A Brief Introduction to The Beauty of Heaven and Earth
It is an aesthetic proposition put forward by Zhuangzi that there is great beauty in heaven and earth without saying it.
Second, the source
Zhuangzi travels to the north: "Heaven and earth have great beauty but don't talk about it, there are clear laws and discussions from time to time, and everything is reasonable but don't talk about it. Tang Lu Deming's Zhuangzi Sound and Meaning: "Great beauty is the beauty of repetition. "
(See "Classic Interpretation") Zhuangzi believes that the beauty of heaven and earth originated from "Tao" itself can be expressed without relying on language, the law of seasonal changes naturally appears without relying on discussion, and the truth of all things is established without relying on human interpretation.
Zhuangzi introduced.
I. Introduction to Zhuangzi
Zhuangzi (about 369 BC-about 286 BC) was born in the Song Dynasty during the Warring States Period (now Minquan County, Shangqiu, Henan, Dongming, Shandong, Mengcheng County, Bozhou, Anhui). ? [67-70] Thinkers, philosophers and writers in the mid-Warring States period, as well as representatives of the Taoist school, were also called "Laozi and Zhuangzi".
Zhuangzi should not be employed by Chu Weiwang because he stands for freedom. He only worked as a lacquer garden official in the Song Dynasty, and was known as the "proud lacquer garden official" in history, and was regarded as a model of local officials. His earliest thought of "sage inside and king outside" had a far-reaching influence on Confucianism. He has a profound insight into the principles of the Book of Changes, pointing out that the Book of Changes is based on yin and yang, and his "three tones" thought is consistent with the three talents in the Book of Changes.
His literary imagination is rich and peculiar, his language is freely used, he is flexible and changeable, and he can write exquisite and unspeakable philosophies, which is called "literary philosophy, philosophical literature". His works are included in the book Zhuangzi, and his representative works include Free Travel, Theory of Everything, Master of Health, etc.
According to legend, Zhuangzi tried to live in seclusion in Nanhua Mountain and was buried here. Therefore, at the beginning of Tianbao, Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty was named as a South China True Man, and the book Zhuangzi was also regarded as the South China True Classic.
Second, the main impact
Zhuangzi inherited and developed Laozi's philosophical thought of "Taoism is natural", which made Taoism a real science. He himself became an important representative of Taoism and was called "the ancestor of Taoism" with Laozi.
Zhuangzi's knowledge is rooted in Laozi's words, so his books are more than 100,000 words, most of which are fables, such as Fisherman's Father, Stealing Foot and Tile, which are all used to identify Laozi's thoughts.
He led "noble life" and "for me" to "mature life" and "selfless", which was attributed to the natural unity of Tao and me. Zhuangzi, Zhouyi and Laozi are also called "San Xuan", which has high research value in philosophy.