TeeJay wrote:
> shazi wrote:
>> jz wrote:
>
>> > dao chang wu wei
>> > dao chang wu ming
>>
>> hi j -- i've been way-faring in brazil lately,
>> now in london doing nothing for a day,
>> so here i am...been a while.
Good to sea people.
Without different povs
there is very little to say.
Possibly there is nothing.
[ snip ...]
>> > - along the Hao River
>> > the scientist in me seeks -
>>
>> i mite think
>> that "dao chang" mite be "fei chang dao"
>> for dao changes, or dao is in the changes.
When I ponder how nothing changes
and how nothing stays the same,
they may or may not be the same nothing.
>> funny you mention cook ding.
>> he carved, while still wuwei.
>>
>> i see scientific method as observing nature.
>> laozi said that there are two Ways to observe nature:
>> without desire--intention--one can observe the wonder,
>> the mystical, a cat's miao or so.
>> with an intent, on can observe the boundaries
>> maybe science does this very well,
>> but scientific method sets aside the intention
>> or better said, the hypothesis,
>> when it proves false.
>
>Lao was spelling out his methodology much like the way Bacon described his. He said its best not to desire to find something out but rather to gather the facts and let the facts speak for themselves.
>The philosophers of Bacon's day were intent on using their reasoning to rationalize God and Bacon said no, just observe the facts and with no intention in mind and let discovery arise on its own.
>I don't think a pragmatist like Lao was much of a mystic. It seems to me that the ones who see mysticism in Taoism are shaping their own reality to find some meaning in abstractions. As David Hume said, there is what is and what ought to be. Many people see what they want to see to fit in with their own belief as if it "ought to be so". Let so be so. Chuang-tzu mentioned that knowledge is limitless (epistemological) and man is limited and to go after the unlimited with what is limited is dangerous. Lao reflected on this also saying "abandon knowledge" and it could be that he meant forget about epistemology and the hunt for knowledge. Let it be! Let it be! Nietzsche didn't take heed and went mad. (It could have been the VD though....but then again he was a misogynist?)
Excellent points, imo.
Dao may be found in change.
A zone chaulk full of emptiness
without leaving a room
there is plenty
to be found within.
>> does laozi say that one way of observing
>> is better than the other?
>> no...he said
>> "these two go together,
>> but are differently named;"
The TTC does appear to me to be pragmatic
and to have its very own Tao, which it puts
nice and neat, into words, even to an extent
in which is articulated what is not-Tao.
>Inherent emotional intelligence (fight or flight) and logical intelligence (1+1=2). They both operate at the same time within.
>
>> observation, even with intent to observe,
>> does not act on things, mostly...
>> hence scientific observation can be wuwei.
>>
>> but science can go beyond observation
>> science can act on things,
>> changing their form
>> to create something artificial
>> such science might not be wuwei.
>
>How can using that which exists be artificial? A human being is of Tao (whether they realize it or not) and whatever the creation of the human being is, it is also from the attributes from Tao.
>There's no magic in Tao. It is the Way it is.
A war horse is not a natural horse.
Zz appears not to approve much, if at all,
of the Polo method by which many died.
There can be many Tao.
Zz had his. The TTC has its.
Da Dao could be in a class
beyond classifications. Except it's
modified by a Da. Even tho it is the
smallest of small in a way too.
Least of the least, at least.
A very of very. Verily.
Eye say! Old chaps.
>When beauty is seen as beauty people wanna look good, feel good, taste good...forget about good and bad, they arise mutually.
I like the way you said that.
Makes a fine point
out of a leafy branch
broken off a huge tree
in a bamboo grove.