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#11
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So far as I know, May is correct. Some scholars believe that the terms once referred to such things as the shady side of a mountain and the sunny side of a mountain.
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Then I came back from where I'd been. My room, it looked the same - but there was nothing left between The Nameless and the name. - Leonard Cohen. |
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#12
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Quote:
why? because this way there is darkness in light - and vice versa - and the fields and the distinction betwen them are not static but constantly changing. anybody know what happens when you spin a coloured disc fast enough? ![]()
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a tree that is unbending is easily broken. the hard and strong will fall. the soft and weak will overcome. (tao te ching, chapter 76) |
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#13
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It's quite common knowledge that the "yin yang" symbol has existed LOOONG before Lao Tzu and in many different forms. A symbol, is ALWAYS a way of explaining a concept or idea, never is it an explanation in and of itself. A symbol is exactly what "symbol" means. Something used to "represent" something else.
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I go forth with bare feet, and a simple spirit. Lord have mercy on me. beati pauperes spiritu † |
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#14
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DC Lau says: "…the Yin and Yang occur once and once only in the Laozi (chapter 47) and there is no reason to suppose that they occupy an important place in the thought of the whole work."
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