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quote 2194 |
Lao Tzu
Laozi 33, in Wing-Tsit Chan, Chinese Philosophy, Chapter 7.
What is it that dies but does not perish? Wang Pi said it was Tao on which human life depended, and Wu Ch'eng said it was the human mind. Other commentators have given different answers. Most of them, however, believe that Lao Tzu meant the immortality of virtue. Thus the Taoists conformed top the traditional belief which had already been expressed in the Tso chuan (Tso’s Commentary on the Spring and Autumn Annals), namely, immortality of virtue, achievement, and words and which has continued to be the typical Chinese idea of immortality. (1) It is to be noted that unlike Chuang Tzu, Lao Tzu showed no tendency believe in earthly immortals (hsien, a fairy), although his exaltation of everlasting life undoubtedly contributed to the development of the belief.
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