Thursday, April 24, 2014

Chapter 18

When the Great Tao was abandoned,
There appeared humanity and justice.
When intelligence and wit arose,
There appeared great hypocrites.
When the six relations lost their harmony,
There appeared filial piety and paternal kindness.
When darkness and disorder began to reign in a kingdom,
There appeared the loyal ministers.

Again the first line gives the impression of a long gone Golden Age, when the Great Tao was followed and everybody lived in perfect harmony.  Another way of putting this is: to the follower of the Tao, even the display of humanity and justice are a degradation of the ideal.

When there are notions of humanity in people’s minds, there must also be notions of inhumanity; when justice is being applauded, there is, of necessity, the suffering of injustice.

The people are not living directly in the beautiful, peaceful clarity of the present moment; they are clearly filtering reality through thought, and seeing not with their eyes but with shadowy mental concepts.  They are not living in simple spontaneous trust, but are being judgemental, acting on these erroneous judgements, and thereby distorting the natural flow of the Tao. 

Remember: according to the Taoist, all judgement is made in error, and we are as wrong to extol the good as we are to deprecate the bad.

When intelligence and wit arose,
There appeared great hypocrites.

Intelligence only arises in the degraded all-too-human world where there are shared mental concepts of reality.  Some people live easily and thrive in the conceptual world; others – very often those of innate spiritual clarity – find it hard to prosper in the abstract world of the intelligence. 

The ‘intelligent’ ones therefore find it easy to dupe the more simple-minded.  For where there is conceptual truth, there is the possibility of shielding this truth from those who believe they need it.  The clever are able to use their skills to turn falsehood into truth and vice versa. 

When the six relations lost their harmony,
There appeared filial piety and paternal kindness.

The six relations (father and son; elder and younger brother; husband and wife) are here describing the natural bonds the form between people in society. 

It is perfectly natural, and entirely in keeping with the Tao if a man devotes more time to the woman who gave birth to his children, than to the woman living next door. 

Such fidelity comes as an instinct, and he shall feel any force preventing this as a matter of conscience.  This bond does not need to be formally consecrated in the form of marriage;  any such ceremony is nothing other than a simulacrum of what shall naturally occur. 

But, when the people start to reverse the situation, and imagine that the ceremony causes the faithful bond, great disharmony is likely to ensue.  A man shall believe that fidelity comes after the ceremony.  And the ceremony, he sees to his delight, can be wilfully performed with women who offer all sorts of quite irrelevant qualities: for example, women who have wealthy relations.  The natural faithful love and solicitude, however, does not come as he expects.

And the reverse is also true.  When there are no ceremonies of consecration, there is no bond other than what is felt in our hearts and sense of conscience.  When this bond dissolves, as well it might, there is therefore no expectation that it should  continue any further.  A couple are free to come together by instinct, and then part by the same instinct, and there shall be no feelings of rancour nor regret.

If we are ignorant enough to believe that we can love as an act of will, we are likely commit ourselves to vows that we are unable to keep.  And it is precisely this sense of failure that creates the very bitter mutual recrimination  that so commonly surrounds divorce.  The artificial joy of the wedding, and the unnecessary pain of divorce go very much hand-in-hand.

When darkness and disorder began to reign in a kingdom,
There appeared the loyal ministers.

The same idea is presented here as it applies to the world of politics.  Loyal ministers are features of a situation where there are also disloyal ministers.  What is the disloyal minister?  He is the man who has developed different intellectual notions about how the state should be run.  He can imagine in his mind all sorts of better ways.  Now it is his master’s old enemy who seems to have the better ideas; it is to him that the loyal minister now turns, transforming himself into the disloyal minister.


Previous                                                 Chapter index                                                       Next


No comments:

Post a Comment