Chinese society had been long known as
one great source of philosophy thinking since B.C. era. The two most popular
teaching which are still continuously studied and cultivated until now indeed
come from the two greatest Chinese teachers born in B.C. era. Lao Zi (571
BC–unknown) with his Taoism teaching encourage people to consistently seek for
peace of mind by understand everything as nature force which should not be
opposed. Each person peace of mind will bring greatest harmony of life without
additional needs of human-created tools of life, such as morality concept,
courtesy rules, country law, etc. The other widespread teaching comes from Confucius
(551-479 BC) with his Confucianism philosophy which mainly consists of life wisdom
concept manifested in a set of moral values and conducts as a guideline for
those who eager to contribute for a better living society. The two philosophers
may seems extremely different in their basic principle as Lao Zi emphasizes on
nature point of view to obtain life harmony while Confucius underlined the
importance of moral values and conducts (which Lao Zi consider as too humanly
made) to gain life wisdom. However, both teaching actually are aim for one same
purpose of a better life quality. Therefore, we certainly will be able to gain
great benefit by study them and understand to flexibly implement each teaching
in the most appropriate situation.
Since the original literature of Taoism
and Confucianism teaching is somewhat hard to find here (I’m not quite sure
have the capability to read if it’s available anyway since I supposed it will
be written in Chinese), I study them based on various resources available. My
main resources are based on comic books series written by Tsai Chih Chung, Taiwan
cartoonist who considered as pioneer in popular literature visualization into
comic books. It becomes easier to understand and entertain at once.
TAOISM & NATURE
There are three popular teachers of
Taoism. Lao Zi (571 BC-unknown) as the Tao founder with his book ‘dao de jing’,
Zhuang Zi (369-286 BC) who inherits Lao Zi teaching through his book and latter
write the longest Tao book titled ‘nan hua zhen jing’, and Lie Zi who sometimes
considered as fairytale figure since no one clearly knows his living period.
Lao Zi (571 BC-unknown) real name is Li
Er. He was born in the end of West Zhou dynasty and lives his life modestly in Luoyang as an
administrator in palace archives room. He likes to read various history books
while at work and that enables him to gain deeper understanding of humanity. In
the 23rd year of King Zhao government, Lao Zi left Luoyang and head
to the Han Gu border gate in the west since he feels that the government is
about to collapse. In the border gate, a Tao seeking gate keeper named Lin
Yinxi asks Lao Zi to write about Taoism before leave. Upon this request, Lao Zi
writes Taoism book which divided into two parts, one titled ‘dao’ which
literally means ‘way’ and the other titled ‘de’ which literally means ‘virtue’.
He left the borderline after finish the book and no one knows his whereabouts
after that. His ‘dao de jing’ becomes one of the most important Tao books until
nowadays.
Lao Zi is the Taoism founder from whom we
could, or maybe couldn’t, understand what Tao actually is. I said that we could,
or maybe couldn’t, understand since Lao Zi himself always said that no one can
truly understand Tao. One who declares understands Tao is actually doesn’t
understand and one who admits that he/she doesn’t understand Tao maybe is
actually the most Tao person. The complexity of this concept can be truly
understand since, in my opinion, Lao Zi concept of Tao actually is a near
attempt to explain about God. It is said in the ‘dao de jing’:
“Something exist,
Before universe created,
Silent and empty,
One and eternal,
And always moving,
Worth to be universal mother,
I don’t know what its name, so I called
it Tao.”
Above phrase clearly shows an almost God
definition. Even though I will not talk about religion matters here, I couldn’t
resist for being dazzled while read those phrase above. Not because of the
concept that God creates universe since it does almost a common beliefs, but
because of the concept of one God which is still uncommon in many religion
nowadays. In my religion, we indeed believe that God is definitely only one,
but not many other religions are share those same believe. Instead, I found
this concept in Taoism, and that fact is fascinated me. Lao Zi also realize mind
limitation and human tendency to conceptualized things will be a great barrier
to understand Tao, therefore he makes a clear warning sentences in the first
part of ‘dao de jing’:
“Anything that declared as Tao is
definitely not the real Tao.
The name that could be given is not the
real name.”
Based of this definition of Tao, Lao Zi
strongly believes that everything created and exists in the universe is a
natural cause which should never be opposed. A nature creation never serves any
harmful purposes unless human try to against it according to their selfishness
to achieve personal benefit. When everything in the universe being left as the
way it should be, the greatest harmony of life will be achieved and benefits
many instead of only certain selfish person. Therefore, Lao Zi strongly denied
human made values, rules, laws, etc which blindly created based on human
limited knowledge. Instead, he builds his teaching values based on observation
of nature phenomenon. Taoism explains
how sun and moon alternately shines, how sky and ground kept in its place, and
how cloud makes rain or vice versa, which all silently controlled by nature.
Therefore in the governmental area, Tao believes that government should follow
nature silent control to lead the country. They should not interfere people’s
personal matters, imposed many prohibitions, or enforced hard punishment, in
order to get the country in harmony states.
Taoism favors natural approach for
everything as it believes that it is the most correct way, approved by the
universe creator, to do things. Two persons maybe gain the same achievement in
their life, but a person with Tao would maintain his/her pure inner soul, while
a person without Tao may wouldn’t. Not only maintain one’s soul, Taoism also
cares for human body. Since it’s created at its best shape by nature, human
should never sacrifice their own body in order to pursue personal ambition.
Work or study too hard until the body get sick is against Tao.
Depart from the good believe of nature
and denial of human created things, Taoism also strongly opposed the concept of
duality. Duality concept is only a human creation occurs during comparison
process. Nature doesn’t recognize duality concept since everything created with
specific benefit & purpose and no need to compare between one another. Lao
Zi explains the Tao essence as ‘the emptiness with unlimited benefit’ while Tao
manifestation is ‘the real comes from unreal’. The universe is created in an
empty space. Without empty space, there is no place for universe to be created.
Therefore, the real universe comes from unreal (emptiness). This concept
challenge one human duality concept of useful and useless. Empty is not always
useless and full is not always useful. Sometimes the emptiness benefit is
greater than the real one as Lao Zi give some examples in his ‘dao de jing’:
·
A furnace must have an empty space inside to
burn a wood or coal
·
A wheel can rotate since there is an cavity to
attach an axle
·
A cup can contain water because of its concave
shape
·
We take benefit from window due to its hollow
part
·
We can live in a house since there is empty
room inside
Furthermore, Zhuang Zi in his ‘nan hua
zhen jing’ also explain the relativity of usefulness and the useful of
uselessness.
Zhuang Zi (369-286 BC) name is Zhuang
Zhou. He lives in what now called as Henan
province as a small officer in Song country during China Warring States period.
Zhuang Zi’s book is given a title of ‘nan hua zhen jing’ due to the change of
his birthplace name to Nanhua (only for that time) during Tang dynasty period
in the year of 742. Taoism had been highly valued and protected during the Tang
dynasty since the Tang dynasty founder, Li Yuan, has the same family name with
Lao Zi. Therefore, Zhuang Zi had given a title of ‘Nanhua Real Man’ and his
book ‘nan hua zhen jing’ which literally means ‘Nanhua True Book’.
Zhuang Zi indicates that like another
kind of duality, the duality concept of useful versus useless is also very
relative. A man named Hui Zi tells Zhuang Zi about a useless giant tree which
its trunk is full of bulge and its branch is so twisted so it’s very difficult
even just to cut down. Zhuang Zi said, “Instead of worrying about a useless
giant tree, why not staying under that tree and take shelter comfortably in the
sunny day?” The tree may seems useless for a carpenter, but become very useful
for a traveler in the sunny day. It’s relative. Moreover, the giant tree can only
be useful for the traveler since it’s useless for carpenter. If carpenter
decide that the tree is useful for them, they will definitely cut it down, and
there is no more place for a traveler to take a shelter from the sun. That’s
called the useful of usefulness. The same logic of useful versus useless could
be widely applied in another human made duality concept, such as rich and poor,
high and low, long and short, etc. The near fairytale Tao figure, Lie Zi, even
explains the intricacy of duality concept so that it should not ever be
believed through the more abstract way, awake versus dreaming.
Lie Zi is considered as one of popular
Tao teachers even when his true existence is actually doubted. No one clearly
knows in what period Lie Zi was lived. Some sources mention that he lives
around 600 BC, while another declare that it should be around 400 BC. The real
fact is that a book which mentions Lie Zi’s name exists around the year of 300.
Lie Zi believes that human mind and body can’t be apart and always affect each
other. What we’re imagined or experienced during the day will be a dream in the
night. Therefore, to differentiate which the real one is between awake and
dreaming is actually beyond human capability to understand.
“Life is like a dream. In the reality and illusion that influence
each other, how could you be so sure that you’re not dreaming now and what happens
in the dream is actually closer to the reality?”
(Lie Zi)
By understand the relativity of duality
concept, Taoism emphasized on the importance of internal essence instead of
external factor. The fact that the giant tree physical shape (external factor)
that makes it seems useless for the carpenter doesn’t prevent the traveler who
able to understand the essence of those tree existence to gain the true benefit
from it.
There is one story in Zhuang Zi’s book,
‘nan hua zhen jing’, from with we could understand how every human could
protect the Tao inside his/her heart. The story tells about Confucius and his
fellow students that meet a Tao fisherman in the black wood. The fisherman
criticizes that Confucius will be slip further and further from Tao, so that
Confucius chases him and eagerly ask the fisherman to explain the meaning of
his words. The fisherman answered that a human will never be able to protect
Tao if he/she still has one of eight weaknesses and four flaws. Eight
weaknesses according to the fisherman are:
1. Do
things that should not be done
2. Keep
talking even if others don’t’ listen
3. Use
sweet words to please others
4. Agree
without deep consideration
5. Criticize
behind other’s back
6. End a
friendship
7. Praise
the bad & get rid of the people that we hate
8. Not
tell the truth about the right and wrong
Moreover, four flaws mentioned by the Tao
fisherman are:
1. Hunger
for praise and fame
2. Arrogant
3. Defend
our mistake & hate other’s advice
4. Support
one who agree & condemn one who disagree
In ‘dao de jing’, Lao Zi explains the Tao
degeneration concept as a sign of society deterioration instead of advancement.
Tao --> Morality --> Kindness --> Justice --> Courtesy
If Tao neglected, morality appears; If Morality neglected,
Kindness appears; If Kindness neglected, Justice appears; If Justice neglected,
Courtesy appears.
“If courtesy or rules of conduct for human relationship
required, hypocrisy and lies appears. That is the sign of chaos.”
(Lao Zi, 571 BC-unknown)
It doesn’t necessarily conclude that Lao
Zi opposed any concept of morality, kindness, justice, or courtesy. In fact,
from Taoism teaching, indeed we could obtain various moral values. Lao Zi
simply wants to emphasize solely on the essence of those morality, kindness,
justice, and courtesy, which is the Tao itself. Morality developed based on
Tao, therefore based on natural cause, is also Tao. However, morality developed
based on limited human knowledge, neglects the nature phenomenon, definitely is
not Tao. That kind of morality doesn’t come from the heart and only bring
hypocrisy and lies which is a sign of society chaos. One story in Zhuang Zi’s
‘nan hua zhen jing’ about a famous robber could help us to gain better
understanding of this view.
Dao Zhi is a famous robber in ancient
era. One day, one of his subordinates asks him a question, “Tell me, does a
robber also implement Tao?” Dao Zhi answered, “Yes, of course!” He explains,
“As a robber leader, I need to be able to predict where the valuables are
stored. It called wisdom. I lead the robbers to break into a victim house. It
called courage. When the mission complete, I’ll be the last who leave the crime
scene to ensure everyone is safe. It called loyalty (to friends). I carefully
consider the whole situation before take action. It called intelligence. I
distribute the stolen valuables fairly between all my subordinates. It called
virtue. No one capable to become a robber leader without implement these five
ethics.”
From the story above, we could see that
what Dao Zhi claims as Tao is actually not Tao. Nature will never do harm to
the others just to fulfill personal desires. A human with Tao heart will not
become a robber. What Dao Zhi practiced is just morality ethics without Tao,
which is definitely not Tao. Further, Zhuang Zi said that both good and bad
person could benefits from morality ethics. A good person needs morality ethics
to do his/her goodness. A bad person needs morality ethics to do his/her
badness. If Tao neglected in a society and bad is outnumbered good, then
morality ethics will do more harm than benefit to the society.
The ten main moral values that could be
obtained from inside of Tao teaching are as below:
1. Be
Grateful
Tao believes that everything provided by nature is at its
best shape to serve a certain purpose for universe greatness. There is no
reason for sadness or regret due to our imperfect condition. Be grateful and
optimized our strengths instead of struggling with our weaknesses.
“Born
with six fingers in one hand is natural. It’s not too much or too little.
However, desire to have six fingers in one hand is a sign of greed and it’s not
natural.”
Zhuang
Zi (369-286 BC)
2. Flexibility
of Mind
Everything in the universe exists for a good reason, even
if sometimes human mind capability is too limited to understand. Mind should be
flexible to see beyond human made knowledge since everything created by human
is not eternal, always changing, and therefore relative.
“We
could point to where a moon is with a finger. To see a moon, we should see
beyond a finger. A word is like a finger who pointed to the truth. However,
human commonly only see the finger. They don’t see beyond the finger to find
the truth.”
(Lao
Zi, 571 BC-unknown)
“Good
and bad, black and white, everything depends on human definition. They don’t
have objective standard. If everyone said that white is black, isn’t you who
believe the opposite will be considered crazy?”
(Lie
Zi)
A flexible mind will enables us to think deeply before
make a judgment and carefully consider before take an action. It will lead us
to success as Taoism believes that the soft will defeat the hard. The hardest
part of human body is teeth and it will be gone in old age, while tongue as the
softest part will still remains. When a storm attacks, a giant tree fallen
while a grass will still survive. A storm which destroys giant trees and big
houses consists of wind that is very soft, even doesn’t have a body or shape.
3. Courage
and Confidence
By understand that follow the principal of nature is the
best way to live a life, ones will have a courage and confidence to face any
obstacles in his/her life. Even life and death is a natural cause that
shouldn’t, and definitely couldn’t, be opposed.
“Human
must face life and death in balance and live a life with courage and
confidence. A human who hopes for eternal life and fear of death is like a lost
traveler that couldn’t find a way back.”
(Lie
Zi)
4. Sincerity
One of water special characteristics is its ability to
support life for everything. It gives a great benefit to many without requires
anything in return. It’s sincere and unselfish.
5. Kindness
Water is soft, it doesn’t fight anything that stands in
its way. It will always find another way, through the rock and mountain crack,
and let everything else as the way it should be. A kind heart will try any
possible way to avoid confrontation and thinks for the good of many, not only
ours.
6. Modesty
Naturally, water always flows from the higher to the lower
place, never the opposite. The lower its position, the higher its volume, and
the greater it could benefit others. It perfectly describes an ocean. It has a lower
position, a higher volume, and a greater benefit than a river. A modest person
will not boast his/her ability, appreciate others’ capability, and therefore
always has an opportunity to learn and improve.
“Ability
to realize our ignorance or lack of knowledge is wisdom. Think that you understand
what you don’t understand is a big mistake.”
(Lao
Zi, 571 BC-unknown)
7. Honesty
Before a mirror was found, we could see our reflection in
clear water. Water always shows our reflection exactly the same with our real
shape and condition. Water is honest.
8. Self
Introspection
Instead of criticize others, Tao strongly encourage us to
do a self introspection.
“How
others treat us will depends on how we treat others. Like a shadow, it will be
straight if you straight. Or like an echo, it will always resonance back what
you just said.”
(Lie Zi)
(Lie Zi)
9. Listen
to the Heart
Many common people struggle to deal with more external
than internal factors. External factors such as how to meet family
expectations, how to be appreciated by the society, how to get a job that
generates a lot of money, etc. Every action performed is triggered by external
factors. These people are unlikely to gain the true success in their life. Even
if they seem to be success, they may still unable to feel fulfillment in their
heart. They trapped in an unhappy life since they attached in many external
factors and neglect the most valuable Tao inside them, the heart. Once someone
starts to listen to their heart, every action will greatly benefit others and
self.
“If
someone’s mind is full with external things, he/she will be bridled and
unsettled.”
Zhuang
Zi (369-286 BC)
“What
comes from inside our heart will be greatly influence others. Time will never
be able to erase that influence.”
(Lie
Zi)
The book of Lie Zi narrate one story about a woman named
Han Er whose voice able to influence many other people, either through her
singing or crying. Han Er, a woman who lived in the Han Kingdom ,
run-out of supplies during her journey to the Qi Kingdom. She enters the
capital through the Concord Gate and start singing to get a food. When she
left, the voice of her singing remains and swirls back and forth in the gate
for three days. People feel like Han Er is still there. When Han Er pass
through in front of an inn, one of inn’s servant humiliate Han Er and she cries
with deep melancholy in a long sad tone. People who listen to Han Er cries
become very sad and drop their tears. They feel a great pressure and couldn’t
eat anything for three days so that they chase Han Er and ask her to come back
to the inn. Feels very happy, Han Er starts to sing a happy song and everyone,
old and young, couldn’t resist to excitedly dance and forget about their previous
sadness. They even give Han Er a precious gift before she leaves. Han Er
influences not only stop there. After that, people of Concord Gate become a
very expert singer because of Han Er example.
10. Passion
for Improvement
Previously clear water can become dirty and muddy when it
stuck in one place and unable to flow.
We could clearly see how Taoism always
use nature phenomenon to explain about its teachings. Various values above
maybe totally new and different or indeed the same and overlapping with
Confucianism values. The key to get a harmony for both teaching is to understand
and practice moral values of both Taoism and Confucianism teaching flexibly, without
forget the essence of Tao.
(To be continued)