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Document Details :

Title: Lessons on Spirituality from Zhuang Zi
Subtitle: Dichotomies and beyond Dichotomies between Man and Nature
Author(s): OFILADA MINA, Macario
Journal: Studies in Spirituality
Volume: 10    Date: 2000   
Pages: 66-76
DOI: 10.2143/SIS.10.0.505261

Abstract :
Our interest in the Chinese mystic sage Zhuang Zi (ca.399-295 B.C.) is not due to this possible appeal to scholars of Christian spirituality or to Thomas Merton's discovery of him. On the contrary, this mysterious author of an equally mysterious book, who is commonly held to be the mystical interpreter of Lao Zi (ca. 600 B.C.), does give us -on his own and on his own categories- certain valuable lessons on spirituality. Themes such as dichotomies, mystical union and absorption, freedom, etc., can be understood as elements of a vibrant mysticism and could be helpful in the attempts towards a scientific delineation of spirituality. His is not a litugical spirituality, but starts as a spirituality of attitudes or dispositions made concrete by action or the lack of it; for Wu Wei, or gliding along, is sheer passivity in the Way or Dao.

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