Ziran: Nature Defined In Chinese - Deepstash
The Philosophy Of Alan Watts

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The Philosophy Of Alan Watts

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Ziran: Nature Defined In Chinese

Ziran: Nature Defined In Chinese

In Chinese, the word for nature is ziran, which means “self so”, or “so of itself”. Ziran doesn’t mean green pastures over yonder. There is no word to distinguish between “us” and “nature” in Chinese. It means a spontaneous process that happens in and of itself.

This notion of ziran — the natural, spontaneous process of life — is the basis of the principle of “Tao”. The Chinese philosophy based around living in accordance with the Tao, and that is attributed to the person (or likely persons) Lao Tzu, is called Toaism.

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HERACLITUS

No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it’s not the same river and he’s not the same man.

HERACLITUS

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Lesson #1: On The Meaning of Life

Lesson #1: On The Meaning of Life

To know that you can do nothing is the beginning. Lesson One is: “I Give Up”… What happens now? You find yourself in what is perhaps a rather unfamiliar state of mind.”

Just watching. Not trying to get anything. Not expecting anything. Not seeking. Just trying to relax. Just watching, with...

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127 reads

Lesson #5: On the Present Moment

Lesson #5: On the Present Moment

The past and the present are real illusions, that they exist only in the present, which is what there is and all that there is. From one point of view, the present is shorter than a microsecond. From another, it embraces all eternity. But there isn’t anywhere, or anywhen, else to be.

...

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Get rid of knowledge; eject wisdom, and the people will be benefited a hundred-fold

LAO-TZU

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The Philosopher From The Future

The Philosopher From The Future

Watts stands out among other 20th-century philosophers for several reasons. Namely because he managed to do three unique things:

  • Have very differentiated points of view from contemporary Western viewpoints.
  • Articulate them extremely well.
  • Do it all in a time when you co...

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174 reads

Thinking Isn't Everything

Thinking Isn't Everything

You can’t make sense of the universe through problem-solving. You can’t find the meaning of life through thought alone. Problem-solving is a function of the universe. Your thoughts are one small expression of life.

From the beginning, the question was flawed. But more than ...

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85 reads

Lesson #3: On Religion & Faith

Lesson #3: On Religion & Faith

Religions are divisive and quarrelsome. They are a form of one-upmanship because they depend upon separating the “saved” from the “damned,” the true believers from the heretics, the in-group from the out-group. . . . All belief is fervent hope, and thus a cover-up for doubt and uncertainty.

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67 reads

A Spiritual Entertainer

A Spiritual Entertainer

Alan Watts wasn’t an expert in what he taught. Despite writing extensively about Eastern philosophies like Buddhism, Hinduism, Taoism, and Zen, he wasn’t ordained as any kind of monk or didn’t strictly follow any one system.

What he was, like the ideas he dedicated his life to studying and ...

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102 reads

The Harsh Truth Of Life

The Harsh Truth Of Life

Believing in some other entity that has divine power or will to save you from your sins can also cause you to close off from life and avoid its harsh truths — uncertainty, impermanence, death, change.

Paradoxically, embracing such realities is essential for freedom and the basis of understa...

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67 reads

You Are Part Of The Whole

You Are Part Of The Whole

One can only attempt a rational, descriptive philosophy of the universe on the assumption that one is totally separate from it. But if you and your thoughts are part of this universe, you cannot stand outside them to describe them. This is why all philosophical and theological systems must ultima...

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74 reads

Don't Be So Serious

Don't Be So Serious

Alan Watts didn’t take life, or himself, too seriously. He enjoyed a good drink or six. He left the Church partly due to an extramarital affair. He didn’t pretend he wasn’t human and wasn’t ashamed of his vices—whether they be sex, alcohol, acid, partying on his houseboat, or all the above.

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The Paradox Of Life

The Paradox Of Life

How can you understand the universe when you are a part of it? How can you discover the meaning of life through intellect alone? How can you bite your own teeth or eat your own mouth? Although seemingly obvious and even foolish, Watt’s believed such questions were key to really realizing how much...

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ALAN WATTS

If the universe is meaningless, so is the statement that it is so. If this world is a vicious trap, so is its accuser, and the pot is calling the kettle black.

ALAN WATTS

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Lesson #2: On Uncertainty & Insecurity

Lesson #2: On Uncertainty & Insecurity

To be secure means to isolate and fortify the “I”, but it is just the feeling of being an isolated “I” which makes me feel lonely and afraid. In other words, the more security I can get, the more I shall want”.

The desire for security and the feeling of insecurity are the same thing.

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Lesson #4: On Taoism & Nature

Lesson #4: On Taoism & Nature

In the West, “nature” is something that’s equated with the countryside or the mountains — a place that is wild and out there.

Nature is thus something you enjoy from the safety of your couch via a David Attenborough documentary or when you finally get out of the city on the weekend.

T...

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Multimedia specialist

Lessons on life, belief, religion and nature.

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Alan Watts On Taoism And Nature

  • Western society equates nature with the countryside or the mountains. Nature is everywhere, even inside us.
  • Any attempt to intentionally be one with nature (or Tao) results in us moving away from it because the attempt itself shows that we are not one with it already.

Lao Tzu: The Action In Inaction

Doing nothing, non-action or not forcefully acting is one of Lao-Tzu’s well-known teachings. We mistakenly think this is akin to being lazy, and doing absolutely nothing. What Lao-Tzu means is that we should not do anything that is not in accordance with Tao. It means swimming with the ti...

Lao-Tzu: The Founder Of Taoism

Lao-Tzu: The Founder Of Taoism

  • Lao-Tzu (pronounced as lao-zuh) was a sage in Ancient China who founded Taoism.
  • Tao means ‘the way’ and is the pathway towards simplicity, harmony and real contentment. It is termed as the ultimate power that provides order in the universe.
  • The teachings of Lao-Tz...

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