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Published Online: July 26 2008 | nh20080726a0
Keywords: Philosophy | nh20080726a0

To be nothing, and to be right

ZHUANG Zhou (Zhuangzi, ~369 BCE - 286 BCE)
Anyway, I would like to be nothing......--The first paragragh of the Zhuangzi: Outer Chapters - The Tree on the Mountain.

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Zhuangzi: Outer Chapters - The Tree on the Mountain. (The first paragragh).
Translated by James Legge. Source: The Writings of Chuang Tzu. James Legge, 1891.
The title and abstract were written by Lin PU, the Editor-in-Chief with National History.



To be nothing, and to be right...Photograph by Lin PU. Pukou Campus, Nanjing University. 20080108. Copyright © 2008 National History. Scidea Publishing.



Zhuangzi was walking on a mountain, when he saw a great tree with huge branches and luxuriant foliage. A wood-cutter was resting by its side, but he would not touch it, and, when asked the reason, said, that it was of no use for anything, Zhuangzi then said to his disciples, 'This tree, because its wood is good for nothing, will succeed in living out its natural term of years.' Having left the mountain, the Master lodged in the house of an old friend, who was glad to see him, and ordered his waiting-lad to kill a goose and boil it. The lad said, 'One of our geese can cackle, and the other cannot - which of them shall I kill?' The host said, 'Kill the one that cannot cackle.'

Next day, his disciples asked Zhuangzi, saying, 'Yesterday the tree on the mountain (you said) would live out its years because of the uselessness of its wood, and now our host's goose has died because of its want of power (to cackle) - which of these conditions, Master, would you prefer to be in?' Zhuangzi laughed and said, '(If I said that) I would prefer to be in a position between being fit to be useful and wanting that fitness, that would seem to be the right position, but it would not be so, for it would not put me beyond being involved in trouble; whereas one who takes his seat on the Dao and its Attributes, and there finds his ease and enjoyment, is not exposed to such a contingency. He is above the reach both of praise and of detraction; now he (mounts aloft) like a dragon, now he (keeps beneath) like a snake; he is transformed with the (changing) character of the time, and is not willing to addict himself to any one thing; now in a high position and now in a low, he is in harmony with all his surroundings; he enjoys himself at ease with the Author of all things; he treats things as things, and is not a thing to them: where is his liability to be involved in trouble? This was the method of Shan Nong and Huang-Di. As to those who occupy themselves with the qualities of things, and with the teaching and practice of the human relations, it is not so with them. Union brings on separation; success, overthrow; sharp corners, the use of the file; honour, critical remarks; active exertion, failure; wisdom, scheming; inferiority, being despised: where is the possibility of unchangeableness in any of these conditions? Remember this, my disciples. Let your abode be here - in the Dao and its Attributes.'



Suggested Readings:

1. ZHUANG Zhou (Zhuangzi, ~369 BCE - 286 BCE). Zhuangzi. (Chinese/English).
Source: The Writings of Chuang Tzu. James Legge, 1891. | Link.

2. An introduction of ZHUANG Zhou (Zhuangzi, ~369 BCE - 286 BCE) and his philosophy. 
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Zhuangzi.  Metaphsics Research Lab, CSLI, Stanford University. 2001.
Copyright owner: Harold Roth (Email: Harold_Roth@brown.edu)

Web page: plato.stanford.edu/entries/zhuangzi | Link
.



Scidea Citation: nh20080726a0
 

National History: ZHUANG Zhou (Zhuangzi, ~369 BCE - 286 BCE).
Natl. Hist. nh200807


ZHUANG Zhou. To be nothing, and to be right. National History, 1 (7), nh20080726a0 (2008).
doi: 10.3128/nh20080726a0 |
CrossRef

Scidea_doi: 10.3128/nh20080726a0ZHUANG Zhou (Zhuangzi, ~369 BCE - 286 BCE) : To be nothing, and to be right. [Abs.] Anyway, I would like to be nothing...--The first paragragh of the Zhuangzi: Outer Chapters - The Tree on the Mountain. [Title and abstract] Lin PU. [Metaphrase of Zhuangzi] James Legge. The Writings of Chuang Tzu. 1891.

National History
    - The Fragments of Life.
ISSN: 1995-0632. EISSN: 1995-0977. DOI: 10.3128/nh2008

Copyright © 2008 SCIDEA LIMITED. Nanjing. Hongkong. CHINA.
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周將處乎材與不材之間


 

莊周(莊子,約公元前369年—公元前286年)
ZHUANG Zhou (Zhuangzi, ~369 BCE - 286 BCE)

  莊子行於山中,見大木枝葉盛茂,伐木者止其旁而不取也。問其故。曰:“無所可用。”莊子曰:“此木以不材得終其天年。”夫子出於山,舍於故人之家。故人喜,命豎子殺雁而烹之。豎子請曰:“其一能鳴,其一不能鳴,請奚殺?”主人曰:“殺不能鳴者。”

  明日,弟子問於莊子曰:“昨日山中之木,以不材得終其天年。今主人之雁,以不材死。先生將何處?”莊子笑曰:“周將處乎材與不材之間。材與不材之間,似之而非也,故未免乎累。若夫乘道德而浮游則不然。無譽無訾,一龍一蛇,與時俱化,而無肯專為。一上一下,以和為量,浮游乎萬物之祖。物物而不物於物,則胡可得而累邪!此黃帝、神農之法則也。若夫萬物之情,人倫之傳,則不然。合則離,成則毀,廉則挫,尊則議,有為則虧,賢則謀,不肖則欺,胡可得而必乎哉?悲夫!弟子志之,其唯道德之鄉乎!”

——選自《莊子·外篇·山木》 


下圖一、二為《莊子·外篇·山木》第一自然段。
參考書版本來源:阮毓崧 輯。《莊子集註》。廣文書局。臺北。1972年7月第一版。




The first paragragh of the Zhuangzi: Outer Chapters - The Tree on the Mountain.
Source Book: RUAN Yusong (Y. S. Ruan). Collected Notes on Zhuangzi. First editon. Guangwen Publishing House, Taipei, July 1972.
Original images are scanned by REN Zhen.  Reproduced by National History, 2008.

  

莊周(莊子,約公元前369年—公元前286年)
ZHUANG Zhou (Zhuangzi, ~369 BCE - 286 BCE)

 

 


本文索引

國家歷史 2008年第07期 nh200807 | doi: 10.3128/nh200807

莊子。周將處乎材與不材之間。國家歷史,1 (7),nh20080726a0 (2008)。
國家歷史當前目錄 nh200807 □ 本文全文nh20080726a0 □ CrossRef 數據庫鏈接

Scidea_doi: 10.3128/nh20080726a0莊周(莊子,約公元前369年—公元前286年)【周將處乎材與不材之間】莊子笑曰:“周將處乎材與不材之間。材與不材之間,似之而非也,故未免乎累。”——選自《莊子·外篇·山木》。【國家歷史】2008年第07期。

國際刊號_印刷版 ISSN: 1995-0632.
國際刊號_網絡版 EISSN: 1995-0977.
CrossRef 數據庫鏈接 DOI: 10.3128/nh2008
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