1st Edition

The Tao of the West Western Tranformations of Taoist Thought

By J.J. Clarke Copyright 2000
284 Pages
by Routledge

284 Pages
by Routledge

288 Pages
by Routledge

In this book, J.J. Clarke shows us how Taoist texts, ideas, and practices have been assimilated within a whole range of Western ideas and agendas. We see how Chinese thinkers such as Lao-tzu and Chuang tzu, along with practices such as Feng Shui and Tai Chi, have been used as a key Western inspiration in religion, philosophy, ethics, politics, ecology and health. The Tao of the West not only... Read more
Preface, 1 ‘The Way that can be told’: introduction, 2 ‘The meaning is not the meaning’: on the nature of Daoism, 3 ‘Cramped scholars’: Western interpretations of Daoism, 4 ‘The Great Clod’: Daoist natural philosophy, 5 ‘Going rambling without destination’: moral explorations, 6‘The transformation of things’: the alchemy of life, sex and health, 7 ‘The Way is incommunicable’: transcendence, 8 ‘The twitter of birds’: philosophical themes, 9 ‘Journey to the West’: by way of concluding, Appendix I: Chinese dynastic chronology, Appendix II: Wade–Giles/Pinyin conversion table, Notes, Bibliography, Name index, Subject index

Biography

J.J Clarke has taught philosophy at McGill University, Montreal, and at the University of Singapore, and is currently Reader in History of Ideas at Kingston University, UK. He is the author of In Search of Jung, Jung and Eastern Thought, and Oriental Enlightenment: The Encounter Between Asian and Western Thought, all published by Routledge.

'John brings a wealth of knowledge and historical understanding to bear, which enriches the reader's perspective.' - David Lorimer