Pondering Chinese Taoist and Arab/Persian Sufi ideas of individuality and immortality.

have some tea

“Tao is forever and he that possesses it, though his body ceases, is not destroyed.”


Before straying too far into this, pondering these ideas does not imply that I necessarily subscribe to, or believe in, the symbolic or literally stated import of all of these ideas. I do, however, find them highly interesting on a philosophical level.

There exists remarkable concordance between aspects of the Chinese esoteric tradition – in particular Taoist streams – and aspects of esoteric Islam, in particular Sufism.

Both schools of thought are concerned with the unification of opposites, mainly on a higher plane of “ascent”, as well as in daily human affairs, be they commercial, sexual, familial, or social. Both also see a general ‘fall” of mankind not so much as in a negative light, but more as a necessary and inevitable process that can be reversed.

Both are interesting systems of thought that see polarity and opposites as being important, but constantly looks for harmony, unification, and the complementarities of such opposites. Both cultivate the realization that every set of opposing things resolves itself on a different level, while seeing the importance of such opposites in their own light.

In ancient Chinese thought Phenomena are the “ten thousand things”.

Descent into the phenomenal world, for the Chinese sage, implies also a possible ascent into a “higher” world – and the very path of return to this higher world, the world of our origins, is the path of immortality.

Man, he is the individual being that emerges into the world by birth, you and I, as human beings are individuals.

The personality (from the Latin word persona – or the face) is the most outward aspect of our true individuality.

While Western Christianity is mainly concerned with “saving” the individual being after death, and the Western Atheist believes the individual being ceases at death, the Chinese sage was concerned with preventing the decay of the individual state, after death, and with preserving the most essential aspect of it. This idea is philosophically interesting to me.

Some schools of Chinese thought believe that the being of an individual man is at one with “life” (Ming) and “human nature” (Hsing) prior to his being born.

Hsing is the source from which man’s innate spiritual consciousness emerges – its very origin.

Ming is the source from which the “life-energy” (ch’i, or qi) is produced – the very “substance of life and death.”

Ming is life, and it is identified with a descending trajectory. Think of it as an animating force.

Hsing however is a human’s inner nature, and is identified with an ascending trajectory.

With Ming we have a “descent” which is involuntary – it is a “fall”.

With Hsing’s we have an “ascent”, one that is controlled, however.

Before your birth, Ming and Hsing are connected, and form what the Chinese call a “wheel of unity”.

After your birth, Ming and Hsing are separated.

Within the womb the developing human embryo moves outward and its initial environment is torn. The Chinese description of this act is “as if a man lost footing on a high mountain”.

Thus a fall occurs: “with a cry the man plunges down to earth”.
This is to say, birth itself is seen as a fall from a primordial state of unified non individuation.

It is at this point that human nature can no longer see life, and life can no longer see human nature.

Uniting human nature and life is of supreme importance in some schools of Chinese thought.
The resulting unified human entity reentering “the womb” to gestate further as an embryo – a spiritual embryo – is of supreme importance.

The Tao Te Ching states:
“The Tao gave birth to the One;
The One gave birth to the Two;
The Two gave birth to the Three;
The Three gave birth to the myriad creatures.”

The Tao is the source of Heaven – T’ian.

T’ian, while being impersonal heaven, and a non anthropomorphized conceptualization of reality’s absolute principle, is also roughly equivalent to the idea of a godhead. The proof for this follows.
That the notion of “Heaven” is essentially the closest concept to “God” one can find in early Chinese thought can be noted in early texts, and it’s parallels common to Turkic and Mongol thought. The Mongol and Turkic supreme God is etymologically related to T’ian, which also illustrates the distant relatedness of these languages and races. Even today the word for God used by modern Muslim Turks is “Tani” a cognate of the Chinese term.

Early Chinese thought did not see an anthropomorphized deity in the notion of “heaven”, but their notion was very similar to the impersonal, beyond manifestation, formless notion of “Allah” that many Sufis hold. Western Christians with a particular conception of “God” often find aspects of the Muslim God difficult to understand. Allah in Islamic thought, and in particular in Sufi thought, certainly has a personal aspect, though Sufis note that in reality people tend to worship a God of their own making, a reflection of themselves in a sense, but beyond this Allah is more of a supreme principle of being.

For the Chinese, the Tao has two aspects: a Tao of Transcendence called “wu-wei”. In the Tao Te Ching it is simply referred to as “Tao”, and a Tao of Immanence called “yu-wei” or “t’ai-chi” which is referred to as “the One.”

This is similar to the Sufi notion of the “names of Allah” emerging from an unmanifested state along two trajectories “Jalali” – transcendence and severity, and “Jamali” – immanence and mercy.

Wu-wei, the Tao of Transcendence is associated with a primal generator that sits unmoved in its generating of things, and it is not at all identical to the objects it generates.

But t’ai-chi, the One and the Tao of Immanence is chaos itself, and out of chaos is born “the Two” principles which are yin, by quiescence and yang, by movement. ”

The emergence of the cosmos with its myriad phenomena and creatures stems directly from t’ai-chi, yin and yang.

The Chinese sage sought, through alchemy, to reverse this process of generation and move backwards – from myriad creatures and spirits to a primal state of simplicity – which was t’ai-chi itself.

At that point once has the potential to stand before the Tao of Transcendence – which is absolute – this potency can be clarified, the process of generation thus reversed and a sort of “immortality” of the human being as an individual may be attained.

The myriad things returning lead to the Three,
The Three to the Two,
The Two to the One,
The One to the Tao of Transcendence.[xix]


Alchemy is the process, to the Chinese sage, of refining, through physical chemical operations and corresponding subtle and spiritual operations on the individual man, certain elements of his being as a Microcosm – a miniature universe whose elements have correspondences with elements of the larger macrocosm universe around us, of refining these elements into their macrocosmic elements.

The Sufis were also concerned with alchemy, not so much physical alchemy but using the metaphors of alchemy as specific psychological operations – or so they say.

However, like the Taoists, many Sufis were operative alchemists, as well as being involved in other natural scientists. Several renown early opticians, physicists, and astronomers, were Sufis. The practical aspect of natural philosophy/natural science were often practical supports to inward operations.

Interested English language readers are referred to the works on Hermetic Alchemy of Titus Burckhardt and Julius Evola alike, and to Rene Guenon’s The Great Triad (which also contains a fascinating early description of the Chinese Triads) – references to other works to consult for an account of these processes in Western philosophic thought, are also available.

_EOF

5 Comment

  1. I have not thought much about Chinese spirituality, even though it is technically “my” culture. For most Chinese, religion simply is not a big part of their lives. Spirituality was something infused into the older generation — or maybe it is something that the Chinese simply turn to when they get older as a rite of passage. My grandparents practiced tai chi regularly.

    I was first exposed to the Tao Te Ching (道德经) when I was 7 or 8. They teach it to very small children the way they teach the bible to children in the west. However, it is not something that consumes a person’s thoughts, not a systematic, dogmatic text which must be adhered strictly.

    Tian, by the way, most literally means “sky” rather than “heaven.” To get “heaven” you have to add the word for a large hall or room — tian tang (天堂).

    By the way, if you have not yet read Dune, you simply must.

  2. Dune used to be like a personal bible of mine, I strongly identified with Paul.

    Thank you for the correction on Tian, by the way. This makes more sense in a way, because to the Mongols Tengri is a sky God, if I recall correctly.
    When I lived in Washington DC I knew an older Chinese gentleman. He strongly indicated to me that prior to Mao his country had a more vibrant daily sense of spirituality. He told me that there were still practicing Taoist alchemists even, of the old ancient kind, who mostly fled to the hills or to Taiwan after the communist takeover, their generation that died of being the last of what was until then still a living tradition.

    I lost touch with him, and many other interesting people, when I left DC. I should return and check up on things.

  3. mohamedpameen says:

    This is a complicated topic for laymen. Most probably you have read a lot on Ibn-ul-Arabi and go along with his philosophy. Either the concept of Unity of Being or the Idea of Apparenticism. You may say the difference is only in form but not in substance. You may mix up the substance and accident. But many Muslim Sufis do not agree with that contention. Existence is common both in God and in the universe and this has led Hindu mystics to conclude that God means the Universe. But the Ultimate Reality is still far away. As every human has a soul, the Universe has a soul, it is like the relation that the embryo has with its mother when both are mixed up with each other. God knew best, I am incapable of arguing on that.

    Some religious philosophers think there is unity between God and His creations, but in Islam most philosophers like Shah Waliyullah assert that, that Unity is not real. They say that human intellect can reach what they call the universal soul( may be it is termed Nirvana, not very sure) but it can not move a step further and so we say God is incomparable and unfathomable. God is not the Universe, the Ultimate reality is still very, very far away. However the Quran says, God is closer to you than your jugular vein.

    When a great Emanation takes place ( Example Birth of Jesus) people came under the over weaning presumption that Jesus is the Incarnation of God Himself which was a great ignorance and folly according to islam. People took the shadow of reality as Reality itself.

  4. mohamedpameen says:

    Mysticism or Tasawwuf deals with the inner aspect of religion. It aims at getting enlightenment which can be attained by means of worship and obedience to God Almighty( this means strict adherence to a certain way of life)

    It s ultimate object is GOODNESS which is the essense and kernel of the teachings of Islam( as well other religions I would say) The real aim in life should be following of Shariah as a way of life.

    There is absolutely no denying the fact that all sufis are men of great learning, vision and tastes

    William Chittick’s following statement is very true “They were usually deeply learned in both jurisprudence and theology, but they considered these the groundwork for the real task of becoming fully human.”

    But his next assertion, quote
    “Those who asked questions about the meaning of life or felt the call of love for God did not seek guidance from jurists or theologians. Instead, they turned to teachers experienced in matters of the spirit. These teachers were called by a variety of names, “Sufi” being one of many.”

    This made me get confused and interpret that students of Islam turned to Sufis rather than jurists and theologians seeking guidance.

    Ideas that I have stated I got mostly from reading Shah Waliyullah ( I consider him as a great sufi of 18th century) and are the ideas of a layman.

    Some readers seem to have read much more and you seem to possess greater knowledge on the subject

    You have every right to hold on to either views. Either the concept of Unity of Being or the Idea of Apparenticism. You may say the difference is only in form but not in substance. God knew best, I am incapable of arguing on that.

  5. Sidi Mohamed, thank you bhai for the illuminating response

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.