Taouism

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English[edit]

Proper noun[edit]

Taouism

  1. Dated spelling of Taoism.
    • 1832 December, “Literary Notices”, in The Chinese Repository[1], volume 1, number 8, Canton, →OCLC, page 340:
      M. Constant's opinion concerning the Chinese, we are sorry to say, has a great deal of truth in it : they are, he observes, of all people the most attached to materialism, they have no notion of spirituality, they are blind fatalists ; their doctrine is far more dry than any other pantheistic scheme : - "it supposes the existence of one only substance, without attributes, without qualities, without will, without intelligence ;" (we suppose he means the le of Confucianists-see Morrison's Dictionary 6942,) "it knows of no motives but blind fatalism, and of no perfection but a blind apathy, without virtue and without vice, without pain and without pleasure, without hope and without fear, without desire and without dislike, and finally without immortality." (Here there is a good deal of Taouism set forth.)
    • 1879, Robert K. Douglas, Confucianism and Taouism[2], London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, →OCLC, →OL, page 174:
      Among these recluses arose one who was noted as a deep and original thinker, and who became the founder of Taouism. This was Laou-tsze, the old philosopher, who was born about fifty years before Confucius.

Anagrams[edit]