Monday, April 27, 2020
Taoism And Buddhism Essays (2219 words) - Taoism, Reincarnation
  Taoism And Buddhism  Taoism and Buddhism are the two great philosophical and religious traditions  that originated in China. Taoism began the sixth century BCE. And Buddhism came  to China from India around the second century of the Common Era. These two  religions have shaped Chinese life and thought for nearly twenty-five hundred  years. One dominant concept in Taoism and Buddhism is the belief in some form of  reincarnation. The idea that life does not end when one die is an integral part  of these religions and the culture of the Chinese people. Reincarnations, life  after death, and beliefs are not standardized. Each religion has a different way  of applying this concept to its beliefs. This paper will discuss the  reincarnation concepts as they apply to Taoism and Buddhism, and then provide a  comparison of both. Taoism The goal in Taoism is to achieve Tao, to find "the    Way". Tao is the ultimate reality, a presence that existed before the universe  was formed and which continues to guide the world and everything in it. Tao is  sometimes identified as "the Mother", or the source of all things. That  source is not a god or a Supreme Being, as Taoism is not monotheistic. The focus  is not to worship one god, but instead to come into harmony with Tao. Tao is the  essence of everything that is right, and complications exist only because people  choose to complicate their own lives. Desire, ambition, fame, and selfishness  are seen as hindrances to a harmonious life. One can only achieve Tao if he rids  himself of all desires. By shunning every earthly distraction, the Taoist is  able to concentrate on the self. The longer the person's life, the more saintly  the person is presumed to become. Eventually the hope is to become immortal, to  achieve Tao, to reach the deeper life. This is the after life for a Taoist, to  be in harmony with the universe, and to have achieved Tao. The origin of the  word Tao can explain the relationship between life, and the Taoism concept of  life and death. The Chinese character for Tao is a combination of two characters  that represent the words as head and foot. The character for foot represents the  idea of a person's direction or path. The character for head represents the idea  of conscious choice. The character for head also suggests a beginning, and foot,  an ending. Thus the character for Tao also conveys the continuing course of the  universe, the circle of heaven and earth. Finally, the character for Tao  represents the Taoist idea that the eternal Tao is both moving and unmoving. The  head in the character means the beginning, the source of all things, or Tao  itself, which never moves or changes; the foot is the movement on the path.    Taoism upholds the belief in the survival of the spirit after death. Taoist  believes birth is not a beginning, and death is not an end. There is an  existence without limit. There is continuity without a starting point. Applying  reincarnation theory to Taoism is the belief that the soul never dies, a  person's soul is eternal. In the writings of the Lao-Tzu Te-Tao Ching, Tao is  described as having existed before heaven and earth. Tao is formless, it stands  alone without change and reaches everywhere without harm. The Taoist is told to  use the light that is inside to revert to the natural clearness of sight. By  divesting oneself of all external distractions and desires, only then can one  achieve Tao. In ancient days a Taoist that had transcended birth and death,  achieved Tao, was said to have cut the Thread of Life. In Taoism, the soul or  spirit does not die at death. The soul is not reborn, it simply migrates to  another life. This process, the Taoist version of reincarnation, is repeated  until Tao is achieved. The following translation from the Lao-Tzu Te-Tao Ching  summarizes the theory behind Tao and how a Taoist can achieve Tao. The Great Tao  flows everywhere. It may go left or right. All things depend on it for life, and  it does not turn away from them. It accomplishes its task, but dies not claim  credit for it. It clothes and feeds all things but does not claim to be master  over them. Always without desires, it may be called the Small. All things come  to it and it does not master them; it may be called the Great. Therefore (the  sage) never strives himself for the great, and thereby the great is    
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