Chad Hansen

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Chad Hansen


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Average rating: 3.97 · 314 ratings · 39 reviews · 7 distinct worksSimilar authors
Tao Te Ching  on the Art of...

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4.29 avg rating — 185,887 ratings — published -350 — 3255 editions
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The Complete Idiot's Guide ...

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3.79 avg rating — 111 ratings — published 2002 — 8 editions
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A Daoist Theory of Chinese ...

4.32 avg rating — 41 ratings — published 1992 — 4 editions
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Tao Te Ching: The Art of Ha...

3.53 avg rating — 34 ratings3 editions
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Language and Logic in Ancie...

3.60 avg rating — 5 ratings — published 1983 — 3 editions
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Western And Chinese Philosophy

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2005
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A New Approach to Logic in ...

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“A parallel comparison helps to capture the similarities between existentialism (especially Nietzsche's) and Daoism (especially Zhuangzi's). Both discover the practical pointlessness of universal or absolute meaning (purpose). Nietzsche, from his perspective as a disappointed Christian yearning for absolute, transcendent, dependence on God, experiences this awareness with existentialist angst, a sensation of looking off a cliff into a bottomless abyss. The angst is caused by the vertigo impulse, the fear we will jump or drop off our perch into that nothingness. Zhuangzi, from his Daoist sense of the constraint of conventional authority, does not think of any cliff as a reference point. If the abyss is bottomless, then there is no such thing as falling. The cliff and Zhuangzi are both floating free. Leaving the cliff and entering the abyss is weightlessness―free flight―not falling. From his relativistic perspective, the cliff is floating away. Zhuangzi's reaction is not "Oh no!" but "Whee!”
Chad Hansen, A Daoist Theory of Chinese Thought: A Philosophical Interpretation



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