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What is the Tao?
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All Flashcards in Topic 10.10
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10.10.18 cards
What is the Tao?
'The Way' — the nameless source and pattern that everything flows from and follows.
'The Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao'?
The real Tao can't be captured in words — naming it shrinks the whole into just one labelled thing.
Why is the Tao 'nameless'?
A name cuts one thing off from the rest, but the Tao is the undivided whole every named thing is cut from.
Is the Tao a thing or a god?
Neither — it's the current, not an object on it; the natural Way things go, empty and prior to named things.
'The ten thousand things'?
An old Chinese phrase for 'everything' — all of which the Tao gives rise to, like a spring giving rise to a river.
A finger pointing at the moon?
Words can aim your attention at the Tao but aren't the Tao itself — don't mistake the label for the thing.
Why do words fall short of the Tao?
Words divide the world into boxes ('hot' vs 'cold'); the Tao is what holds the world together before we chop it up.
The limits-of-language point (Go further)?
Some things can be shown or lived but not fully stated — naming that gap is a top-band move.
10.10.28 cards
What is wu wei?
'Non-action' — acting in harmony with the natural flow instead of forcing against it.
Is wu wei doing nothing?
No — it's effortless, well-timed action that works WITH the grain of things, not passivity.
Effortless action?
A small, well-timed move along the natural grain does the work that straining and forcing never could.
'Water overcomes the hard and strong'?
Water yields and flows round obstacles, yet wears down stone over time — soft outlasts hard.
The power of yielding?
Bending and giving way isn't weakness; it quietly outlasts rigid force (the reed survives the storm, the stiff tree snaps).
Why does forcing backfire?
It fights the natural grain, wasting energy and stirring up resistance — like yanking a knot tighter.
Not-forcing vs not-caring (Go further)?
Wu wei is dropping needless force (wise), not giving up or laziness (idle) — a distinction that scores.
How does wu wei link to the Tao?
If the Tao is the Way things naturally go, wu wei is simply going WITH that Way rather than fighting it.
10.10.38 cards
What does ziran mean?
'Self-so' — being naturally what you are, of your own accord, without forcing or pretending.
The uncarved block?
An image of natural simplicity — a self whole and full of possibility before ambition chisels it into a fixed shape.
Why keep the block 'uncarved'?
Carve it into something clever and you gain one shape but lose the whole — the deep simplicity the Way prizes.
Returning to simplicity?
Fewer desires, less chasing — loosening the grip of endless wanting and settling back into the natural Way.
'He who knows he has enough is rich'?
Real wealth is contentment, not endless getting — the person who knows they have enough is already rich.
Is ziran the same as 'nature' (trees, mountains)?
No — it's the quality of being unforced, doing what you do of your own accord, not scenery.
Does 'fewer desires' mean giving up all ambition? (Go further)
No — it targets restless craving that's never satisfied, not every purpose; a quieter life can still act.
How do ziran, the block and fewer desires connect?
One idea seen three ways: be natural (ziran), stay whole (uncarved block), want less (return to simplicity).
10.10.48 cards
Who is the sage in the Tao Te Ching?
The wise person who lives by the Tao and, as ruler, governs least — wu wei applied to a whole society.
'The best ruler, the people barely know he exists'?
The finest leader rules so lightly that things run smoothly and people say 'we did it ourselves'.
Lao Tzu's ranking of rulers?
Worst = feared and hated; better = loved and praised; best = barely noticed, ruling by example.
Why does heavy-handed rule backfire?
Endless laws, taxes and meddling stir up the very resistance and disorder they then try to crack down on.
How does the sage sum up the whole text?
The sage lives out the Tao, wu wei and simplicity in one life — trusting the Way, not forcing, leading by barely leading.
The 'govern least' objection (Go further)?
Famine, invasion or injustice may need firm action light rule won't provide — so 'least' works as a default, not an absolute.
Paper 2 format on the Tao Te Ching?
Open book, one hour: (a) Explain a concept [10] + (b) Evaluate a claim [15].
What does Paper 2 (b) 'Evaluate' reward?
Weighing the claim — arguing for and against and reaching a reasoned view, anchored in the text.
Topic 10.10 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Tao Te Ching — Lao Tzu
Philosophy exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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