- The
Liezi (Chinese: 列子; Wade–Giles: Lieh-tzu) is a
Taoist text
attributed to Lie Yukou, a c. 5th
century BC
Hundred Schools of
Thought philosopher. Although...
-
considered the
author of the
Daoist book
Liezi,
which uses his
honorific name
Liezi (Chinese: 列子; pinyin:
Lièzǐ; Wade–Giles: Lieh4-tzŭ3; lit. 'Master Lie')...
- — (Balfour 1884,
chapter 1, p. 86) The (c. 4th
century CE)
Taoist Liezi uses wuji (meaning "limitless")
eight times in a
cosmological dialogue (with...
-
purity that one
achieves through attunement with the Dao. In the
Taoist text
Liezi,
Guixu is
located billions of li East of the
Bohai Sea. There, all the water...
- of ****verance and willpower. The tale
first appeared in Book 5 of the
Liezi, a
Daoist text of the 4th
century BC, and was
retold in the
Garden of Stories...
-
teach simple hedonism, nor did Yang Chu, 'his'
Liezi chapter clearly adopts a hedonism.
Elsewhere in the
Liezi, however,
hedonism is
explicitly criticized...
- as
continuing traditions first embodied by the Daodejing, Zhuangzi, and
Liezi. The
canon was ****embled by
monks c. 400 CE in an
attempt to
bring together...
-
possibly the
Liezi and Zhuangzi. He
founded the
philosophical school of "Yangism". The
philosophies attributed to Yang Zhu, as
presented in the
Liezi, clash...
- wickedness,
Followed the
Immortals fluttering through the sky. The
Daoist Liezi (ca. 4th
century CE) uses
zhenren in two chapters. The
first usage (3),...
- (Founder of
Philosophical Taoism)
Wenzi (c. 5th
century BCE) Lie
Yukou (
Liezi) (c. 400 BCE)
Zhuang Zi (Chuang Tzu) (c. 4th
century BCE)
Guiguzi (c. 2nd...