老子的智慧(林语堂英文作品集)
分類: 图书,哲学,中国哲学,先秦哲学,道家哲学,老子,
品牌: 林语堂
基本信息·出版社:外语教学与研究出版社
·页码:270 页
·出版日期:2009年
·ISBN:7560081401/9787560081403
·条形码:9787560081403
·包装版本:1版
·装帧:平装
·开本:32
·正文语种:英语
·丛书名:林语堂英文作品集
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内容简介《老子的智慧》是林语堂英文作品集之一。The Pastor was not a follower of convention,SO the boys did not wear queues.Yutang was a little guy,deeply tanned,with a prominent forehead'a pair of sparkling eyes,and a narrow chin.Six miles later,when the skiff camet0 Xiaoxi.the boys changed tO a five.sail junk,and sailed toward Zhangzhou on West River.There were paddy fields and farmhouses on either side ofthe river.and tall mountains stood behind them,clad in grey-purplish hues.Yutang thought it inexpressibly beautiful.After a day's journey,the junk was tied up against the bank under some bamboo trees.Yutang was told tO lie down,cover himself with a blanket and go tO sleep. But sleep was the last thing on the boy's mind.The boatman sitting at the iunk,s stern was sucking at his pipe,and between gulps of bitter tea,telling stories about the Empress Dowager Cixi,who ruled the court today,having put the Emperor Guangxu under house arrest for supporting the reformers at the palace.Another junk was tied up on the opposite bank,brightly lit by lanterns.A soft breeze wafted sounds of merrymaking and music from a lute across the water.
目录
FOREWORD
INTRODUCrIoN
PROLEGOMENA
BOOKOFTAo
(The chapter headings indicate the text of Laotse;section headings indicatselections from Chuangtse.)
Book One THE CHARACTER OF TAO
I.ON THE ABSOLUTE TAo
2.THE RISE OF RELATIVE OPPOSITES
3.ACTlON WITHOUT DEEDS
4.THE CttARACTER OF TAO
5 .NATURE
6.THE SPIRIT OF THE VALLEY
Book Two THE LESSONS OF
7.LIVING FOR oTHERS
8.WATER
9.THE DANGER OF OVERWEENING SUCCESS
10.EMBRACING THE ONE
11.TIlE UTILITY OF NOT-BEING
12.THE SENSES
13.PRAISE AND BLAME
Book Three THEIMITATIONOFTAO
14.PREHISTORIC ORIGINS
15.THEWISEONESoFOLD
16.KNOWING THE ETERNAL LAW
17.RULERS
18.THE DECLINE OF TAO
19.REALIZE THE SIMPLE SELF
20.THEWORLDANDI
21.MANIFESTATlONS OF TAO
22.FUTILITY OF CONTENTlON
23.IDENTIFICATION WITH rrlAO
24.THE DREGS AND TUMORS OF VIRTUE
25.TIlE FOUR ETERNAL MODEIS
Book Four THE SOURCE oF POWER
26.HEAVINESS AND LIGHTNESS
27 ON STEALING THE LIGHT
28.KEEPING TO THE FEMALE
29.WARNING AGAINST INTERFERENCE
30.WARNING AGAINST THE USE OF FORCE
31.WEAPONS OF EVIL
32.TAO IS LIKE THE SEA
33.KNoWING ONESELF
34.THE GREAT TAo FLOWS EVERYWHERE
35.Tt{E PEACE OF TAO
36.THE RHYTHM OF LIFE
37.WORLD PEACE
38.DEGENERATION
39.UNITY THROUGH COMPLEMENTS
40.THE PRINCIPLE OF REVERSlON
Book Five THE CONDUCT OF LIFE
41.OUALITIES OF THE TAOIST
42.THE VIoLENT MAN
45.THE SOFTEST SUBSTlANCE
44.BE CONTENT
45.CALM OUIETUDE
46.RACING HORSES
47. PURSUIT OF KNOWLEDGE
48.CONOUERING THEⅥ,ORLD BY INACTlON
49.THE PEOPLE’S HEARTS
50.THE PRESERVING OF LIFE
51.THE MYSTIC VIRTUE
52.STEALlNG THE ABSOLUTE
53.BRIGANDAGE
54.TtIE INDIVIDUAL AND THE STATE
55.THE CHARACTER OF THE CHILD
56.BEYOND HONOR AND DISGRACE
Book Six THE THEORY OF GOVERNMENT
57.THE ART OF GOVERNMENT
58.LAZY GOVERNMENT
59.BE SPARING
60.RUI。ING A BIG COUNTRY
61.BIG AND SMALL COUNTRIES
62.THE GOOD MAN’S TREASURE
63.DIFFICUIjr AND EASY
64.BEGINNING AND END
65.THE GRAND HARMONY
66.THE LORDS OF THE RAVINES
67.THE THREE TREASURES
68.THE VIRTUE OF NOT-CONTENDING
69.CAMOUFLAGE
70.THEYKNOWMENOT
71.SICK.MINDEDNESS
72.ON PUNISHMENT(I)
73.ON PUNISHMENT(2)
74.ON PUNISHMENT f3)
75.ON PUNISHMENT f4)
Book Seven APHOIUSMS
76.HARD AND SOFT
77.BENDING THE BoW
78.NOTHING WEAKER THANⅥWrER
79.PEACE SETTLEMENTS
80.THE SMALL UTOPIA
81.THE Ⅵ,AY oF HEAVEN
IMAGINARY CONVERSATIONS BETWEEN
LAoTSE AND CoNFUCIUS
THE PRONUNCIATION OF CHINESE NAMES
CONVERSION TABLE OF CHAPTERS IN CHUANGTSE
WADE-GILES TO PINYIN CONVERSION TABLE
WORKS IN ENGLISH BY UN YUTANG
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序言One morning in 1905.or the 3Ith year of the reign of Emperor Guangxu ofQing Dynasty,tWO brothers set Out by boat from their hometown Boa-ah,amountain hamlet in Fujian Province on the southern coast of China,for theDort city of Xiamen,some sixty miles away.The boys were full of excitementand chatted especi~ly the younger one.Yutang was ten years old,and today,hewas taking leave of his hometown and going with his brother to study in Xiamen·Thev were sons of Pastor Lin Zhicheng,who was born in the poor village ofWulisha.Pastor Lin was sending his sons tO free missionary schools in Xiamen.
The Pastor was not a follower of convention,SO the boys did not wear queues.Yutang was a little guy,deeply tanned,with a prominent forehead'a pair of sparkling eyes,and a narrow chin.Six miles later,when the skiff camet0 Xiaoxi.the boys changed tO a five.sail junk,and sailed toward Zhangzhou on West River.There were paddy fields and farmhouses on either side ofthe river.and tall mountains stood behind them,clad in grey-purplish hues.Yutang thought it inexpressibly beautiful.After a day's journey,the junk was tied up against the bank under some bamboo trees.Yutang was told tO lie down,cover himself with a blanket and go tO sleep. But sleep was the last thing on the boy's mind.The boatman sitting at the iunk,s stern was sucking at his pipe,and between gulps of bitter tea,telling stories about the Empress Dowager Cixi,who ruled the court today,having put the Emperor Guangxu under house arrest for supporting the reformers at the palace.Another junk was tied up on the opposite bank,brightly lit by lanterns.A soft breeze wafted sounds of merrymaking and music from a lute across the water.
文摘As sociates with men.Because he has not human passions the questions of rightand wrong do not touch him.Infinitesimal indeed is that which belongs to thehuman;infinitely great is that which is completed in God.(2:3)22.3.TWO USELESS TREES.A certain carpenter Shih was traveUing to the Ch'iState.On reaching Shady Circle,he saw a sacred li tree in the temple to the Godof Earth.It was so large that its shade could cover a herd of several thousandcattle.It was a hundred spans in girth,towering up eighty feet over the hilltop,before it branched out.A dozen boats could be cut Out of it.Crowds stoodgazing at it,but the carpenter took no notice,and went on his way withouteven casting a look behind.His apprentice,however,took a good look at it,and when he caught up with his master,said,“Ever since I have handled anadze in your service,I have never seen such a splendid piece of timber.Howwasitthatyou,Master,didnot careto stopandlook atit?” “Forget about it.It’S not worth talking about.”replied his master.“It’Sgood for nothing.Made into a boat,it would sink;into a coffm,it would rot;into furniture,it would break eas@;into a door,it would sweat;into a pillar,itwould be worm-eaten.It is wood of no quality and of no use.That is why it hasattained its present age.” When the carpenter reached home,he dreamt that the spirit of the treeappeared to him in his sleep and spoke to him as follows:“What is it youintend to compare me with?Is it with fine-grained wood?Look at the cherryapple,the pear,the orange,the pumelo,and other fruit bearers.As soon astheir fruit ripens they are stripped and treated with indignity.The great boughsare snapped off,the small ones scattered abroad.Thus do these trees by theirown value injure their own lives.They cannot fulfil their allotted span of years.but perish prematurely because they destroy themselves for the(admiration of)the world.Thus it is with all things.Moreover,I tried for a long perio
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