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1.1 A way can be a guide, but not a fixed path; names can be
given, but not permanent labels.
1.2 Nonbeing is called the beginning of heaven and earth; being
is called the mother of all things.
1.3 Always passionless, thereby observe the subtle; ever intent,
thereby observe the apparent.
1.4 These two come from the same source but differ in name;
1.5 both are considered mysteries. The mystery of mysteries is
the gateway of marvels.
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2.1 When everyone knows beauty is beauty, this is bad.
2.2 When everyone knows good is good, this is not good.
2.3 So being and nonbeing produce each other: difficulty and ease
complement each other, long and short shape each other,
2.4 high and low contrast with each other, voice and echoes
conform to each other, before and after go along with each other.
2.5 So sages manage effortless service and carry out unspoken
guidance.
2.6 All beings work, without exception: if they live without
possessiveness,
2.7 act without presumption, and do not dwell on success, then by
this very nondwelling success will not leave.
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3.1 Not exalting cleverness causes the people not to contend.
3.2 Not putting high prices on hard-to-get goods causes the
people not to steal.
3.3 Not seeing anything to want causes the mind not to be
confused.
3.4 Therefore the government of sages empties the mind and fills
the middle, weakens the ambition and strengthens the bones,
3.5 always keeping the people innocent and passionless. It makes
the sophisticated not dare to contrive;
3.6 action being without contrivance, nothing is disordered.
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4.1 The Way is unimpeded harmony; its potential may never be
fully exploited.
4.2 It is as deep as the source of all things;
4.3 it blunts the edges, resolves the complications, harmonizes
the light, assimilates to the world.
4.4 Profoundly still, it seems to be there:
4.5 I don't know whose child it is, before the creation of
images.
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5.1 Heaven and earth are not humane; they regard all beings as
straw dogs.
5.2 Sages are not humane; they see all people as straw dogs..
5.3 The space between heaven and earth is like a bellows and
pipes, empty yet inexhaustible, producing more with each
movement.
5.4 The talkative reach their wits' end again and again; that is
not as good as keeping centered.
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6.1 The valley spirit not dying is called the mysterious female.
6.2 The opening of the mysterious female is called the root of
heaven and earth.
6.3 Continuous, on the brink of existence, to put in into
practice, don't try to force it.
#
7.1 Heaven is eternal, earth is everlasting.
7.2 The reason they can be eternal and everlasting is that they
do not foster themselves, that is why they can live forever.
7.3 For this reason sages put themselves last, and they were
first;
7.4 they excluded themselves, and they survived.
7.5 Was it not by their very selflessness that they managed to
fulfill themselves?
#
8.1 Higher good is like water: the good in water benefits all,
and does so without contention. It rests where people dislike to
be, so it is close to the Way.
8.2 Where it dwells becomes good ground; profound is the good in
its heart, benevolent the good it bestows. Goodness in words is
trustworthiness,
8.3 goodness in government is order; goodness in work is ability,
goodness in action is timeliness.
8.4 But only by non-contention is there nothing extreme.
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9.1 To keep on filling is not as good as stopping.
9.2 Calculated sharpness cannot be kept for long.
9.3 Though gold and jewels fill their house, no one can keep
them.
9.4 When the rich upper classes are haughty, their legacy indicts
them.
9.5 When one' work is accomplished honorably, to retire is the
Way of heaven.
#
10.1 Carrying vitality and consciousness, embracing them as one,
can you keep from parting?
10.2 Concentrating energy, making it supple, can you be like an
infant?
10.3 Purifying hidden perception, can you make it flawless?
10.4 Loving the people, governing the nation, can you be
uncontrived?
10.5 As the gate of heaven opens and closes, can you be
impassive?
10.6 As understanding reaches everywhere, can you be innocent?
10.7 Producing and developing, producing without possessing,
growing without domineering: this is called mysterious power.
#
11.1 Thirty spokes join at a hub: their use for the cart is where
they are not.
11.2 When the potter's wheel makes a pot, the use of the pot is
precisely where there is nothing.
11.3 When you open the doors and windows for a room, it is where
there is nothing that they are useful to the room.
11.4 Therefore being is for benefit, nonbeing is for usefulness.
#
12.1 Colors blind people's eyes; sounds deafen their ears;
flavors spoil people's palates,
12.2 the chase and the hunt craze people's minds; goods hard to
obtain make people's actions harmful.
12.3 Therefore sages work for the middle and not the eyes,
leaving the latter and taking the former.
#
13.1 Favor and disgrace seem alarming; high status greatly
afflicts your person.
13.2 What are favor and disgrace? Favor is the lower: get it and
you're surprised, lose it and you're startled. This means favor
and disgrace are alarming.
13.3 Why does high status greatly afflict your person? The reason
we have a lot of trouble is that we have selves. If we had no
selves what troubles would we have?
13.4 Therefore those who embody nobility to act for the sake of
the world seem to be able to draw the world to them, while those
who embody love to act for the sake of the world seem to be
worthy of the trust of the world.
#
14.1 What you don't see when you look is called the unobtrusive.
What you don't hear when you listen is called the rarefied. What
you don't get when you grasp is called the subtle.
14.2 These three cannot be completely fathomed, so they merge
into one;
14.3 above is not bright, below is not dark. Continuous,
unnameable, it returns again to nothing.
14.4 This is called the stateless state, the image of no thing;
this is called mental abstraction. When you face it you do not
see its head, and when you follow it you do not see its back.
14.5 Hold to the ancient Way so as to direct present existence:
only when you know the ancient can this be called the basic cycle
of the Way.
#
15.1 Skilled warriors of old were subtle, mysteriously powerful,
so deep they were unknowable.
15.2 Just because they are unknowable, I will try to describe
them. Their wariness was as that of one crossing a river in
winter, their caution was as that of one in fear of all around;
their gravity was as that of a guest,
15.3 their relaxation was as that of ice at the melting point.
Simple as uncarved wood, open as valleys, they were as
inscrutable as murky water.
15.4 Who can, in turbidity, use the gradual clarification of
stillness? Who can, long at rest, use the gradual enlivening of
movement?
15.5 Those who preserve this Way do not want fullness. Just
because of not wanting fullness, it is possible to use to the
full and not make anew.
#
16.1 Attain the climax of emptiness, preserve the utmost quiet:
16.2 as myriad things act in concert, I thereby observe the
return. Things flourish, then each returns to its root.
16.3 Returning to the root is called stillness; stillness is
called return to Life, return to Life is called the constant;
knowing the constant is called enlightenment. Acts at random, in
ignorance of the constant, bode ill.
16.4 Knowing the constant gives perspective; this perspective is
impartial. Impartiality is the highest nobility; the highest
nobility is divine, and the divine is the Way.
16.5 This Way is everlasting, not endangered by physical death.
#
17.1 Very great leaders in their domains are only known to exist.
Those next best are loved and praised. The lesser are feared and
despised.
17.2 Therefore when faith is insufficient and there is disbelief,
17.3 it is from the high value placed on words. Works are
accomplished, tasks are completed, and ordinary folk all say they
are acting spontaneously.
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18.1 When the Great Way is deserted, then there is humanitarian
duty.
18.2 When intelligence comes forth, there is great fabrication.
18.3 When relations are discordant, there is family love.
18.4 When the national polity is benighted and confused, then
there are loyal ministers.
#
19.1 Eliminate sagacity, abandon knowledge, and the people will
benefit a hundredfold.
19.2 Eliminate humanitarianism, abandon duty, and the people
return to familial love.
19.3 Eliminate craft, abandon profit, and theft will no longer
exist.
19.4 These three become insufficient when used for embellishment
causing there to be attachments.
19.5 See the basic, embrace the unspoiled, lessen selfishness,
diminish desire.
#
20.1 Detach from learning and you have no worries. How far apart
are yes and yeah? How far apart are good and bad?
20.2 The things people fear cannot but be feared. Wild indeed the
uncentered!
20.3 Most people celebrate as if they were barbecuing a
slaughtered cow, or taking in the springtime vistas; I alone am
aloof, showing no sign, like an infant that doesn't yet smile,
riding buoyantly as if with nowhere to go.
20.4 Most people have too much; I alone seem to be missing
something. Mine is indeed the mind of an ignoramus in its
unadulterated simplicity.
20.5 Ordinary people try to shine; I alone seem to be dark.
Ordinary people try to be on the alert; I alone am unobtrusive,
calm as the ocean depths, buoyant as if anchored nowhere.
20.6 Most people have ways and means; I alone am unsophisticated
and simple. I alone am different from people in that I value
seeking food from the mother.
#
21.1 For the countenance of great virtue, only the Way is to be
followed.
21.2 As a thing, the Way is abstract and elusive; elusive and
abstract, there are images in it; abstract and elusive, there is
something there. Recondite, hidden, it has vitality therein: that
vitality is very real; it has truth therein.
21.3 From ancient times to now, its name is the undeparting;
thereby are seen all beauties.
21.4 How do I know all beauties are thus? By this.
#
22.1 Be tactful and you remain whole; bend and you remain
straight. The hollow is filled, the old is renewed. Economy is
gain, excess is confusion..
22.2 Therefore sages embrace unity as model for the world.
22.3 Not seeing themselves, they are therefore clear. Not
asserting themselves, they are therefore outstanding. Not
congratulating themselves, they are therefore meritorious. Not
taking pride in themselves, they last long.
22.4 It is just because they do not contend that no one in the
world can contend with them.
22.5 Is it empty talk, the old saying that tact keeps you whole?
When truthfulness is complete, it still resorts to this.
#
23.1 To speak rarely is natural. That is why a gusty wind doesn't
last the morning, a downpour of rain doesn't last the day.
23.2 Who does this? Heaven and earth. If heaven and earth cannot
go on forever, how much less can human beings!
23.3 Therefore those who follow the Way assimilate to the Way;
the virtuous assimilate to virtue, those who have lost assimilate
to loss.
23.4 Those who assimilate to the Way are happy to gain it, those
who assimilate to virtue too are happy to gain it, and those who
assimilate to loss are also happy to gain it.
23.5 When trust is insufficient, there is distrust.
#
24.1 Those on tiptoe don't stand up, those who take long strides
don't walk;
24.2 those who see themselves are not perceptive, those who
assert themselves are not illustrious;
24.3 those who glorify themselves have no merit, those who are
proud of themselves do not last.
24.4 On the Way, these are called overconsumption and excess
activity. Some people disdain them, so those with the Way
abstain.
#
25.1 Something undifferentiated was born before heaven and earth;
still and silent, standing alone and unchanging, going through
cycles unending, able to be mother to the world.
25.2 I do not know its name; I label it the Way. Imposing on it a
name, I call it Great.
25.3 Greatness means it goes; going means reaching afar; reaching
afar means return.
25.4 Therefore the Way is great, heaven is great, earth is great,
and kingship is also great. Among domains are four greats, of
which kingship is one.
25.5 Humanity emulates earth, earth emulates heaven, heaven
emulates the Way, the Way emulates nature.
#
26.1 Gravity is the root of lightness; calm is the master of
excitement.
26.2 Thereby do exemplary people travel all day without leaving
their equipment. Though they have a look of prosperity, their
resting place is transcendent.
26.3 What can be done about heads of state who take the world
lightly in their own self-interest?
26.4 Lack of gravity loses servants of state; insanity loses
heads of state.
#
27.1 Good works are trackless, good words are flawless, good
planning isn't calculating.
27.2 What is well closed has no bolt locking it, but cannot be
opened. What is well bound has no rope confining it, but cannot
be untied.
27.3 Therefore sages always consider it good to save people, so
that there are no wasted humans; they always consider it good to
save beings, so that there are no wasted beings.
27.4 So good people are teachers of people who are not good.
People who are not good are students of people who are good.
27.5 Those who do not honor teachers or care for students are
greatly deluded, even in knowledgeable. This is called an
essential subtlety.
#
28.1 Know the male, keep to the female; be humble toward the
world. Be humble toward the world, and eternal power never
leaves, returning again to innocence.
28.2 Knowing the white, keep the black; be an exemplar for the
world. Be an exemplar for the world, and eternal power never goes
awry, returning again to infinity.
28.3 Knowing thee glorious, keep the ignominious; be open to the
world. Be open to the world, and eternal power suffices,
returning again to simplicity.
28.4 Simplicity is lost to make instruments, which sages employ
as functionaries. Therefore the great fashioner does no
splitting.
#
29.1 Should you want to take the world, and contrive to do so, I
see you won't manage to finish.
29.2 The most sublime instrument in the world cannot be
contrived. Those who contrive spoil it; those who cling lose it.
29.3 So creatures sometimes go and sometimes follow, sometimes
puff and sometimes blow, are sometimes strong and sometimes weak,
begin sometime and end sometime;
29.4 Therefore sages remove extremes, remove extravagance, remove
arrogance.
#
30.1 Those who assist human leaders with the Way do not coerce
the world with weapons, for these things are apt to backfire.
30.2 Brambles grow where an army has been; there are always bad
years after a war.
30.3 Therefore the good are effective, that is all; they do not
presume to grab power thereby:
30.4 they are effective but not conceited, effective but not
proud, effective but not arrogant. They are effective when they
have to be, effective but not coercive.
30.5 If you peak in strength, you then age; this, it is said, is
unguided. The unguided soon come to an end.
#
31.1 Fine weapons are instruments of ill omen: people may despise
them, so those with the Way do not dwell with them.
31.2 Therefore the place of honor for the cultured is on the
left, while the honored place for the martialist is on the right.
31.3 Weapon, being instruments of ill omen, are not the tools of
the cultured, who use them only when unavoidable.
31.4 They consider it best to be aloof; they win without
beautifying it. Those who beautify it enjoy killing people. Those
who enjoy killing cannot get their will of the world.
31.5 The left is favored for auspicious things, the right for
things of ill omen: so the subordinate general is on the left,
the top general on the right. That means when you are in
ascendancy of power you handle it as you would a mourning.
31.6 When you have killed many people, you weep for them in
sorrow. When you win a war, you celebrate by mourning.
#
32.1 The Way is eternally nameless, Though simplicity is small,
the world cannot subordinate it.
32.2 If lords and monarchs can keep to it, all beings will
naturally resort to them.
32.3 Heaven and earth combine, thus showering sweet dew. No
humans command it; it is even by nature.
32.4 Start fashioning, and there are names; once names also
exist, you should know when to stop. By knowing when to stop, you
are not endangered.
32.5 The Way is to the world as rivers and oceans to valley
streams.
#
33.1 Those who know others are wise; those who know themselves
are enlightened.
33.2 Those who overcome others are powerful; those who overcome
themselves are strong.
33.3 Those who are contented are rich; those who act strongly
have will.
33.4 Those who do not lose their place endure; those who die
without perishing live long.
#
34.1 The Great Way is universal; it can apply to the left or the
right.
34.2 All beings depend on it for life, and it does not refuse.
Its accomplishments fulfilled, it does not dwell on them. It
lovingly nurtures all beings, but does not act as their ruler.
34.3 As it has no desire, it can be called small.
34.4 All beings take to it, yet it does not act as their ruler,
it can be called great.
34.5 Therefore sages never contrive greatness; that is why they
can become so great.
#
35.1 When holding the Great Image, the world goes on and on
without harm, peaceful, even, tranquil.
35.2 When there is music and dining, passing travelers stop;
35.3 but the issue of the Way is so plain as to be flavorless.
When you look at it, it is invisible; when you listen to it, it
is inaudible; when you use it, it cannot be exhausted.
#
36.1 Should you want to contain something, you must first
deliberately let it expand. Should you want to weaken something,
you must deliberately let it grow strong. Should you want to
eliminate something, you must deliberately allow it to flourish.
36.2 This is called subtle illumination. Flexible and yielding
overcome adamant coerciveness.
36.3 Fish shouldn't be taken from the depths; the effective tools
of the nation shouldn't be shown to others.
#
37.1 The Way is always uncontrived, yet there's nothing it
doesn't do.
37.2 If lords and monarchs could keep to it, all beings would
evolve spontaneously. When they have evolved and want to act, I
would stabilize them with nameless simplicity.
37.3 Even nameless simplicity would not be wanted. By not
wanting, there is calm, and the world will straighten itself.
#
38.1 Higher virtue is not ingratiating; that is why it has
virtue. Lower virtue does not forget about reward; that is why it
is virtueless.
38.2 Higher virtue is uncontrived; and there is no way to
contrive it. Lower virtue is created, and there is a way to do
it.
38.3 Higher humanity is created, but there is no way to contrive
it. Higher duty is done, and there is a way to do it. Higher
courtesy is done, but no one responds to it; so there is forced
repetition.
38.4 Therefore virtue comes after the loss of the Way; humanity
comes after the loss of virtue, duty comes after the loss of
humanity, courtesy comes after the loss of duty.
38.5 Manners mean loyalty and trust are thin, and disarray's
beginning. Foresight is a flower of the Way, and the beginning of
ignorance too.
38.6 Therefore great people dwell in the thick, not the thin.
They abide in the substance, not the flower. So they leave the
latter and take the former.
#
39.1 When unity was attained of old, heaven became clear by
attaining unity, earth became steady by attaining unity, spirit
was quickened by attaining unity,
39.2 valley streams were filled by attaining unity, all beings
were born by attaining unity; and by attaining unity lords acted
rightly for the sake of the world. What brought this about was
unity:
39.3 without means of clarity, heaven may burst; without means of
steadiness, earth may erupt; without means of quickening, spirit
may be exhausted; without means of filling,
39.4 valley streams may dry up; without means of birth, all
beings may perish; without means of acting rightly, lords may
stumble.
39.5 Therefore nobility is rooted in humility, loftiness is based
on lowliness.
39.6 This is why noble people refer to themselves as alone,
lacking, and unworthy. Is this not being rooted in humility? So
there is no praise in repeated praise; they don't want to be like
jewels or like stones.
39.7 So there is no praise in repeated praise;
39.8 they don't want to be like jewels or like stones.
#
40.1 Return is the movement of the Way; yielding is the function
of the Way.
40.2 All things in the world are born of being; being is born of
nonbeing.
#
41.1 When superior people hear of the Way, they carry it out with
diligence. When middling people hear of the way, it sometimes
seems to be there, sometimes not.
41.2 When lesser people hear of the Way, they ridicule it
greatly. If they didn't laugh at it, it wouldn't be the Way.
41.3 So there are constructive sayings on this: The Way of
illumination seems dark, the Way of advancement seems retiring,
the Way of equality seems to categorize; higher virtue seems
empty, greater purity seems ignominious, broad virtue seems
insufficient,
41.4 constructive virtue seems careless. Simple honesty seems
changeable, great range has no boundaries, great vessels are
finished late; the great sound has a rarefied tone, the great
image has no form,
41.5 the Way hides in namelessness. Only the Way can enhance and
perfect.
#
42.1 The Way produces one; one produces two, two produce three,
three produce all beings:
42.2 all beings bear yin and embrace yang, with a mellowing
energy for harmony.
42.3 The things people dislike are only to be alone, lacking, and
unworthy; yet these are what monarchs call themselves.
42.4 Therefore people may gain from loss, and may lose from gain.
42.5 What others teach, I also teach. The strong cannot master
their death: I take this to be the father of teachings.
#
43.1 What is softest in the world drives what is hardest in the
world. Nonbeing enters where there is no room; that is how we
know noncontrivance enhances.
43.2 Unspoken guidance and uncontrived enhancement are reached by
few in the world.
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44.1 Which is closer, your name or your body? Which is more, your
body or your possessions? Which is more destructive, gain or
loss?
44.2 Extreme fondness means great expense, and abundant
possessions mean much loss.
44.3 If you know when you have enough, you will not be disgraced.
If you know when to stop, you will not be endangered. It is
possible thereby to live long.
#
45.1 Great completeness seems incomplete; its use is never
exhausted. Great fullness seems empty; its use is never ended.
Great directness seems restrained,
45.2 great skill seems inept, great eloquence seems inarticulate.
45.3 Movement overcomes cold, stillness overcomes heat. Clear
stillness is right for the world.
#
46.1 When the world has the Way, running horses are retired to
till the fields. When the world lacks the Way, war-horses are
bred in the countryside.
46.2 No crime is greater than discontent, no fault is greater
than possessiveness.
46.3 So the satisfaction of contentment is always enough.
#
47.1 They know the world without even going out the door. They
see the sky and its pattern without even looking out the window.
47.2 The further out it goes, the less knowledge is; therefore
sages know without going, name without seeing, complete without
striving.
#
48.1 For learning you gain daily; for the Way you lose daily.
48.2 Losing and losing, thus you reach noncontrivance; be
uncontrived, and nothing is not done. Taking the world is always
done by not making anything of it.
48.3 For when something is made of it, that is not enough to take
the world.
#
49.1 Sages have no fixed mind; they make the minds of the people
their mind:
49.2 they improve the good, and also improve those who are not
good; that virtue is good.
49.3 They make sure of the true, and they make sure of the untrue
too; that virtue is sure.
49.4 The relation of sages to the world is one of concern: they
cloud their minds for the world; all people pour into their ears
and eye, and sages render them innocent.
#
50.1 Exiting life, we enter death.
50.2 The followers of life are three out of ten, the followers of
death are three out of ten; in the lives of the people, the dying
grounds on which they are agitated are also three out of ten.
What is the reason? Because of the seriousness with which they
take life as life.
50.3 It has been said that those who maintain life well do not
meet rhinos or tigers on land and do not arm themselves in war.
50.4 There is no way for rhinos to gore them; there is no way for
tigers to claw them; there is no way for weapons to get at them.
Why? Because they have no dying ground.
#
51.1 The Way gives birth, virtue nurtures, things form, momentum
completes. Therefore all beings honor the Way and value its
Virtue. The honor of the Way and the value of Virtue are not
granted by anyone, but are always naturally so.
51.2 So the Way gives birth and nurtures, makes grow and
develops, completes and matures, builds up and breaks down.
51.3 It produces but does not possess; it acts without
presumption, it fosters growth without ruling. This is called
hidden Virtue.
#
52.1 The world has a beginning that is the mother of the world.
52.2 Once you have found the mother, thereby you know the child.
Once you know the child, you return to keep the mother, not
perishing though the body may die.
52.3 Close your eyes, shut your doors, and you do not toil all
your life.
52.4 Open your eyes, carry out your affair, and you re not saved
all your life.
52.5 Seeing the small is called clarity; keeping flexible is
called strength.
52.6 Using the shining radiance, you return again to the light,
not leaving anything to harm yourself. This is called entering
the eternal.
#
53.1 Causing one flashes of knowledge to travel the Great Way,
only its application demands care.
53.2 The Great Way is quite even, yet people prefer byways.
53.3 When courts are extremely fastidious, the fields are
seriously neglected, and the granaries are very empty;
53.4 They wear colorful clothing and carry sharp swords, eat and
drink their fill and possess more than enough. This is called the
vanity of thieves; it is not the Way.
#
54.1 Good construction does not fall down, a good embrace does
not let go; their heirs honor them unceasingly.
54.2 Cultivate it in yourself, and that virtue is real; cultivate
it in the home, and that virtue is abundant; cultivate it in the
locality, and that virtue lasts; cultivate it in the nation, and
that virtue is rich; cultivate it in the world, and that virtue
is universal.
54.3 So observe yourself by yourself, observe the home by the
home, observe the locality by the locality, observe the nation by
the nation, observe the world by the world.
54.4 How do I know the world is as it is? By this.
#
55.1 The richness of subliminal virtue is comparable to an
infant: poisonous creatures do not sting it, wild beasts do not
claw it, predatory birds do not grab it. Its tendons are
flexible, yet its grip is firm.
55.2 Even while it knows not of the mating of male and female,
its genitals get aroused; this is the epitome of vitality.
55.3 It can cry all day without choking or getting hoarse; this
is the epitome of harmony. Knowing harmony is called constancy;
knowing constancy is called clarity;
55.4 enhancing life is called propitious, the mind mastering
energy is called strong.
55.5 When beings climax in power, they wane; this is called being
unguided. The unguided die early.
#
56.1 Those who know do not say; those who say do not know.
56.2 Close the senses, shut the doors; blunt the sharpness,
resolve the complications; harmonize the light, assimilate to the
world. This is called the mysterious sameness.
56.3 It cannot be made familiar, yet cannot be estranged; it
cannot be profited, yet cannot be harmed; it cannot be valued,
yet cannot be demeaned. Therefore it is precious for the world.
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57.1 Use straightforwardness for civil government, use surprise
for military operations; use noninvolvement to take the world.
How do I know this?
57.2 The more taboos there are in the world, the poorer the
populace is;
57.3 The more crafts the people have, the more exotic things are
produced; the more laws are promulgated, the greater the number
of thieves.
57.4 Therefore the sage says, I contrive nothing, and the people
are naturally civilized; I am fond of tranquility, and the people
are naturally upright.
57.5 I have nothing to do, and the people are naturally
enriched.; I have no desire, and the people are naturally simple.
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58.1 When the government is unobtrusive, the people are pure.
When the government is invasive, the people are wanting.
58.2 Calamity is what fortune depends upon; fortune is what
calamity subdues.
58.3 Who knows how it will all end? Is there no right and wrong?
The orthodox also becomes the unorthodox, the good also becomes
ill; people's confusion is indeed long-standing.
58.4 Therefore sages are upright without causing injury, honest
without hurting, direct but not tactless, illuminated but not
flashy.
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59.1 To govern the human and serve the divine, nothing compares
to frugality.
59.2 Only frugality brings early recovery; only recovery means
buildup of power. Build up virtue, and you master all. When you
master all, no one knows your limit. When no one knows your
limit, you can maintain a nation.
59.3 When you maintain the matrix of a nation, you can last long.
59.4 This is called making the root deep and the basis firm, the
Way of long life and eternal vision.
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60.1 Governing a large nation is like cooking a little fish.
60.2 When the world is ruled by the Way, the ghosts are
powerless.
60.3 It is not that the ghosts are powerless; their spirits do
not harm the people. Not only do the spirits not harm the people;
sages do not harm the people either.
60.4 Because the two do not harm each other, their virtues
ultimately combine.
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61.1 A great nation flows downward into intercourse with the
world. The female of the world always prevails over the male by
stillness.
61.2 Because stillness is considered lower, by lowering itself to
a small nation a great nation takes a small nation; by being
lower than a great nation a small nation takes a great nation.
61.3 So one takes by lowering itself, another takes place by
being lower.
61.4 A great nation wants no more than to include and nurture
people; a small nation ants no more than to admit and serve
people.
61.5 Both get what they want, so the great should be below.
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62.1 The Way is the pivot of all things: the treasure of good
people, the safeguard of those who are not good.
62.2 Fine words can be sold, honored acts can oppress people; why
should people who are not good abandon them.
62.3 Therefore to establish an emperor and set up high officials,
one may have a great jewel and drive a team of horses, but that
is not as good as advancing calmly on this Way.
62.4 Why did the ancients value this Way? By it one can attain
without long seeking and escape from the faults one has; therefore
it is valued by the world.
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63.1 By nondoing, strive for nonstriving, savor the flavorless,
63.2 regard the small as important, make much of little, repay
enmity with virtue;
63.3 plan for difficulty when it is still easy, do the great
while it is still small.
63.4 The most difficult things in the world must be done while
they are easy; the greatest things in the world must be done when
they are small.
63.5 Because of this sages never do great things; that is why
they can fulfill their greatness.
63.6 If you agree too easily, you'll be little trusted; if you
take it easy a lot, you'll have a lot of problems.
63.7 Therefore it is through difficulty that sages end up without
problems.
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64.1 What is at rest is easy to hold. What has not shown up is
easy to take into account. What is frail is easy to break. What
is vague is easy to dispel.
64.2 Do it before it exists; govern it before there's disorder.
64.3 The most massive tree grows from a sprout; the highest
building rises from a pile of earth; a journey of a thousand miles
begins with a single step.
64.4 Those who contrive spoil it; those who cling lose it. Thus
sages contrive nothing, and so spoil nothing. They cling to
nothing, and so lose noting.
64.5 Therefore people's works are always spoiled on the verge of
completion. Be as careful of the end as of the beginning, and
nothing will be spoiled.
64.6 Thus sages want to have no wants; they do not value goods
hard to get. They learn not learning to recover from people's
excesses, thereby to assist the naturalness of all beings,
without daring to contrive.
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65.1 In ancient times, good practitioners of the Way did not use
it to enlighten the people, but to make them unsophisticated.
65.2 When people are unruly, it is because of their
sophistication. So to govern a country by cunning is to rob the
country. Not using cunning to govern a country is good fortune
for the country.
65.3 Too know these two is also a model. Being always aware of
the model is called hidden virtue.
65.4 Hidden virtue is deep, far-reaching, in contrast to ordinary
people. Only when it thus does it reach great accord.
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66.1 The reason why rivers and seas can be lords of the hundred
valleys is that they lower themselves to them all; therefore they
can be lords of the hundred valleys.
66.2 So when sages wish to rise above people, they lower
themselves to them in their speech. When they want to precede people, they go after them in status.
66.3 So when sages rule, people don't take it gravely. And when
sages are in the forefront, people don't attack them. Therefore
the world happily backs them and does not tire of them.
66.4 Because they do not contend, no one in the world can contend
with them.
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67.1 Everyone in the world says my Way is great, but it seems incomparable. It is just because it is great that it seems
incomparable: when comparisons are long established it becomes
trivialized.
67.2 I have three treasures that I keep and hold: one is mercy,
the second is frugality, the third is not presuming to be at the
head of the world.
67.3 By reason of mercy, one can be brave. By reason of
frugality, one can be broad. By not presuming to be at the head of
the world, one can make your potential last.
67.4 Now if one were bold but had no mercy, if one were broad but
were not frugal, if one went ahead without deference, one would
die.
67.5 Use mercy in war, and you win; use it in defense, and you're
secure. Those whom heaven is going to save are those it guards
with mercy.
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68.1 Good warriors do not arm, good fighters don't get mad,
68.2 good winners don't contend, good employers serve their
workers.
68.3 This is called the virtue of noncontention; this is called
mating with the supremely natural and pristine.
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69.1 There are sayings on the use of arms: "Let us not be
aggressors, but defend." "Let us not advance an inch,
but retreat a foot."
69.2 This is called carrying out no action, shaking no arm,
facing no enemy, wielding no weapon.
69.3 No calamity is greater than underestimating opponents. If
you underestimate opponents, you're close to losing your
treasure.
69.4 So when opposing armies clash, the compassionate are the
ones who win.
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70.1 My sayings are easy to recognize, and very easy to apply.
But no one in the world can recognize them, and no one can apply
them.
70.2 Sayings have a source, events have a leader. It is only
through ignorance that I am not known. Those who know me are
rare; those who emulate me a noble.
70.3 This is why sages dress plainly, and conceal what is
precious.
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71.1 To know unconsciously is best. To presume to know what you
don't is sick. Only by recognizing the sickness of sickness is it
possible to be not sick.
71.2 The sages' freedom from ills was from recognizing the
sickness of sickness, so they didn't suffer from sickness.
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72.1 When the people are not awed by authority, then great
authority is attained.
72.2 Their homes are not small to them, their livelihood not
tiresome. Just because they do not tire of it, it is not tiresome
to them.
72.3 Therefore sages know themselves but do not see themselves.
They take care of themselves but do not exalt themselves. So they
take one and leave the other.
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73.1 Boldness in daring means killing; boldness in not daring
means life.
73.2 These two may help and may harm. Who knows the reason for
what heaven dislikes? That is why even sages find it hard for
them.
73.3 The Way of heaven wins well without contest, responds well
without speech, comes of itself uncalled, relaxed yet very
resourceful.
73.4 The net of heaven is vast; the holes are large but don't let
slip.
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74.1 If people usually don't fear death, how can death be used to
scare them?
74.2 If people are made to fear death, and you catch them and
kill them when they act oddly, who would dare?
74.3 There are always executioners. And to kill in the place of
an executioner is taking the place of a master carver. Those who
take the place of a master carver rarely avoid cutting their
hands.
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75.1 When people are starving, it is because their governments
take too much, causing hem to starve.
75.2 When people are hard to control, it is because of the
contrivances of their governments, which make them hard to
control.
75.3 When people slight death, it is because of the earnestness
with which they seek life; that makes them slight death. Only
those who do not contrive to live are wise in valuing life.
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76.1 When people are born they are supple, and when they die they
are stiff..
76.2 When trees are born they are tender, and when they die they
are brittle.
76.3 Stiffness is thus a companion of death, flexibility a
companion of life.
76.4 So when an army is strong it doe not prevail. When a tree is
strong, it is cut for use.
76.5 So the stiff and strong are below, the supple and yielding
on top.
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77.1 The Way of heaven is like drawing a bow: the high is
lowered, the low is raised; excess is reduced, need is fulfilled.
77.2 The Way of heaven reduces excess and fills need, but the way
of humans is not so: they strip the needy to serve those who have
too much.
77.3 -
77.4 -
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78.1 Nothing in the world is more flexible and yielding than
water. Yet when it attacks the firm and the strong, none can
withstand it, because they have no way to change it.
78.2 So the flexible overcomes the adamant, the yielding overcome
the forceful. Everyone knows this, but no one can do it.
78.3 This is why the sages say those who can take on the disgrace
of nations are leaders of lands; and those who can take on the
misfortune of nations are rulers of the world. True sayings seem
paradoxical.
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79.1 When you harmonize bitter enemies, yet resentment is sure to
linger, how can this be called good?
79.2 Therefore sages keep their faith and do not pressure others.
79.3 So the virtuous see to their promises, while the virtueless
look after precedents.
79.4 The Way of heaven is impersonal; it is always with good
people.
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80.1 A small state has few people. It has the people keep arms
but not use them. It has them regard death gravely and not go on
distant campaigns.
80.2 Even if they have vehicles, they have nowhere to drive them.
Even if they have weapons, they have nowhere to use them.
80.3 It has the people go back to simple techniques, relish their
food, like their clothes, be comfortable in their ways, and enjoy
their work.
80.4 Neighboring states may be so close they can hear each
other's dogs and roosters, but they make it o that the people
have never gone back and forth.
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81.1 True words are not beautiful, beautiful words are not true.
81.2 The good are not argumentative, the argumentative are not
good.
81.3 Knowers do not generalize, generalists do not know.
81.4 Sages do not accumulate anything but give everything to
others, having more the more they give.
81.5 The Way of heaven helps and does not harm. The Way for
humans is to act without contention.