Don wrote:
> I would like to relate this focus on
>"individualism" to the question of Yang Chu and his seeming egoism,
>naturalism, and individualism, that seems to argue against
>selflessness in Taoism. I admit to being somewhat off-put by what
>Taoism seems to assert about self, selves, elves, etc..
<< begin quote from the Chuang-tzu, Chapter 1 >>
Lieh Tzu could ride the wind and go soaring around with cool and
breezy skill, but after fifteen days he came back to earth. As far as
the search for good fortune went, he didn't fret and worry. He escaped
the trouble of walking, but he still had to depend on something to get
around. If he had only mounted on the truth of Heaven and Earth,
ridden the changes of the six breaths, and thus wandered through the
boundless, then what would he have had to depend on?
Therefore I say, the Perfect Man has no self; the Holy Man has no
merit; the Sage has no fame.
<< end of quote >>
<< begin quote of Feng's TTC >>
Forty-nine
The sage has no mind of his own.
He is aware of the needs of others.
I am good to people who are good.
I am also good to people who are not good.
Because Virtue is goodness.
I have faith in people who are faithful.
I also have faith in people who are not faithful.
Because Virtue is faithfulness.
The sage is shy and humble - to the world he seems confusing.
Others look to him and listen.
He behaves like a little child.
<< end of quote >>