Zom wrote:http://www.buddhanet.net/budsas/ebud/ebmed094.htm
First of all... Chuang Tzu is not Lao Tzu...alan... wrote:obviously it's already in my signature but i'll repost it here:
"Do not hanker for fame. Do not make plans. Do not try to do things. Do not try to master knowledge. Hold what is but do not hold it to be anything. Work with all that comes from heaven, but do not seek to hold it. Just be empty. The perfect man's heart is like a mirror. It does not search after things. It does not look for things. It does not seek knowledge, just responds. As a result he can handle everything and is not harmed by anything." -Chuang Tzu
so this is a taoist quote. the idea is found in zen and probably other traditions as well. does it fit in theravada or not? does the advice to bahiya sound like this?:
"Then, Bāhiya, you should train yourself thus: In reference to the seen, there will be only the seen. In reference to the heard, only the heard. In reference to the sensed, only the sensed. In reference to the cognized, only the cognized. That is how you should train yourself. When for you there will be only the seen in reference to the seen, only the heard in reference to the heard, only the sensed in reference to the sensed, only the cognized in reference to the cognized, then, Bāhiya, there is no you in connection with that. When there is no you in connection with that, there is no you there. When there is no you there, you are neither here nor yonder nor between the two. This, just this, is the end of stress."
-Ud 1.10
"Bāhiya Sutta: Bāhiya" (Ud 1.10), translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu. Access to Insight, 3 September 2012, http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/kn/ud/ud.1.10.than.html. Retrieved on 28 January 2013.
that leads to an even more intriguing question: was lao tzu a paccekabuddha ? i have found other quotes that could fall right in with the pali canon in the chuang tzu. i'll post them tonight.
xabir wrote:First of all... Chuang Tzu is not Lao Tzu...
alan... wrote:just thought it was interesting how close the two are at moments.
daverupa wrote:alan... wrote:just thought it was interesting how close the two are at moments.
The trouble is that one can only pull out the good stuff when one already knows it as 'good' via the Dhamma; overall, talk which seems in accord with the Dhamma is diluted within the vastly more copious talk which is not, such as: Immortals, alchemy designed to produce immortality, the holy state is what one returns to rather than what one develops, human beings are a microcosm of the universe, samsara is in perfect harmony in its natural state, the whole corpus of Taoist sexual manuals and practices... one can go on and on.
that preceding the quote you made for me above clearly implies that i already know that i've simply pulled a few things out of an overall different conceptual framework and indeed a completely different tradition.alan... wrote:overall taoism is different from buddhism,
alan... wrote:overall taoism is different from buddhism, just thought it was interesting how close the two are at moments.
does it fit in theravada or not?

daverupa wrote:Well, okay - but even though you agree, you still askeddoes it fit in theravada or not?
and my detailed response was addressing this. If you already agreed, you'd already have had an answer to this question, in which case I would be confused why it was asked...
alan... wrote:bahiya sutta in relation to taoism mind mirror
"Do not hanker for fame. Do not make plans. Do not try to do things. Do not try to master knowledge. Hold what is but do not hold it to be anything. Work with all that comes from heaven, but do not seek to hold it. Just be empty. The perfect man's heart is like a mirror. It does not search after things. It does not look for things. It does not seek knowledge, just responds. As a result he can handle everything and is not harmed by anything." -Chuang Tzu
so this is a taoist quote. the idea is found in zen and probably other traditions as well. does it fit in theravada or not? does the advice to bahiya sound like this?:
Dan74 wrote:I think daverupa points to the fact that Tao Te Ching and Taoism are quite different things. At least popular Taoism is full of all sorts of things that seem entirely foreign not just to Buddhadhamma but to Tao Te Ching itself, which is a classic and well worth studying, IMO.
alan... wrote:daverupa wrote:Well, okay - but even though you agree, you still askeddoes it fit in theravada or not?
and my detailed response was addressing this. If you already agreed, you'd already have had an answer to this question, in which case I would be confused why it was asked...
again you left out most of the quote so it makes it confusing. the entire thing is:alan... wrote:bahiya sutta in relation to taoism mind mirror
"Do not hanker for fame. Do not make plans. Do not try to do things. Do not try to master knowledge. Hold what is but do not hold it to be anything. Work with all that comes from heaven, but do not seek to hold it. Just be empty. The perfect man's heart is like a mirror. It does not search after things. It does not look for things. It does not seek knowledge, just responds. As a result he can handle everything and is not harmed by anything." -Chuang Tzu
so this is a taoist quote. the idea is found in zen and probably other traditions as well. does it fit in theravada or not? does the advice to bahiya sound like this?:
so clearly i wasn't asking if taoism fit in with theravada or not. i was asking if one very specific taoist concept fits in with theravada or not.
i meant that one single concept of mind mirror. not taoism as a whole. the quotes in the post after that were ended with the statement of knowing taoism and buddhism are different overall to differentiate them from the OP which was asking whether or not that single concept fit in with theravada.
so the OP was asking if the taoist mind mirror is compatible with the bahiya sutta, the second post is just a few quotes that are similar to buddhism in general.
you didn't even discuss the mind mirror concept in relation to the bahiya sutta, it sounds like you only read the second post or something as none of what you wrote talks about the title and content of the OP, so no need to be confused why it was asked...
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