Tao and Method

A Reasoned Approach to the Tao Te Ching

By Michael LaFargue

Subjects: Chinese Religion And Philosophy
Series: SUNY series in Chinese Philosophy and Culture
Paperback : 9780791416020, 658 pages, August 1994
Hardcover : 9780791416013, 658 pages, August 1994

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Table of contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Part I: Hermeneutics

Introduction

1. Interpretation and Meaning: Two Histories

 

Hermeneutics
The Ontology of Meaning: A History and a Proposal

 

2. Philosophical Foundations for Interpretive Method

 

Philosophical Foundations
Language and Reality
The Idea of Competence
This Hermeneutics Comared and Contrasted with Recent Trends in Hermeneutics

Part II: Sociohistorical Background

Introduction

3. The Self Understanding of Warring States Shih

 

China in the Late Warring States Period
Cho-yun Hsu on the Rise of the Shih
Shih Idealists
How did Shih-Idealists Gain Recognition?
The Shih-School as an Environment for Idealism

 

4. Mencius on the Role of the Shih-Idealist

 

Doctrinal Wolrdviews vs. the Mencian Worldview
Mencius Stakes Out an Expanded Role for Shih-Idealists
Other Shih-Schools

 

5. Mencius on Virtue

 

The Content of Mencius' Instruction to Kings
Self-Cultivation
Conclusion: The Mencian Shih vs. the Modern Philosopher
Mencius and the Tao Te Ching

Part III: Verbal Form and the Structure of Laoist Thought

Introduction

6. The Semantic Structure of Aphorisms

 

The Proverb as a Special Genre of Speech
Conversational Implicature
Speech Acts
The Target of Proverbs
The Attitude Expressed and the Value-Orientation Motivating It

 

7. Understanding Laoist Polemic Aphorisms

 

Definiteness
Making Sense of the Paradoxical Style of Laoist Aphorisms
The Problem of Coherence
The Unifying Basis for Laoist Thought: A Concern for Organic Harmony
Appendix: Sayings About Nature, Heaven, and the Ancients

 

8. Sayings and Self-Cultivation

 

Introduction
The Nei Yeh
Some Parallels Between the Tao Te Ching and the Nei Yeh

 

9. The Vocabulary of Self-Cultivation in the Chuang Tzu and the Tao Te Ching

 

Self-Cultivation Vocabulary in the Chuang Tzu
The Vocabulary of Self-Cultivation in the Tao Te Ching

 

10. The Wonderful and Cosmic Tao

 

"Softness Overcomes Hardness"
Sayings Linking One Quality to Another
Normative Descriptions
Sayings Describing the Wonderful Benefits of the Qualities Laoists Cultivate
Cosmic Sayings: A General Thesis
"Stillness is the Norm of the World"
Cosmogonies
Contradictions and Non-Literal Understanding

 

11. A Pluralist but Critical Theory of Worldviews

 

The Dilemmas of Ethnocentrism and Diversity
A Broadened Thoery of "The Good" as an Irreducible Ontological Category
Conversion and the Transformation of the Lebenswelt
Transcendence
Subject's View and Outsider's View
The Laoist "System"
Some Comments on Contemporary Relevance

 

12. The Art of the Sayings Collage

 

Indirect External Evidence
Internal Evidence That the Tao Te Ching is Composed of Sayings from an Oral Tradition
Internal Evidence for Deliberate and Artful Composition of the Chapters
Substative Associations of the Composers

Part IV: Translation, Commentary, and Topical Glossary

Introduction

Translation and Commentary

Additional Textual Notes

Topical Glossary

Notes

References

Subject Index

Author Index

Index of Passages Discussed

List of Chapters in the Traditional Arrangement

Description

While the Tao Te Ching has been translated and commented on countless times, interpretations are seldom based on systematic theoretical treatment of the problems of interpretive method posed by this enigmatic classic. Beginning with a critical discussion of modern hermeneutics including treatments of Hirsch, Gadamer, and Derrida, this book applies methods developed in biblical studies to the Tao Te Ching. The following chapters discuss systematically four areas necessary to recovering the Tao Te Ching 's original meaning: its social background; the semantic structure of the brief aphorisms contained in the book; the concrete background of the more cosmic sayings; and the origin and genre of the 81 chapters of the Tao Te Ching. These essays propose relatively new theories in each of these areas, leading to a new approach to the interpretation of the text. This approach is illustrated in the translation and the detailed commentary on each chapter.

Michael LaFargue is the author of Language and Gnosis and teaches at the University of Massachusetts in Boston.

Reviews

"This translation and commentary takes a novel, even controversial approach to the Tao Te Ching, presenting the reader with a full-blown culturological understanding of this core Taoist Classic. " — Roger T. Ames, University of Hawaii

"More than any other classical Chinese work, perhaps, the Tao Te Ching has been ripped from its historical, cultural and concretely experiential context and employed (like a set of transcultural Rorschach images) to tickle the meditative fancies of Mystical Everyman. LaFargue's worry about the origin and evolution of the text, its intended audience, and the 'purpose' of its aphorisms, allows him to ask relevant hermeneutical questions, the responses to which open the text in a new way. " — David L. Hall, The University of Texas