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Baopuzi (simplified Chinese: 抱朴子;
traditional Chinese: 抱樸子) is a
literary work
written by Ge Hong (AD 283–343), (Chinese: 葛洪; Wade–Giles: Ko Hung), a...
- (283–343 CE)
immortalized pu in his pen name
Baopuzi "Master who
Embraces Simplicity" and
eponymous book
Baopuzi. Pu can be
written with
either of the variant...
- and
floating goblins" [飛尸流凶]. The "Inner Chapters" of the (c. 320 CE)
Baopuzi,
written by the Jin
Dynasty Daoist scholar Ge Hong, is the
earliest source...
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Eastern Jin dynasty. He was the
author of
Essays on
Chinese Characters, the
Baopuzi, the
Emergency Formulae at an Elbow's Length,
among others. He was the...
- the 317
Baopuzi ("[Book of the]
Master Who
Embraces Simplicity") and the
later Shenxian Zhuan ("Traditions of
Divine Transcendents"). The
Baopuzi description...
- of the
phoenix or the
ascension of the dragon. The (c. 320 CE)
Daoist Baopuzi by Ge Hong
mentions Feilong 飛龍 "flying dragon" and uses it as a graphic...
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meditation on
inner deities. The Jin
dynasty scholar Ge Hong's (c. 320)
Baopuzi "Master who
Embraces Simplicity",
which is an
invaluable source for early...
-
Literary Chinese trope for the
lifespan of a
Daoist xian transcendent. The
Baopuzi says Peng Zu
lived 800
years and Anqi
Sheng lived over 3,000, "but in the...
- Even when
fettered with ropes, it can find its [human] food." Ge Hong's
Baopuzi (c. 320)
mentions wangliang (魍魎) twice. One
context lists the
demon among...
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Yaojiu (堯韭, "Yao's l****; calamus") (Bokenkamp 2015: 295). Ge Hong's c. 318
Baopuzi (Master Who
Embraces Simplicity)
mentions Han
Zhong (韓終)
twice and medical...