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Taoism Caroline &Ashley. The Philosophy. Humans should accept life as it is and not wish for life to be any other way Wu-wei is a phrase that translates into “non-doing,” which means letting things come naturally Yin and yang Heaven, earth, and humanity all come from the yin and yang.
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The Philosophy • Humans should accept life as it is and not wish for life to be any other way • Wu-wei is a phrase that translates into “non-doing,” which means letting things come naturally • Yin and yang • Heaven, earth, and humanity all come from the yin and yang
Yin and Yang • are complete opposites of each other but compliment each other • The white part of the symbol is male, heat, passive, day and heaven • The black part of the symbol is female, coolness, night, active, and earth • Black and white do not oppose each other, but they complete each other • Everything comes from the forces of yin and yang
The Religion • The symbol in the background is “Tao,” which means “The Way” • Taoism religion is blended with Buddhism and Confucianism • T’ai Chi is “Ultimate Cause,” which is the reason for everything in existence
Myths • The Jade Emperor -controlled the heavens • kuei -means ghosts -these ghost bring with them death
Tao-Te Ching • Written by a man named Lao –Tzu • It is a collection of all the beliefs of Taoism • These beliefs have been practiced since the b.c. era
The Five Elements • The five elements in Taoism are, from greatest to least important, water, fire, wood, metal, and earth • The elements are thought to produce all the seasons: wood/spring (wood gives birth to fire) fire/summer (fire gives birth to ash or earth. Earth then gives birth to metal) metal/autumn (metal gives birth to water) water/winter
Bibliography Occhiogrosso, Peter. The Joy of Sects. Doubleday: New York, 1994. 147-149. “Taoism” Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. 4 Jan 2005. Wikipedia. 4Jan 2005. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taoist