Symbolism and mythology
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
- Columbia University - Asia for Educators - Defining "Daoism": A Complex History
- Minnesota Library Publishing Project - World Religions: the Spirit Searching - Daoism
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Laozi
- Khan Academy - Daoism
- OpenStax - Introduction to Philosophy - Daoism
- Western Kentucky University - TopSCHOLAR - The Creation of Daoism
- Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Daoist Philosophy
- The Metropolitan Museum of Art - Daoism and Daoist Art
- National Geographic - Taoism
- Asia Society - Daoism
- Humanities LibreTexts - Daoism
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Taoism
- World History Encyclopedia - Taoism
- Pinyin romanization:
- Daoism
- Key People:
- Zhuang Zhou
- Laozi
- Liezi
- Zhao Youqin
- Kou Qianzhi
- On the Web:
- Columbia University - Asia for Educators - Defining "Daoism": A Complex History (Oct. 28, 2024)
Taoists prefer to convey their ecstatic insights in images and parables. The Tao is low and receiving as a valley, soft and life-giving as water, and it is the “mysterious female,” the source of all life, the Mother of the Ten Thousand Things. Human beings should become weak and yielding as water that overcomes the hard and the strong and always takes the low ground; they should develop their male and female sides but “prefer femininity,” “feed on the mother,” and find within themselves the well that never runs dry. Tao is also the axis, the ridgepole, the pivot, and the empty center of the hub. The sage is the “useless tree” or the huge gourd too large to be fashioned into implements. A frequent metaphor for the working of the Tao is the incommunicable ability to be skillful at a craft. Skilled artisans do not ponder their actions, but, in union with the tao of their subjects, they do their work reflexively and without conscious intent.
Much ancient Chinese mythology has been preserved by the Taoists, who drew on it to illustrate their views. A chaos (hundun) myth is recorded as a metaphor for the undifferentiated primal unity; the mythical emperors (Huangdi and others) are extolled for wise Taoist rule or blamed for introducing harmful civilization. Dreams of mythical paradises and journeys on clouds and flying dragons are metaphors for the wanderings of the soul, the attainment of the Tao, and the identity of dream and reality.
Taoists have transformed and adapted some ancient myths to their beliefs. Thus, the Queen Mother of the West (Xiwangmu), who was a mountain spirit, pestilence goddess, and tigress, became a high deity—the Fairy Queen of all Immortals.