PDF Daoism Explained From the Dream of the Butterfly to the Fishnet Allegory Ideas Explained Book 1 Audible Audio Edition HansGeorg Moeller Simon Barber University Press Audiobooks Books

By Antonio Daniels on Monday, June 3, 2019

PDF Daoism Explained From the Dream of the Butterfly to the Fishnet Allegory Ideas Explained Book 1 Audible Audio Edition HansGeorg Moeller Simon Barber University Press Audiobooks Books



Download As PDF : Daoism Explained From the Dream of the Butterfly to the Fishnet Allegory Ideas Explained Book 1 Audible Audio Edition HansGeorg Moeller Simon Barber University Press Audiobooks Books

Download PDF Daoism Explained From the Dream of the Butterfly to the Fishnet Allegory Ideas Explained Book 1 Audible Audio Edition HansGeorg Moeller Simon Barber University Press Audiobooks Books

Hans-Georg Moeller has achieved the perfect blend with Daoism Explained. It is both a fascinating introduction on Daoist thought as well as an original and insightful contribution to Eastern philosophy. This book will take the place of The Tao of Pooh by Hoff. Like that book, Doaism Explained offers a comprehensive presentation of Daoist philosophy that is interesting and easy to follow.

The study sheds new light on many Doaist allegories by showing how modern translations often concealed the wit and humor of the Chinese original or imposed alien philosophical frameworks on them. It attempts to take away the metaphysical and Christian disguises with which Daoist philosophy has been obscured by Western interpretations in the past 100 years.

The book is published by Open Court. The audiobook will be published by University Press Audiobooks.


PDF Daoism Explained From the Dream of the Butterfly to the Fishnet Allegory Ideas Explained Book 1 Audible Audio Edition HansGeorg Moeller Simon Barber University Press Audiobooks Books


"Found Jesus."

Product details

  • Audible Audiobook
  • Listening Length 8 hours and 2 minutes
  • Program Type Audiobook
  • Version Unabridged
  • Publisher University Press Audiobooks
  • Audible.com Release Date March 28, 2019
  • Language English, English
  • ASIN B07Q464YTD

Read Daoism Explained From the Dream of the Butterfly to the Fishnet Allegory Ideas Explained Book 1 Audible Audio Edition HansGeorg Moeller Simon Barber University Press Audiobooks Books

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Daoism Explained From the Dream of the Butterfly to the Fishnet Allegory Ideas Explained Book 1 Audible Audio Edition HansGeorg Moeller Simon Barber University Press Audiobooks Books Reviews :


Daoism Explained From the Dream of the Butterfly to the Fishnet Allegory Ideas Explained Book 1 Audible Audio Edition HansGeorg Moeller Simon Barber University Press Audiobooks Books Reviews


  • This is truly one of the finest books on Daoism. Professor Moeller's ability to illuminate many difficult daoist concepts in a clear and concise manner is very rare. Please take the time to read excerpts from the book. The excerpt The Wheel - An image of Dao is a brilliant examination of Chapter 11 of the Tao Te Ching. Also, the chapters "The State", and "Presence and Nonpresence" (usually translated as being and non-being) are excellent. "Daoism Explained" is not a rehash of ideas taken from previous books on the subject. It is a unique and intelligent examination of Daoism.
  • Prof Moeller understands Daoism .His clear concepts are fundamental to understand Chinese philosophy for Western people.

    Looking forward to reading more of his book.

    Harmony
  • Found Jesus.
  • My title says it all. Moeller gets at the philosophical core of Daoism and offers a comprehensive and, for me, truly eye-opening analysis of the tradition and some of its major statements, enigmas, and figures.
  • It is a very accurate, readable book, and does great service in clarifying concepts previously and otherwise mis-interpreted.
  • This is a great book for readers of Daoist works- mainly the Daodejing (Laozi), Liezi, and Zhuangzi. It covers the fundamentals of Daoism succinctly without glossing over important concepts. After reading this book anyone should be able to read the aforementioned works with a greater degree of comprehension. As the previous reviewer stated, this is indeed one of the best books on Daoism. However, it also contains one of the most backwards economic theories ever put on paper. Fortunately, the author limits his hopelessly surreal ideas of the latter topic to only the last few pages. In his attempt to explain society as a self-perpetuating force that runs itself without human action, he makes statements that are so blatantly silly that it almost seems as if he added them in just to see if readers were really paying attention. In his own words, "the functioning of the modern economy has to be explained largely in terms of the flow of money and stocks- and no longer as a causal result of human enterprise." So somehow if human enterprise were to suddenly cease, the flow of money and stocks will just keep going- right? This notion seems too ridiculous to entertain, but the author continues by stating that "mass communication has quite obviously detached itself from actual human performances and 'autonomized' itself as a self-generating 'hypertext.'" It's quite interesting to know that this author feels as if mass communication on planet Earth will continue unabated if all the humans got on spaceships and left. The whole idea that economies and politics and mass communication don't need people sounds like something that would happen if robots took over the planet Terminator-style. If that's what the author is referring to, then I suppose I am wrong. But if the author thinks the "Dao" will handle monetary exchanges just fine without us around, then he needs to put the bong down for a while. In all, this book is great and would have fully earned its five stars if it weren't for this little delusional twist at the end.
  • Book has quite a bit of notes in it that the previous owner took, which sometimes mark through the text. Fortunately these were done in pencil, but I have to erase these marks to read the book. The description by the merchant didn't include any indication that the markings were this bad...
  • A typical work of the many that arrogant scholars, without any meditative practice and experience are producing on Lao Tzu and Chuang Tzu. It is pitiful and ironic that ego-inflated western scholars, most of them from "reputed" universities and therefore totally committed to academic correctedness (which is totally anti-Tao) attempt to interpret works that were written in a hightened state of conscioussness by Tao-men that had turned their backs to the sterile intellectuality of the status quo of their days.
    Don't waste your money on books produced by the new "Taoist scholarship" mafia, that come up with fanciful rationalistic theories only to impress their collegues and justify their salaries.