RELIGIONS
TAOISTS
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Question
[CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
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Totality of Being
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Wu and Yu
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Wei wuwei
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Yin
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Yang
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Detailed explanation-1: -wuwei, (Chinese: “nonaction”; literally, “no action”) Wade-Giles romanization wu-wei, in Chinese philosophy, and particularly among the 4th-and 3rd-century-bce philosophers of early Daoism (daojia), the practice of taking no action that is not in accord with the natural course of the universe.
Detailed explanation-2: -This is the paradox of wu wei. It doesn’t mean not acting, it means ‘effortless action’ or ‘actionless action’. It means being at peace while engaged in the most frenetic tasks so that one can carry these out with maximum skill and efficiency.
Detailed explanation-3: -What does wu-wei mean? A key Taoist concept that means “not doing/nondoing” or “actionless-action". It can be translated as “nonaction” or “doing nothing". Zhuangzi argued that each creature should be true to its own Tao.
Detailed explanation-4: -Literally wu means “there-is-not, ‘’ “to-have-not, ‘’ “the not, ‘’ “nothing, ‘’ “the empty; ‘’ yu means “there-is, ‘’-“to-have, ‘’ “to-be, ‘’ “that-which-is.” Wu is usually translated “non-being, ‘’ whereas yu is translated “being.”