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#chinese philosophy – @dragoni on Tumblr
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DragonI

@dragoni

"Truth is not what you want it to be; it is what it is, and you must bend to its power or live a lie", Miyamoto Musashi
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Dao de Jing Chapter 68, Great warriors are not…

善為士者不武. 善戰者不怒. 善勝敵者不與. 善用人者為之下. 是謂不爭之德. 是謂用人之力. 是謂配天古之極.

Shàn wéi shì zhě bù wǔ. Shànzhàn zhě bù nù. Shànshèng dí zhě bù yǔ. Shàn yòngrén zhě wéi zhī xià. Shì wèi bùzhēng zhī dé. Shì wèi yòngrén zhī lì. Shì wèi pèi tiān gǔ zhī jí.

Great warriors are not militaristic. Great soldiers do not get angry. Great conquers do not gloat. Those good at managing men are humble. This is called the virtue of non-contention. This is called the strength of using men. This is called the highest manifestation of accord with heaven.

Trans. Scott M. Rodell

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The professor who teaches Classical Chinese Ethical and Political Theory claims, "This course will change your life."
His students tell me it is true: that Puett uses Chinese philosophy as a way to give undergraduates concrete, counter-intuitive, and even revolutionary ideas, which teach them how to live a better life.  Elizabeth Malkin, a student in the course last year, says, “The class absolutely changed my perspective of myself, my peers, and of the way I view the world.” Puett puts a fresh spin on the questions that Chinese scholars grappled with centuries ago. He requires his students to closely read original texts (in translation) such as Confucius’sAnalects, the Mencius, and the Daodejing and then actively put the teachings into practice in their daily lives. His lectures use Chinese thought in the context of contemporary American life to help 18- and 19-year-olds who are struggling to find their place in the world figure out how to be good human beings; how to create a good society; how to have a flourishing life. 
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Decisions are made from the heart. Americans tend to believe that humans are rational creatures who make decisions logically, using our brains. But in Chinese, the word for “mind” and “heart” are the same. Puett teaches that the heart and the mind are inextricably linked, and that one does not exist without the other. 
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Recent research into neuroscience is confirming that the Chinese philosophers are correct: Brain scans reveal that our unconscious awareness of emotions and phenomena around us are actually what drive the decisions we believe we are making with such logical rationality.
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Once they’ve understood themselves better and discovered what they love to do they can then work to become adept at those activities through ample practice and self-cultivation. Self-cultivation is related to another classical Chinese concept: that effort is what counts the most, more than talent or aptitude. We aren’t limited to our innate talents; we all have enormous potential to expand our abilities if we cultivate them. You don’t have to be stuck doing what you happen to be good at; merely pay attention to what you love and proceed from there. Chinese philosophers taught that paying attention to small clues “can literally change everything that we can become as human beings,” says Puett.  
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