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  1. Chuang Tzu was a brilliant, original, and influential Chinese philosopher who lived around the 4th century BCE. The background from which he arose involved a period of strife, conquest, oppression, and an attempt to preserve traditional societal values. This situation gives light to the origin of Chuang Tzus philosophy, which was centered on ...

  2. 17 de dic. de 2014 · Zhuangzi (Chuang-tzu 莊子 “Master Zhuang” late 4th century BC) is the pivotal figure in Classical Philosophical Daoism. The Zhuangzi is a compilation of his and others’ writings at the pinnacle of the philosophically subtle Classical period in China (5th–3rd century BC). The period was marked by humanist and naturalist reflections on normativity shaped by the metaphor of a dào (道 ...

  3. Like. “You have only to rest in inaction and things will transform themselves. Smash your form and body, spit out hearing and eyesight, forget you are a thing among other things, and you may join in great unity with the deep and boundless.”. ― Zhuangzi, The Complete Works of Chuang Tzu.

  4. The Perfect man is spirit-like. Great lakes might be boiling about him, and he would not feel their heat; the Ho and the Han might be frozen tip, and he would not feel the cold; the hurrying thunderbolts might split the mountains, and the wind shake the ocean, without being able to make him afraid. Being such, he mounts on the clouds of the air ...

  5. Chuang Tzu (399 - 295 B.C.) ... "The mind of the perfect man is like a mirror. It does not lean forward or backward in response to things. It responds to things but conceals nothing of its own. Therefore it is able to deal with things without injury to [its reality]."

  6. 9 de mar. de 2018 · Chuang Tzu (c. 370-287 BCE) “The Perfect Man uses his mind like a mirror – going after nothing, welcoming nothing, responding but not storing.” From Chuang Tzu: Basic Writings (section 16, “Fit for Emperors and Kings”), translated by Burton Watson. (Columbia University Press, 1996).

  7. Chuang Tzu is known as one of the most significant and paradoxical philosophers of Taoism, a mystical philosophy that presents reality as an illusion created by infinitely shifting appearances. He ...