dawei Posted June 9, 2016 Resources: Online Zhuangzi By Indiana University (R. Eno) http://www.indiana.edu/~p374/Zhuangzi.pdf The Complete Works Of Chuang Tzu Translated by Burton Watson http://terebess.hu/english/chuangtzu.html Chuang-tzu Chapters Translated by Lin Yutang http://oaks.nvg.org/chuang-lin.html The Chuang-tzu James Legge's Translation Updated http://oaks.nvg.org/chuang.html Zhuangzi – "Being Boundless” By Nina Correa http://www.daoisopen.com/zhuangzitranslation.html Zhuangzi A. Charles Muller http://www.acmuller.net/con-dao/zhuangzi.html Books Essays, and Musings Bilingual Zhuangzi Library of Chinese Classics: Chinese-English edition: 2 Volumes) (English and Chinese Edition) http://www amazon.com/Zhuangzi-Library-Chinese-Classics-Chinese-English/dp/7543820870 Zhuangzi: Bilingual Edition, English and Chinese: James Legge https://www.amazon.com/Zhuangzi-Bilingual-English-Chinese-x838A-ebook/dp/B00KKQFLI0 Chuang Tsu / Inner Chapters (English and Mandarin Chinese Edition) Feng and English http://www amazon.com/Chuang-Chapters-English-Mandarin-Chinese/dp/0394719905 Other Books: Chuang-Tzu: The Inner Chapters A.C. Graham http://www.amazon.com/Chuang-Tzu-Inner-Chapters-Hackett-Classics/dp/0872205819 The Way of Chuang Tzu Thomas Merton http://www.amazon.com/Way-Chuang-Tzu-Second/dp/0811218511 Zhuangzi: A New Translation of the Daoist Classic as Interpreted by Gua Xiang (Translations from the Asian Classics) Richard John Lynn http://www.amazon.com/Zhuangzi-Translation-Interpreted-Translations-Classics/dp/0231123868 Zhuangzi: Thinking through the Inner Chapters Bo Wang / Translated by Livia Kohn http://www.amazon.com/Zhuangzi-Thinking-Chapters-Contemporary-Scolarship/dp/1931483604 Experimental Essays on Zhuangzi Victor Mair http://www.amazon.com/Experimental-Essays-Zhuangzi-Victor-Mair/dp/1931483159 Wandering at East in the Zhuangzi Roger T. Ames http://www.amazon.com/Wandering-Zhuangzi-Chinese-Philosophy-Culture/dp/0791439224 Zhuangzi and the Happy Fish Roger T. Ames http://www.amazon.com/Zhuangzi-Happy-Fish-Roger-Ames/dp/0824846842 Zhuangzi: Text and Context Livia Kohn http://www.amazon.com/Zhuangzi-Text-Context-Livia-Kohn/dp/1931483272 New Visions of the Zhuangzi Livia Kohn http://www.amazon.com/New-Visions-Zhuangzi-Livia-Kohn/dp/1931483299 Hiding the World inside the World: Uneven discourses on the Zhuangzi Scott Cook http://www.amazon.com/Hiding-World-Discourses-Zhuangzi-Philosophy/dp/0791458660 Essays on Skepticism, Relativism, and Ethics in the Zhuangzi Edited by Kjellberg and Ivanhoe http://www.amazon.com/Skepticism-Relativism-Zhuangzi-Chinese-Philosophy/dp/0791428923 Introduction and Notes for a Complete Translation Sino-Platonic Paper by Mair http://sino-platonic.org/complete/spp048_chuangtzu_zhuangzi.pdf 6 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
AussieTrees Posted June 3, 2017 a. Chapter 1: Xiao Yao You (Wandering Beyond) The title of the first chapter of the Zhuangzi has also been translated as “Free and Easy Wandering” and “Going Rambling Without a Destination.” Both of these reflect the sense of the Daoist who is in spontaneous accord with the natural world, and who has retreated from the anxieties and dangers of social life, in order to live a healthy and peaceful natural life. In modern Mandarin, the word xiaoyao has thus come to mean “free, at ease, leisurely, spontaneous.” It conveys the impression of people who have given up the hustle and bustle of worldly existence and have retired to live a leisurely life outside the city, perhaps in the natural setting of the mountains. But this everyday expression is lacking a deeper significance that is expressed in the classical Chinese phrase: the sense of distance, or going beyond. As with all Zhuangzi’s images, this is to be understood metaphorically. The second word, ‘yao,’ means ‘distance’ or ‘beyond,’ and here implies going beyond the boundaries of familiarity. We ordinarily confine ourselves within our social roles, expectations, and values, and with our everyday understandings of things. But this, according to Zhuangzi, is inadequate for a deeper appreciation of the natures of things, and for a more successful mode of interacting with them. We need at the very least to undo preconceptions that prevent us from seeing things and events in new ways; we need to see how we can structure and restructure the boundaries of things. But we can only do so when we ourselves have ‘wandered beyond’ the boundaries of the familiar. It is only by freeing our imaginations to reconceive ourselves, and our worlds, and the things with which we interact, that we may begin to understand the deeper tendencies of the natural transformations by which we are all affected, and of which we are all constituted. By loosening the bonds of our fixed preconceptions, we bring ourselves closer to an attunement to the potent and productive natural way (dao) of things. Paying close attention to the textual associations, we see that wandering is associated with the word wu, ordinarily translated ‘nothing,’ or ‘without.’ Related associations include: wuyou (no ‘something’) and wuwei (no interference). Roger Ames and David Hall have commented extensively on these wu expressions. Most importantly, they are not to be understood as simple negations, but have a much more complex function. The significance of all of these expressions must be traced back to the wu of Laozi: a type of negation that does not simply negate, but places us in a new kind of relation to ‘things’—a phenomenological waiting that allows them to manifest, one that acknowledges the space that is the possibility of their coming to presence, one that appreciates the emptiness that is the condition of the possibility of their capacity to function, to be useful (as the hollow inside a house makes it useful for living). The behavior of one who wanders beyond becomes wuwei: sensitive and responsive without fixed preconceptions, without artifice, responding spontaneously in accordance with the unfolding of the inter-developing factors of the environment of which one is an inseparable part. But it is not just the crossing of horizontal boundaries that is at stake. There is also the vertical distance that is important: one rises to a height from which formerly important distinctions lose what appeared to be their crucial significance. Thus arises the distinction between the great and the small, or the Vast (da) and the petty (xiao). Of this distinction Zhuangzi says that the petty cannot come up to the Vast: petty understanding that remains confined and defined by its limitations cannot match Vast understanding, the expansive understanding that wanders beyond. Now, while it is true that the Vast loses sight of distinctions noticed by the petty, it does not follow that they are thereby equalized, as Guo Xiang suggests. For the Vast still embraces the petty in virtue of its very vastness. The petty, precisely in virtue of its smallness, is not able to reciprocate. Now, the Vast that goes beyond our everyday distinctions also thereby appears to be useless. A soaring imagination may be wild and wonderful, but it is extremely impractical and often altogether useless. Indeed, Huizi, Zhuangzi’s friend and philosophical foil, chides him for this very reason. But Zhuangzi expresses disappointment in him: for his inability to sense the use of this kind of uselessness is a kind of blindness of the spirit. The useless has use, only not as seen on the ordinary level of practical affairs. It has a use in the cultivation and nurturing of the ‘shen‘ (spirit), in protecting the ancestral and preserving one’s life, so that one can last out one’s natural years and live a flourishing life. Now, this notion of a flourishing life is not to be confused with a ‘successful’ life: Zhuangzi is not impressed by worldly success. A flourishing life may indeed look quite unappealing from a traditional point of view. One may give up social ambition and retire in relative poverty to tend to one’s shen and cultivate one’s xing (nature, or life potency). To summarize: When we wander beyond, we leave behind everything we find familiar, and explore the world in all its unfamiliarity. We drop the tools that we have been taught to use to tame the environment, and we allow it to teach us without words. We imitate its spontaneous behavior and we learn to respond immediately without fixed articulations. http://www.iep.utm.edu/zhuangzi/#H3 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CityHermit! Posted September 26, 2017 I'm curious if anyone has more information on the historical context of some of the topics brought up in Zhuangzi, or of the period when it was written. When I have gone back to reread it or other texts I get a different understanding after I have learned more background about some of the events or people that are referred to. I think I still have more to study though. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Christopher Tricker Posted December 28, 2022 On 6/10/2016 at 8:49 AM, dawei said: Resources: Allow me to add this new translation: The cicada & the bird. The usefulness of a useless philosophy. Chuang Tzu's ancient wisdom translated for modern life. Christopher Tricker http://thecicadaandthebird.com 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites