It wasn’t easy for me to find this book, but I finally did it after searching for a long time. This book is a compilation of everything I’ve ever learned about the Tao Te Ching, which I read in my teens and twenties.
I found a whole bunch of books on Tao Te Ching, but I only found the definitive version on Twitter. It’s interesting because I found it all to be rather over the top.
I think that I found it too over the top because it has a lot of references to Buddhism, Buddhism being the system of philosophy and religion that developed in China around the time of the Tang Dynasty. There are many mentions of different Buddhist schools and the influence of Buddhism all over. But the main thing that I noticed was that most of the Tao Te Ching books were so dense that they were hard to read.
That’s a bit of a problem with most Chinese books. The primary goal of Tao Te Ching is to spread the teachings of the Tao to the people. While there are books that try to present the entire Tao as a systematic system, there is a lot of unnecessary confusion and the Tao is presented as a series of rules. As a result, most people are at least somewhat confused by the Tao.
I don’t have much experience with the Tao Te Ching, but I do know that many Taoists are not particularly interested in the “rules.” They like to use the Tao as inspiration to create their own rules. For example, Taoist monks in China still make and sell incense from the dried leaves of the plant P. terebinthi, which they claim has medicinal properties.
If you want to find a Taoist monastery, you can look into the Shao Lin temple in Peking that has a large number of Chinese Taoist monks. The monastery is actually part of China’s largest community of Taoist monks. And if they’re not too busy there, they can often find you some of their books of the Tao in the monastery.
The Taoist monks don’t actually have “rules” in the sense that you might think of these things. In fact, a Taoist monk might be quite happy to do things that would be considered immoral by the average person. One of the reasons Taoist monks have so many followers is because the rules they follow are so simple. One of the most fundamental aspects of Taoism is that it is all about the Tao.
The Tao is the source of all that is, all that is is, and all that is not. In other words, if this is not the source of all that is, it is not the source of everything. In other words, everything is in the Tao.
The Tao is like an empty room, in which an empty room is like any other empty space. The Tao is also a vast ocean, in which no waves or currents ever move. The Tao is empty because it is empty. This is a core tenet of Taoism. To be Tao, to do Tao, to live Tao, or to know Tao is to live in the Tao’s emptiness.
Huineng is the Tao-master in Taoist lore, and we are, in our everyday lives, being guided by him. He is the source of the Tao. He is the Source of the Taos emptiness. He is the first and last of all Tao-teachers. He is the first of a vast number of Tao-teachers. But since Tao isn’t a set of facts, there are many Tao-masters. But there is one.
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