Teaching Daoism as Philosophy

Teaching Philosophy 30 (1):1-28 (2007)
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Abstract

I propose to consider chapter 1 of the famous, classic, and foundational Daoist text Dao De Jing, attributed to Laozi, in order to enable a non-expert to negotiate the subject of Daoism in a global philosophy context, and to further enhance the teaching of philosophy by introducing and emphasizing at least some of the controversies that inevitably surround interpretation of a classical set of texts and ideas. This forces students to see through simplistic dichotomies and form subtler conclusions, on their own, and I suggest that this is what the teaching of philosophy should always involve, to be considered philosophy.

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Alan David Fox
University of Delaware

Citations of this work

Much Adwu about Nothing: A Nonrealist Reading of Wang Bi’s Dao.Joseph Suk-Hwan Dowd - 2022 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 21 (2):183-195.

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