xici, a commentary to the I Ching. It is traditionally attributed to Confucius but more likely dates to about the 3rd century BCE.[10]

Therefore there is in the Changes the Great Primal Beginning. This generates the two primary forces. The two primary forces generate the four images. The four images generate the eight trigrams. The eight trigrams determine good fortune and misfortune. Good fortune and misfortune create the great field of action.[11]

This sequence of powers of two includes taiji → yin and yang (two polarities) → Sixiang (Four Symbols) → Bagua (eight trigrams).

The fundamental postulate is the "great primal beginning" of all that exists, t'ai chi – in its original meaning, the "ridgepole". Later Indian philosophers devoted much thought to this idea of a primal beginning. A still earlier beginning, wu chi, was represented by the symbol of a circle. Under this conception, t'ai chi was represented by the circle divided into the light and the dark, yang and yin,  . This symbol has also played a significant part in India and Europe. However, speculations of a Gnostic-dualistic character are foreign to the original thought of the I Ching; what it posits is simply the ridgepole, the line. With this line, which in itself represents oneness, duality comes into the world, for the line at the same time posits an above and a below, a right and left, front and back – in a word, the world of the opposites.[12]

Song dynasty edit

 
Zhou's Taijitu diagram

In the Neo-Confucianism philosophy that developed during the Song dynasty, taiji was viewed "as a microcosm equivalent to the structure of the human body."[13] The Song-era philosopher Zhou Dunyi (1017-1073 CE) wrote the Taijitushuo (太極圖說) "Explanation of the Diagram of the Supreme Ultimate", which became the cornerstone of Neo-Confucianist cosmology. Zhou's brief text synthesized aspects of Chinese Buddhism and Daoism with the metaphysical discussions in the I Ching. Zhou's opening lines are:

Non-polar (wuji) and yet Supreme Polarity (taiji)![a] The Supreme Polarity[b] in activity generates yang; yet at the limit of activity it is still. In stillness it generates yin; yet at the limit of stillness it is also active. Activity and stillness alternate; each is the basis of the other. In distinguishing yin and yang, the Two Modes are thereby established. The alternation and combination of yang and yin generate water, fire, wood, metal, and earth. With these five [phases of] qi harmoniously arranged, the Four Seasons proceed through them. The Five Phases are simply yin and yang; yin and yang are simply the Supreme Polarity; the Supreme Polarity is fundamentally Non-polar. [Yet] in the generation of the Five Phases, each one has its nature.[15]

In tai chi edit

The martial art tai chi draws heavily on Chinese philosophy, especially the concept of the taiji. The Chinese name of tai chi, taijiquan, literally translates as "taiji boxing" or "taiji fist".[16] Early tai chi masters such as Yang Luchan promoted the connection between their martial art and the concept of the taiji.[17][18][19][20] The twenty-fourth chapter of the "Forty Chapter" tai chi classic that Yang Banhou gave to Wu Quanyou says the following about the connect between tai chi and spirituality:

If the essence of material substances lies in their phenomenological reality, then the presence of the ontological status of abstract objects shall become clear in the final culmination of the energy that is derived from oneness and the Real. How can man learn this truth? By truly seeking that which is the shadow of philosophy and the charge of all living substances, that of the nature of the divine.

[citation needed]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Alternatively, this line could be translated as "The Supreme Polarity that is Non-Polar!"
  2. ^ Instead of usual taiji translations "Supreme Ultimate" or "Supreme Pole", Adler uses "Supreme Polarity" [14] because Zhu Xi describes it as the alternating principle of yin and yang, and "... insists that taiji is not a thing (hence "Supreme Pole" will not do). Thus, for both Zhou and Zhu, taiji is the yin-yang principle of bipolarity, which is the most fundamental ordering principle, the cosmic "first principle." Wuji as "non-polar" follows from this."

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Le Blanc 1985, Zhang & Ryden 2002
  2. ^ Chen 1989, Robinet 2008, Oxtoby 2002
  3. ^ Needham & Ronan 1978
  4. ^ Adler 1999
  5. ^ Zhang & Ryden 2002, p. 179
  6. ^ Wu 1986
  7. ^ Wang, Robin R. (July 2005). "Zhou Dunyi's Diagram of the Supreme Ultimate Explained: A Construction of the Confucian Metaphysics". Journal of the History of Ideas. 66 (3). Loyola Marymount University: 311. doi:10.1353/jhi.2005.0047. S2CID 73700080 – via The Digital Scholarship Repository at Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School.
  8. ^ Mair 1994, p. 55
  9. ^ Le Blanc 1985, pp. 120–1
  10. ^ Smith, Richard J. (2008). Fathoming the Cosmos and Ordering the World: The Yijing (I-Ching, or Classic of Changes) and Its Evolution in China. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press. p. 8.
  11. ^ Wilhelm & Baynes 1967, pp. 318–9
  12. ^ Wilhelm & Baynes 1967, p. lv
  13. ^ Oxtoby, Willard Gurdon, ed. (2002). World Religions: Eastern Traditions (2nd ed.). Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press. p. 424. ISBN 0-19-541521-3. OCLC 46661540.
  14. ^ See Robinet 1990
  15. ^ Adler 1999, pp. 673–4
  16. ^ Michael P. Garofalo (2021). "Thirteen Postures of Taijiquan". Cloud Hands blog. from the original on 2023-04-16. Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  17. ^ Eberhard, Wolfram (1986). A Dictionary of Chinese Symbols: Hidden Symbols in Chinese Life and Thought. Routledge & Kegan Paul, London. ISBN 0-415-00228-1.
  18. ^ Woolidge, Doug (June 1997). "T'AI CHI The International Magazine of T'ai Chi Ch'uan Vol. 21 No. 3". T'ai Chi. Wayfarer Publications. ISSN 0730-1049.
  19. ^ 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.
  20. ^ Wile, Douglas (2007). "Taijiquan and Taoism from Religion to Martial Art and Martial Art to Religion - Journal of Asian Martial Arts Vol. 16 No. 4". Journal of Asian Martial Arts. Via Media Publishing. ISSN 1057-8358.

Sources edit

  • Adler, Joseph A. (1999). "Zhou Dunyi: The Metaphysics and Practice of Sagehood". In De Bary, William Theodore; Bloom, Irene (eds.). Sources of Chinese Tradition (2nd ed.). Columbia University Press.
  • Bowker, John (2002). The Cambridge Illustrated History of Religions. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521810371.
  • Cohen, Kenneth J. (1997). The Way of QiGong. The Art and Science of Chinese Energy Healing. New York: Ballantine. ISBN 9780345421098.
  • Coogan, Michael, ed. (2005). Eastern Religions: origins, beliefs, practices, holy texts, sacred places. Oxford University press. ISBN 9780195221916.
  • Chen, Ellen M. (1989). The Tao Te Ching: A New Translation and Commentary. Paragon House. ISBN 9781557782380.
  • Gedalecia, D. (October 1974). "Excursion Into Substance and Function: The Development of the T'i-Yung Paradigm in Chu Hsi". Philosophy East and West. 24 (4): 443–451. doi:10.2307/1397804. JSTOR 1397804.
  • Le Blanc, Charles (1985). Huai-nan Tzu: Philosophical Synthesis in Early Han Thought: The Idea of Resonance (Kan-Ying) With a Translation and Analysis of Chapter Six. Hong Kong University Press. ISBN 9789622091795.
  • Mair, Victor H. (1994). Wandering on the Way: early Taoist tales and parables of Chuang Tzu. Bantam. ISBN 9780824820381.
  • National QiGong Association Research and Education Committee Meeting. Terminology Task Force. Meeting. November 2012.
  • Needham, Joseph; Ronan, Colin A. (1978). The Shorter Science and Civilisation in China: an abridgement of Joseph Needham's original text. Cambridge University Press. OCLC 229421664.
  • Robinet, Isabelle (1990). "The Place and Meaning of the Notion of Taiji in Taoist Sources Prior to the Ming Dynasty". History of Religions. 23 (4): 373–411. doi:10.1086/463205. S2CID 161955134.
  • Robinet, Isabelle (2008). "Wuji and Taiji 無極 • 太極 Ultimateless and Great Ultimate". In Pregadio, Fabrizio (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Taoism. Routledge. pp. 1057–9. ISBN 9780700712007.
  • Wilhelm, Richard; Baynes, Cary F. (1967). The I Ching or Book of Changes. Bollingen Series XIX. Princeton University Press.
  • Wu, Laurence C. (1986). Fundamentals of Chinese Philosophy. University Press of America. ISBN 0-8191-5570-5.
  • Zhang, Dainian; Ryden, Edmund (2002). Key Concepts in Chinese Philosophy. Yale University Press.

lang, latn, taiji, philosophy, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, require, copy, editing, grammar, style, cohesion, tone, spelling, assist, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may require copy editing for grammar style cohesion tone or spelling You can assist by editing it October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message In Chinese philosophy taiji Chinese 太極 pinyin taiji Wade Giles t ai chi lit greatest extent trans supreme ultimate is a cosmological state of the universe and its affairs on all levels involving the interaction of Yin and Yang the Five Phases and finally all the concrete things in the universe More concretely taiji is a conceptual current throughout religious and philosophical traditions indigenous to China contemporaneously studied and applied in the profession of acupuncture and within traditional Chinese medicine throughout and beyond the Sinosphere TaijiA diagram illustrating the concept of taiji called a taijitu The above design depicting interlocking swirls of yin and yang around a central void is the symbol s original form as introduced by Ming era philosopher Lai ZhideChinese nameTraditional Chinese太極Simplified Chinese太极Literal meaning Supreme Pole goal TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyintaijiWade GilesT ai ChiYue CantoneseJyutpingtai3 gik6IPA tʰaːi kɪ k Southern MinHokkien POJthai ke kEastern MinFuzhou BUCTai gĭkVietnamese nameVietnamese alphabetThai cựcChữ Han太極Korean nameHangul태극Hanja太極TranscriptionsRevised RomanizationTaegeukMcCune ReischauerT aegŭkJapanese nameKanji太極KanaたいきょくTranscriptionsRomanizationTaikyoku Contents 1 Etymology 2 Core concept 3 In Chinese texts 3 1 Zhuangzi 3 2 Huainanzi 3 3 I Ching 3 4 Song dynasty 4 In tai chi 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 SourcesEtymology editTaiji 太極 is a compound of tai 太 and ji 極 Tai can be translated as great grand supreme extreme very too and is a superlative form of the Chinese word meaning big large great Chinese 大 pinyin da Ji literally translates as pole highest utmost point extreme but just like pole in English ji is also used to refer to geographical poles Combining the two words taiji could be understood as the source the beginning of the world Common English translations of the cosmological taiji are the Supreme Ultimate 1 or Great Ultimate 2 but other versions are the Supreme Pole 3 Great Absolute or Supreme Polarity 4 Core concept editScholars Zhang and Ryden explain the ontological necessity of taiji Any philosophy that asserts two elements such as the yin yang of Chinese philosophy will also look for a term to reconcile the two to ensure that both belong to the same sphere of discourse The term supreme ultimate performs this role in the philosophy of the Book of Changes In the Song dynasty it became a metaphysical term on a par with the Way 5 Taiji is understood to be the highest conceivable principle from which existence flows This is very similar to the Daoist idea reversal is the movement of the Dao The supreme ultimate creates yang and yin Movement generates yang and when its activity reaches its limit it becomes tranquil Through tranquility the supreme ultimate generates yin When tranquility has reached its limit there is a return to movement Movement and tranquility in alternation become each the source of the other The distinction between the yin and yang is determined and the two forms that is the yin and yang stand revealed By the transformations of the yang and the union of the yin the 4 directions then the 5 phases wuxing of water fire earth and then wood metal are produced These 5 phases become diffused which creates harmony Once there is harmony the 5 seasons of winter spring summer late summer and autumn can occur Yin and yang construct and deconstructed all things this process is enduring eternal and never ending 6 Taiji is often translated as polar with polarity revealing opposing features as in expanding contracting rising falling clockwise anticlockwise However taiji has sometimes been thought of as a monistic concept similar to wuji as in the Wujitu diagram 7 Wuji literally translates as without roof pole but means without limit polarity and or opposite Compared with wuji taiji describes movement and change wherein limits do arise While wuji is undifferentiated timeless absolute infinite potential taiji is often wrongly portrayed as conflictual differentiated and dualistic where as the core to this philosophy is their harmonious relative and complementary natures Yin and yang are reflections and originate from wuji to become taiji In Chinese texts editZhuangzi edit The Daoist classic Zhuangzi introduced the taiji concept One of the ca 3rd century BCE Inner Chapters contrasts taiji here translated as zenith with the liuji 六極 Liuji literally means six ultimates six cardinal directions but here it is translated as nadir The Way has attributes and evidence but it has no action and no form It may be transmitted but cannot be received It may be apprehended but cannot be seen From the root from the stock before there was heaven or earth for all eternity truly has it existed It inspirits demons and gods gives birth to heaven and earth It lies above the zenith but is not high it lies beneath the nadir but is not deep It is prior to heaven and earth but is not ancient it is senior to high antiquity but it is not old 8 Huainanzi edit The 2nd century BCE Huainanzi mentions a zhenren true person perfected person and the taiji that transcends categories like yin and yang exemplified with the fusui and fangzhu mirrors The fu sui 夫煫 burning mirror gathers fire energy from the sun the fang chu 方諸 moon mirror gathers dew from the moon What are contained between Heaven and Earth even an expert calculator cannot compute their number Thus though the hand can handle and examine extremely small things it cannot lay hold of the brightness of the sun and moon Were it within the grasp of one s hand within one s power to gather things within one category from the Supreme Ultimate t ai chi 太極 above one could immediately produce both fire and water This is because Yin and Yang share a common ch i and move each other 9 I Ching edit Taiji also appears in the Xici a commentary to the I Ching It is traditionally attributed to Confucius but more likely dates to about the 3rd century BCE 10 Therefore there is in the Changes the Great Primal Beginning This generates the two primary forces The two primary forces generate the four images The four images generate the eight trigrams The eight trigrams determine good fortune and misfortune Good fortune and misfortune create the great field of action 11 This sequence of powers of two includes taiji yin and yang two polarities Sixiang Four Symbols Bagua eight trigrams The fundamental postulate is the great primal beginning of all that exists t ai chi in its original meaning the ridgepole Later Indian philosophers devoted much thought to this idea of a primal beginning A still earlier beginning wu chi was represented by the symbol of a circle Under this conception t ai chi was represented by the circle divided into the light and the dark yang and yin nbsp This symbol has also played a significant part in India and Europe However speculations of a Gnostic dualistic character are foreign to the original thought of the I Ching what it posits is simply the ridgepole the line With this line which in itself represents oneness duality comes into the world for the line at the same time posits an above and a below a right and left front and back in a word the world of the opposites 12 Song dynasty edit nbsp Zhou s Taijitu diagramIn the Neo Confucianism philosophy that developed during the Song dynasty taiji was viewed as a microcosm equivalent to the structure of the human body 13 The Song era philosopher Zhou Dunyi 1017 1073 CE wrote the Taijitushuo 太極圖說 Explanation of the Diagram of the Supreme Ultimate which became the cornerstone of Neo Confucianist cosmology Zhou s brief text synthesized aspects of Chinese Buddhism and Daoism with the metaphysical discussions in the I Ching Zhou s opening lines are Non polar wuji and yet Supreme Polarity taiji a The Supreme Polarity b in activity generates yang yet at the limit of activity it is still In stillness it generates yin yet at the limit of stillness it is also active Activity and stillness alternate each is the basis of the other In distinguishing yin and yang the Two Modes are thereby established The alternation and combination of yang and yin generate water fire wood metal and earth With these five phases of qi harmoniously arranged the Four Seasons proceed through them The Five Phases are simply yin and yang yin and yang are simply the Supreme Polarity the Supreme Polarity is fundamentally Non polar Yet in the generation of the Five Phases each one has its nature 15 In tai chi editMain article tai chi The martial art tai chi draws heavily on Chinese philosophy especially the concept of the taiji The Chinese name of tai chi taijiquan literally translates as taiji boxing or taiji fist 16 Early tai chi masters such as Yang Luchan promoted the connection between their martial art and the concept of the taiji 17 18 19 20 The twenty fourth chapter of the Forty Chapter tai chi classic that Yang Banhou gave to Wu Quanyou says the following about the connect between tai chi and spirituality If the essence of material substances lies in their phenomenological reality then the presence of the ontological status of abstract objects shall become clear in the final culmination of the energy that is derived from oneness and the Real How can man learn this truth By truly seeking that which is the shadow of philosophy and the charge of all living substances that of the nature of the divine citation needed See also editBagua National and regional symbols which contain the Taiji mark Flag of Mongolia Flag of Tibet Taegeuk Sino Korean pronunciation for Taiji Flag of South Korea Emblem of South Korea Taijitu Tomoe Absolute philosophy OhrNotes edit Alternatively this line could be translated as The Supreme Polarity that is Non Polar Instead of usual taiji translations Supreme Ultimate or Supreme Pole Adler uses Supreme Polarity 14 because Zhu Xi describes it as the alternating principle of yin and yang and insists that taiji is not a thing hence Supreme Pole will not do Thus for both Zhou and Zhu taiji is the yin yang principle of bipolarity which is the most fundamental ordering principle the cosmic first principle Wuji as non polar follows from this References editCitations edit Le Blanc 1985 Zhang amp Ryden 2002 Chen 1989 Robinet 2008 Oxtoby 2002 Needham amp Ronan 1978 Adler 1999 Zhang amp Ryden 2002 p 179 Wu 1986 Wang Robin R July 2005 Zhou Dunyi s Diagram of the Supreme Ultimate Explained A Construction of the Confucian Metaphysics Journal of the History of Ideas 66 3 Loyola Marymount University 311 doi 10 1353 jhi 2005 0047 S2CID 73700080 via The Digital Scholarship Repository at Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School Mair 1994 p 55 Le Blanc 1985 pp 120 1 Smith Richard J 2008 Fathoming the Cosmos and Ordering the World The Yijing I Ching or Classic of Changes and Its Evolution in China Charlottesville University of Virginia Press p 8 Wilhelm amp Baynes 1967 pp 318 9 Wilhelm amp Baynes 1967 p lv Oxtoby Willard Gurdon ed 2002 World Religions Eastern Traditions 2nd ed Don Mills Ontario Oxford University Press p 424 ISBN 0 19 541521 3 OCLC 46661540 See Robinet 1990 Adler 1999 pp 673 4 Michael P Garofalo 2021 Thirteen Postures of Taijiquan Cloud Hands blog Archived from the original on 2023 04 16 Retrieved 2023 07 04 Eberhard Wolfram 1986 A Dictionary of Chinese Symbols Hidden Symbols in Chinese Life and Thought Routledge amp Kegan Paul London ISBN 0 415 00228 1 Woolidge Doug June 1997 T AI CHI The International Magazine of T ai Chi Ch uan Vol 21 No 3 T ai Chi Wayfarer Publications ISSN 0730 1049 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 Wile Douglas 2007 Taijiquan and Taoism from Religion to Martial Art and Martial Art to Religion Journal of Asian Martial Arts Vol 16 No 4 Journal of Asian Martial Arts Via Media Publishing ISSN 1057 8358 Sources edit Adler Joseph A 1999 Zhou Dunyi The Metaphysics and Practice of Sagehood In De Bary William Theodore Bloom Irene eds Sources of Chinese Tradition 2nd ed Columbia University Press Bowker John 2002 The Cambridge Illustrated History of Religions Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521810371 Cohen Kenneth J 1997 The Way of QiGong The Art and Science of Chinese Energy Healing New York Ballantine ISBN 9780345421098 Coogan Michael ed 2005 Eastern Religions origins beliefs practices holy texts sacred places Oxford University press ISBN 9780195221916 Chen Ellen M 1989 The Tao Te Ching A New Translation and Commentary Paragon House ISBN 9781557782380 Gedalecia D October 1974 Excursion Into Substance and Function The Development of the T i Yung Paradigm in Chu Hsi Philosophy East and West 24 4 443 451 doi 10 2307 1397804 JSTOR 1397804 Le Blanc Charles 1985 Huai nan Tzu Philosophical Synthesis in Early Han Thought The Idea of Resonance Kan Ying With a Translation and Analysis of Chapter Six Hong Kong University Press ISBN 9789622091795 Mair Victor H 1994 Wandering on the Way early Taoist tales and parables of Chuang Tzu Bantam ISBN 9780824820381 National QiGong Association Research and Education Committee Meeting Terminology Task Force Meeting November 2012 Needham Joseph Ronan Colin A 1978 The Shorter Science and Civilisation in China an abridgement of Joseph Needham s original text Cambridge University Press OCLC 229421664 Robinet Isabelle 1990 The Place and Meaning of the Notion of Taiji in Taoist Sources Prior to the Ming Dynasty History of Religions 23 4 373 411 doi 10 1086 463205 S2CID 161955134 Robinet Isabelle 2008 Wuji and Taiji 無極 太極 Ultimateless and Great Ultimate In Pregadio Fabrizio ed The Encyclopedia of Taoism Routledge pp 1057 9 ISBN 9780700712007 Wilhelm Richard Baynes Cary F 1967 The I Ching or Book of Changes Bollingen Series XIX Princeton University Press Wu Laurence C 1986 Fundamentals of Chinese Philosophy University Press of America ISBN 0 8191 5570 5 Zhang Dainian Ryden Edmund 2002 Key Concepts in Chinese Philosophy Yale University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Taiji philosophy amp oldid 1217747279, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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