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Baopuzi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Taoist text by Ge Hong

Part ofa series on
Taoism
Tao
Baopuzi
Traditional Chinese抱樸子
Simplified Chinese抱朴子
Literal meaning[Book of the] Master [Who] Embraces Simplicity
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinbàopǔzǐ
Wade–GilesPao-p'u-tzu
IPA[pâʊ.pʰù.tsì]
Middle Chinese
Middle Chinese/bɑuX.pʰˠʌk̚.t͡sɨX/
Laojun rushan fu老君入山符 "LordLao's amulet for entering mountains" fromBaopuzi Inner Chapter 17

Baopuzi (simplified Chinese:抱朴子;traditional Chinese:抱樸子) is a literary work written byGe Hong (AD 283–343), (Chinese:葛洪;Wade–Giles:Ko Hung), a scholar during the turbulentJin dynasty.

Baopuzi is divided into two main sections, the esotericNeipian (Chinese:內篇,;lit. 'Inner Chapters') and the section intended for the public to understand:Waipian (Chinese:外篇;lit. ''Outer Chapters''). TheTaoist Inner Chapters discuss topics such as techniques to achieve"hsien" (Chinese:;lit. 'immortality', 'transcendence'),Chinese alchemy, elixirs, and demonology. TheConfucian Outer Chapters discussChinese literature,Legalism, politics, and society.

Title

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Theeponymous titleBaopuzi derives from Ge Hong'shao (), thehao being a type of sobriquet or pseudonym. Baopuzi literally means "The Master Who Embraces Simplicity;"[1] compounded from the wordsbao () meaning "embrace; hug; carry; hold in both arms; cherish";pu () meaning "uncarved wood", also being aTaoist metaphor for a "person's original nature; simple; plain"; and,zi () meaning "child; offspring; master (title of respect)".Baopu (Pao-p'u; literally:"Simplex"), is a classical allusion to theTao Te Ching (19):

見素抱樸;少私寡欲。絕學無憂。
见素抱朴;少私寡欲。绝学无忧。

Xiàn sùbào pǔ; shǎo sī guǎ yù. Jué xué wú yōu.
Evince the plainness of undyed silk,embrace the simplicity of the unhewn log; lessen selfishness, diminish desires; abolish learning and you will be without worries.

— Tao Te Ching, 19. Translated byVictor Mair[2]

Ge Hong's autobiography explains his rationale for choosing hispen name Baopuzi.

洪之為人也,而騃野,性鈍口訥,形貌醜陋,而終不辯自矜飾也。冠履垢弊,衣或襤褸,而或不恥焉。俗之服用,俾而屢改,或忽廣領而大帶,或促身而修袖,或長裾曳地,或短不蔽腳。洪期於守常,不隨世變。言則率實,杜絕嘲戲,不得其人,終日默然。故邦人鹹稱之為抱朴之士。是以洪著書,因以自號焉。
I [Hong] am an unsophisticated person; dull by nature, and a stammerer. My physical frame is unpleasant to look at; and I am not competent enough to boast of myself and gloss over the defects. My hat and shoes are dirty; my clothes sometimes the worse for wear or patched; but this does not always bother me. Styles in clothing change too quickly and too often: One moment they are broad at the neck, and the belt is wide; another moment they fit tight and have big sleeves; then again they become long and sweep the ground, or short and do not cover the feet. I am an unsophisticated person, It has been my plan to preserve regularity and not to follow the whims of the world. My speech is frank and sincere; I engage in no banter. If I do not come upon the right person, I can spend the day in silence. This is the reason my neighbors call meSimplex (Pao-p'u), which name I have used as a sobriquet in my writings.[3][4]

Compare these autobiography translations:[5] "people all call me apao-p'u scholar (i.e., one who keeps his basic nature, one who is unperturbed by the desires of the world)";[6] "among the people of his district there were those who called him "The Scholar Who Embraces Simplicity"." Wu and Davis noted, "This name has been translatedOld Sober-Sides, but Dr. Wu considers that it has no satirical intent and would better be translatedSolemn-Seeming Philosopher."[7] Fabrizio Pregadio translates "Master Who Embraces Spontaneous Nature".[8]

History

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In comparison to many other Taoist texts, the origins of theBaopuzi are well documented. Ge completed the book during the era of Jianwu (建武), 317–318, whenEmperor Yuan of Jin founded the Eastern Jin dynasty. Ge Hongu subsequently revisedBaopuzi during the era of Xianhe (咸和), 326–334.

Ge Hong's autobiography (Outer Chapter 50) records writing theBaopuzi.

In my twenties I planned to compose some little things in order not to waste my time, for it seemed best to create something that would constitute the sayings of one sole thinker. This is when I outlined my philosophical writing, but it was also the moment when I became involved in armed rebellion and found myself wandering and scattered even farther afield, some of my things getting lost. Although constantly on the move, I did not abandon my brush again for a dozen or so years, so that at the age of 37 or 38 [A.D. 317-18] I found my work completed. In all, I have composedNei p'ien in 20 scrolls,Wai p'ien in 50; … [list of other writings, totaling 310 scrolls] MyNei p'ien, telling of gods and genii, prescriptions and medicines, ghosts and marvels, transformations, maintenance of life, extension of years, exorcising evils, and banishing misfortune, belongs to the Taoist school. MyWai p'ien, giving an account of success and failure in human affairs and of good and evil in public affairs, belongs to the Confucian school.[9]

Compare the more literal translation of Davis and Ch'en, "I left off writing for ten and odd years, for I was constantly on the road, until the era Chien-wu建武 (317-318 A.D.) when I got it ready."[5]

Ge's autobiography mentions his military service fighting rebels against the Jin dynasty, and successfully defending his hometown ofJurong (句容), in modernZhenjiang,Jiangsu. In 330[10]Emperor Cheng of Jin granted Ge the fief of "Marquis ofGuanzhong" with income from 200 Jurong households. Scholars believe Ge revised theBaopuzi during this period, sometime around 330[11] or 332.[7]

TheBaopuzi consists of 70pian () "chapters; books" divided between the 20 "Inner Chapters" and 50 "Outer Chapters" (which can be compared with theZhuangzi textual division).Nathan Sivin described it as "not one book but two, considerably different in theme". TheNeipian andWaipian "led entirely separate physical existences; they were not combined under a single title until a millennium after Ko's time".[12]

The (1444–1445)Ming dynastyDaozang "Taoist canon" first printed the twoBaopuzi parts together. ThisZhengtong Daozang (正統道藏), or "Taoist Canon of theZhengtong Era (1436-1450)", bibliographically categorized theBaopuzi under theTaiqing太淸 "Supreme Clarity" section for alchemical texts.Daozang editions encompass sixjuan ( "scrolls; fascicles; volumes"), three each for the Inner and Outer Chapters. Most received versions ofBaopuzi descend from this MingDaozang text.

Content

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First Page ofBaopuzi Inner Chapter 9

TheBaopuzi's Inner and Outer Chapters discuss miscellaneous topics ranging fromesotericism tosocial philosophy. The Inner Chapters discuss techniques to achievehsien, also transcribed as "xian", () "immortality; transcendence",Chinese alchemy, meditation,Daoyin exercises,Chinese herbology, demons and other spiritual creatures, andfu () "magic talismans". The Outer Chapters discussChinese philosophy,Confucianism,Legalism, government, politics, literature, scholarship, and include Ge's autobiography, which Waley called "the fullest document of this kind that early China produced".[13]

According to Ge Hong's autobiography, he divided the Inner and Outer Chapters on the distinction betweenTaoism andConfucianism. Ge philosophically described Taoism as theben () "root; trunk; origin" and Confucianism as themo () "tip; branch; end".[14] When asked, "Which has the priority, Confucianism or Taoism?" – Baopuzi replies, "Taoism is the very trunk of Confucianism, but Confucianism is only a branch of Taoism."

While theBaopuzi Inner and Outer Chapters differ in content, they share a general format with an unnamed interlocutor posing questions and Ge Hong providing answers. The conventional syntax isHuowen yue (或問曰) "Someone asked, saying" andBaopuzi da yue (抱樸子答曰) "Baopuzi answered, saying".

Inner Chapters

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The twentyNeipian "Inner Chapters" record arcane techniques for achievinghsien "transcendence; immortality". These techniques span two types of Chinese alchemy thatTang dynasty scholars later differentiated intoneidan內丹 "internal elixir; internal alchemy" andwaidan外丹 "external elixir; external alchemy". The worddan "cinnabar; red; pellet; [Chinese medicine] pill" means "pill of immortality, orelixir of life. Ge Hong details his researches into the arts of transcendence and immortality. "Internal alchemy" concerns creating an "immortal body" within the corporeal body through both physiological methods (dietary, respiratory, martial, etc.) and mental practices (meditation, extracorporeal visualization, etc.). "External" or "laboratory alchemy" concerns compounding elixirs (esp. from minerals and metals), writingfu talismans or amulets, herbalism, and exorcism.

Lai outlines the Inner Chapters subjects:

(1) proofs of theper se existence of immortals and transcendent states of immortality of the body; (2) stipulation of the accessibility to the perfect state of long life to everyone, irrespective of one's social status but dependent on whether one could study deeply and strenuously cultivate the necessary esoteric methods; (3) elaboration of diverse esoteric techniques leading one to become ahsien-immortal; and (4) descriptions and criticism of the diverse contemporary Taoist discourses and sects.[15]

Several chapters have specific themes. Chapters 4, 8, 11, and 16 describewaidan "external alchemy". Inner Chapter 18 details meditation practices. In Chapter 19, Ge Hong praises his master Zheng Yin鄭隱 (c. 215 – c. 302), catalogs Taoist books, and lists talismans.[16]

Table 1: TheNeipian內篇 "Inner Chapters"
NumberPinyinCharactersTranslation[17]
1Changxuan暢玄Defining the Mysterious
2Lunxian論仙About Immortals
3Duisu對俗Rejoinders to Popular Conceptions
4Jindan金丹Gold and Cinnabar [pill of immortality]
5Zhili至理The Ultimate Order
6Weizhi微旨The Meaning of "Subtle"
7Sainan塞難Countering Objections
8Shizhi釋滯Resolving Obstructions
9Daoyi道意The Meaning of "the Way"
10Mingben明本Clarifying the Basic [Confucian and Taoist differences]
11Xianyao仙藥The Medicine of Immortality
12Bianwen辨問Discerning Questions
13Jiyan極言The Ultimate Words [regarding immortality]
14Qinqiu勤求Diligently Seeking [for a teacher]
15Zaying雜應Miscellaneous Answers
16Huangbai黃白Yellow and White [gold and silver]
17Dengshe登涉Climbing [Mountains] and Crossing [Rivers]
18Dizhen地眞The Terrestrial Truth
19Xialan遐覽Broad Overview [of Taoist literature]
20Quhuo袪惑Allaying Doubts

Many scholars have praised the Inner Chapters.Joseph Needham, who called Ge Hong "the greatest alchemist in Chinese history", quoted the following passage about medicines from different biological categories.[18]

Interlocutor: Life and death are predetermined by fate and their duration is normally fixed. Life is not something any medicine can shorten or lengthen. A finger that has been cut off cannot be joined on again and expected to continue growing. Blood from a wound, though swallowed, is of no benefit. Therefore, it is most inappropriate to approve of taking such nonhuman substances as pine or thuya [cypress] to protract the brief span of life.
Ko: According to your argument, a thing is beneficial only if it belongs to the same category as that which is treated. … If we followed your suggestion and mistrusted things of a different type, we would be obliged to crush flesh and smelt bone to prepare a medicine for wounds, or to fry skin and roast hair to treat baldness. Water and soil are not of the same substance as the various plants; yet the latter rely upon them for growth. The grains are not of the same species as living men; yet living men need them in order to stay alive. Fat is not to be classed with fire, nor water with fish, yet when there is no more fat the fires dies, and when there is no more water, fish perish. (3)[19]

Needham evaluated this passage, "Admittedly there is much in thePao Phu Tzu which is wild, fanciful and superstitious, but here we have a discussion scientifically as sound as anything in Aristotle, and very much superior to anything which the contemporary occident could produce."[20]

In addition to quoting early alchemical texts, the Inner Chapters describe Ge Hong's laboratory experiments. Wu and Davis mention theBaopuzi formula for makingmosaic gold "a golden crystalline powder used as a pigment" fromCh'ih Yen赤鹽 "red crystal salt" (produced fromamethyst,calcitecrystal, andalum[21]) andHwei Chih灰汁 "limewater".

The description of one process deserves special discussion, for it evidently concerns the preparation of stannic sulfide or "mosaic gold" and is perhaps the earliest known description of the preparation of this interesting substance. Mosaic gold exists in flakes or leaflets which have the color and the luster of gold, it does not tarnish, and is used at present for bronzing radiators, gilding picture frames and similar purposes. As Ko Hung describes the process, "tin sheets, each measuring six inches square by one and two-tenths inches thick, are covered with a one-tenth inch layer of a mud-like mixture ofCh'ih Yen (Red Salt) andHwei Chih (potash-water, limewater), ten pounds of tin to every four ofCh'ih Yen." They are then heated in a sealed earthenware pot for thirty days with horse manure (probably with a smoldering fire of dried manure). "All the tin becomes ash like and interspersed with bean-like pieces which are the yellow gold." The large portion of the metallic tin is converted into some ash-like compound or possibly into the ash-like allotropic modification, gray tin. A small portion of the tin is converted into bean-sized aggregates of flaky stannic sulfide. The yield is poor, for the author says that "twenty ounces of gold are obtained from every twenty pounds of tin used."[22]

The authors add, "It seems likely that Ko Hung was personally experienced in the chemistry of tin, for the Chinese say that he was the first to maketin foil and that he made magic or spirit money out of it."

Outer Chapters

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The fiftyWaipian "Outer Chapters" are more diffuse than the Inner ones. Ge Hong diversely wrote essays on Jin dynasty issues of philosophy, morality, politics, and society. ThisBaopuzi portion details everyday problems among Han dynasty northerners who fled into southern China after the fall ofLuoyang.

Some of the Outer Chapters are thematically organized. Ge Hong wrote chapters 46, 47, and 48 to dispute three adversaries: Kuo Tai郭太 (128-169), who founded theQingtan "pure conversation" school, Ni Heng禰衡 (173-198), who was an infamously arrogant official ofTs'ao Ts'ao, andPao Ching-yen鮑敬言 (ca. 405-ca. 466), who was an early anarchist philosopher.

Table 2: TheWaipian外篇 "Outer Chapters"
NumberPinyinCharactersTranslation[23]
1Jiadun嘉遯Praising Eremitism
2Yimin逸民Rusticating People
3Xuxue勖學Encouraging Study
4Chongjiao崇敎Respecting Education
5Jundao君道The Way of the Ruler
6Chenjie臣節The Integrity of the Ministers
7Lianggui良規Good Regulations
8Shinan時難Averting Difficulties at the Right Time
9Guanli官理The Right Order among the Officials
10Wuzheng務正The Correct Use of Instruments
11Guixian貴賢Esteeming Wise People
12Renneng任能Employing the Able
13Qinshi欽士Respecting Well-Minded Subjects
14Yongxing用刑Employing Punishments
15Shenju審擧Examining Promotions
16Jiaoji交際Keeping Company
17Beique備闕Encountering Deficiencies
18Zhuocai擢才Promoting Talents
19Renming任命Employing Orders
20Mingshi名實Name and Reality
21Qingjian淸鑒The Pure Mirror
22Xingpin行品Using Official Ranks
23Misong弭訟Ending Disputes
24Jiujie酒誡Admonitions on Alcohol
25Jimiu疾謬Pointing out Faults
26Jihuo譏惑Censuring Muddleheadedness
27Cijiao刺驕Criticizing Arrogance
28Baili百里Hundred Miles
29Jieshu接疏Meeting Visitors
30Junshi鈞世Equalizing Generations
31Shengfan省煩Decreasing Vexations
32Shangbo尙博Valuing Breadth of Learning
33Hanguo漢過The Faults of Han
34Wushi吳失The Failings of Wu
35Shouji守塉Guarding Barren Land
36Anpin安貧Content with Poverty
37Renming仁明Benevolence and Brilliance
38Boyu博喻Extensive Analogies
39Guangpi廣譬Vast Examples
40Ciyi辭義Writings and Ideas
41Xunben循本Abiding by Basics
42Yingchao應嘲Responding to Ridicule
43Yupi喻蔽Clarifying Obscurities
44Baijia百家The Hundred Schools
45Wenxing文行Cultivated Behavior
46Zheng Guo正郭Correcting Guo [Tai]
47Tan Ni彈禰Accusing Ni [Heng]
48Jie Bao詰鮑Bao [Jingyan]
49Zhizhi, Qiongda, Chongyan知止, 窮達, 重言Knowing When to Stop, Obscurity and Eminence, Reduplicated Words
50Zixu自敘Autobiography

Translations

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TheBaopuzi has been translated into English, Italian, German, and Japanese. There exist more English translations of the twenty Inner Chapters than of the fifty Outer Chapters.

The Inner Chapters have several partial translations. Tenney L. Davis, professor of organic chemistry atMassachusetts Institute of Technology, collaborated on first translations of the Inner Chapters relevant to thehistory of alchemy. Wu and Davis translated chapters 4 "On the Gold Medicine" and 16 "On the Yellow and White" (i.e., gold and silver).[24] Davis and Ch'en[25] translated chapters 8 "Overcoming Obstructions" and 11 "OnHsien Medicines", and provided paraphrases or summaries of the remaining Inner Chapters. The German sinologistEugene Feifel [de] made English translations of chapters 1–3,[26] 4,[27] and 11.[28] More recently, excerpts from the Inner Chapters are quoted by Verellen[29] and Pregadio.[30]

The Inner Chapters have one complete translation by James R. Ware,[31] which also includes Ge Hong's autobiography from Outer Chapter 50.[32] Several reviewers censured the quality of Ware's translation, for instance, Kroll called it "at times misguided".[33] Huard's and Wong's[34] critical assessment of Ware was criticized in turn by Sivin.[35] "Their review, nonetheless, can only be described as perfunctory. Only the forematter and endmatter of Ware's book are evaluated, and that in a curiously cursory fashion."

Translating the fundamental Taoist wordTao ("way; path; principle") as EnglishGod is a conspicuous peculiarity of Ware'sBaopuzi version. The Introduction gives a convoluted Christian justification, first quoting J.J.L. Duyvendak's translation ofTao Te Ching 25, "Its rightful name I do not know, but I give It the sobriquetTao (= God). If a rightful name is insisted upon, I would call It Maximal."

Then, upon noticing thatTao Te Ching, verse 34, is willing to call the Something "Minimal," every schoolman would have understood that the Chinese author was talking about God, for only in God do contraries become identical! Accordingly, the present translator will always render this use of the term Tao byGod. In doing so, he keeps always in mind as the one and only definition the equation establishable fromExod. 3:13-15 andMark 12:26-27, to mention only two very clear statements. It will be recalled that in the first God says, "My name is I am, I live, I exist," while the second reads, "God is not of the dead but of the living." Therefore, God = Life or Being.[36]

Ware admitted hisGod forDao translation cannot be applied consistently.

It is clear that the wordtao appears frequently in this text not as a designation of God but of the process by which God is to be approximated or attained. In such cases I shall translate it as "the divine process." In instances where either this or "God" would be appropriate, a translator is obliged to be arbitrary. The termtao shih is rendered "processor";hsien is translated "genie" rather than "immortal".[37]

These Chinese words areTao-shih'道士 ("Taoist priest or practitioner" )and"hsien" ("immortal; transcendent".) Ho Peng-Yoke, an authority in theHistory of science and technology in China, criticized Ware's translations.

It may be true that in certain areas the concept of Tao overlaps with the definition and attributes of God, or for that matter with those of Allah, for example oneness and eternity. However, there is the danger of the analogy being pushed too far. Similarly, the reader might be warned that "Genii," as used for rendering the wordhsien, does not convey the concept of some supernatural slaves as found in the lamp and the ring of theThousand-and-One Nights. The reviewer prefers the terminology used by Tenny L. Davis, i.e.Tao left untranslated and "immortal" forhsien.[38]

Nevertheless, Ho's review concluded with praise. "Professor Ware is to be congratulated for bringing out the translation of a most difficult Chinese Taoist text in a very readable form. One cannot find another text that gives so much useful and authoritative information on alchemy and Taoism in fourth-century China."

Ge Hong wrote theBaopuzi in elegantClassical Chinese grammar and terminology, but some Inner Chapter contexts are difficult to translate. Comparing three versions of this passage listinghsien medicines illustrates the complex translation choices.

The besthsien medicine is cinnabar. Others in the order of decreasing excellence are gold, silver,ch'ih, the five jades, mica, pearl, realgar,t'ai i yü yü liang,shih chung huang tzu石中黃子 (literally yellow nucleus in stone),shih kuei石桂 (stony cinnamon), quartz,shih nao石腦,shih liu huang石硫黃 (a kind of raw sulfur), wild honey andtseng ch'ing. (11)[39]

Medicines of superior quality for immortality are: cinnabar; next comes gold, then follows silver, then the manychih, then the five kinds of jade, then mica, thenming-chu, then realgar, then brown hematite, then conglomerate masses of brown hematite, then stone cassia (?), then quartz, then paraffin, then sulphur, then wild honey, then malachite (stratified variety)[40]

At the top of the genie's pharmacopoeia stands cinnabar. Second comes gold; third, silver, fourth, excresences; fifth, the jades; sixth, mica; seventh, pearls; eighth, realgar; ninth, brown hematite; tenth, conglomerated brown hematite; eleventh, quartz; twelfth, rock crystal; thirteenth, geodes; fourteenth, sulphur; fifteenth, wild honey; and sixteenth, laminar malachite.[41]

TheBaoppuzi Outer Chapters have one partial translation into English. Jay Sailey[42] translated 21 of the 50 chapters: 1, 3, 5, 14–15, 20, 24–26, 30–34, 37, 40, 43–44, 46–47, and 50. In addition, Sailey included appendices on "Buddhism and thePao-p'u-tzu", "Biography of Ko Hung" from theJin Shu, and "Recensions" of lostBaopuzi fragments quoted in later texts.[43][33] gave a mixed review, "Although Sailey's renderings frequently obscure Ko Hung's carefully polished diction and nuance, they reliably convey the sense of the original and should be a substantial boon to Western students of medieval Chinese thought and culture."

Significance

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For centuries, traditional scholars have revered theBaopuzi as canonical Taoist scripture, but in recent years, modern scholars have reevaluated the text's veracity.

Traditional scholarship viewed theBaopuzi, especially the Inner Chapters, as a primary textual source for early Chinesewaidan "external alchemy". Wu and Davis described it as,

probably the widest known and highest regarded of the ancient Chinese treatises on alchemy. It has been preserved for us as part of the Taoist canon. It shows us the art matured by five or six centuries of practice, having its traditional heroes and an extensive literature, its technique and philosophy now clearly fixed, its objectives and pretentions established. This art the author examines in a hardheaded manner and expounds in language which is remarkably free from subterfuge.[44]

Arthur Waley praised Ge Hong's rational attitude toward alchemy.

Nowhere in Pao P'u Tzu's book do we find the hierophantic tone that pervades most writings on alchemy both in the East and in the West. He uses a certain number of secret terms, such as金公 "metal-lord" and河車 "river chariot", both of which mean lead; and河上她女 "the virgin on the river", which means mercury … But his attitude is always that of a solidly educated layman examining claims which a narrow-minded orthodoxy had dismissed with contempt.[45]

In the estimation of Ho,[38] theBaopuzi is a "more important" alchemical text thanWei Boyang's (ca. 142)Cantong qi參同契 "The Kinship of the Three". TheBaopuzi mentions aNeijing內經 "Inner Classic" by Wei Boyang, but curiously does not mention Wei'sCantong ji.

Modern scholarship has taken another look at theBaopuzi. Sivin demeans the text's significance.

The Inner Chapters are anything but the writings of a Taoist man of wisdom or organizer for his disciples or for other initiates. This book is a vast trove of commonplaces and hearsay about popular beliefs in which Ko's few incontestably Taoist texts play an essential but small part. Its goal is not to catalog, synthesize, or provide a handbook of techniques. It is rather a dialog in which Ko hurls scattershot against a skeptical anonymous interlocutor. The Inner Chapters are a one-issue book. Ko seeks to convince his questioner, and thereby his readers, that immortality is a proper object of study and is attainable – not only by the ancients but in his own time, not only by a destined few but by anyone with enough faith to undertake arduous and dangerous disciplines. The devotion that Ko calls for implies wholesale acceptance of legends, myths, tales of prodigies, magical beliefs, religious faiths – practically every belief current in the popular imagination of Ko's time and the inverse in almost every sense of what "fundamentalist Confucian" humanists considered worthy of thought (but then they were no longer setting the intellectual style).[46]

Sivin sarcastically compares Ge Hong, "an obsessed bookman and indiscriminate lore-collector", withAlan Watts. "Ko's style was rather than of a pedantic purveyor of occultism to the upper class. I can only think of him as the Alan Watts of his time." However, James Benn observes, "This judgement is perhaps not as damning as Professor Sivin intended. Certainly, one would not now go to Watts in the hope of learning much about Taoism, but a close study of his work would tell us a great deal about perceptions and presuppositions concerning Asian religions in mid-twentieth century America. Like Watts and others of his generation it is true that Ge Hong did see religion as a personal matter, and he seems to have approached it from the point of view of a fan or enthusiast more than as an initiate."[47]

Chi-Tim Lai interprets the Inner Chapters as a "new discourse" onhsien"-immortality through personal salvation and perfection, contrasting with the traditional "imperial discourse" that only the rich could afford to achieve a state ofhsien."[48] For example, histories record that bothQin Shi Huang andEmperor Wu of Han dispatched imperial naval expeditions to obtain the "elixir of immortality" from mythicalMount Penglai. "That is, an individual's self-perfection is only dependent upon ascetic, mystic, and ethical behavior. Since it is a new religious discourse supposedly open to all people, the quest for a prolonged life is no longer the preserve of the wealthy and powerful."

According to Ko Hung, thehsien-immortals who can achieve the complete avoidance of death rarely come from the social groups of worthies, emperors, or sages. Hence, he implies thathsien-immortality are distinctive "human" ideal values to be pursued and potentially achieved by anyone. In the first, in order to differentiate the ideal values ofhsien-immortal from this worldly worthies and powers, Ko Hung says, "Those who attained immortal were almost all poor and lowly. They were not men of position and power."' Second, in placing the ideal ofhsien-immortality out of the reach of imperial figures, Ko Hung rebukes emperors such as the First Emperor of the Ch'in and Emperor Han-wu-ti, who were "models" of seeking for immortality in ancient Chinese history and literature, by saying, "These two emperors had a hollow reputation for wanting immortality, but they never experienced the reality of cultivating the Tao."[49]

Ge Hong quotes his teacher Zheng Yin's explanation that poverty forcesTao-shi ("Taoist practitioners") seekinghsien techniques to engage in the difficulties and dangers of alchemy.

Then I asked further, "Why should we not eat the gold and silver which are already in existence instead of taking the trouble to make them? What are made will not be real gold and silver but just make-believes."Said Cheng Chun in reply, "The gold and silver which are found in the world are suitable for the purpose. ButTao-shih are all poor; witness the adage thatHsien are never stout andTao-shih never rich.Tao-shih usually go in groups of five or ten, counting the teacher and his disciples. Poor as they are, how can they be expected to get the necessary gold and silver? Furthermore they cannot cover the great distances to gather the gold and silver which occur in nature. The only thing left for them to do is to make the metals themselves". (16)[50]

Ware translates this adage, "There are no fat genii and no rich processors".[51]

For a wealthy person seekinghsien (transcendence), Ge Hong recommends compoundingjinyi金液 (lit. "gold liquid/fluid") "golden liquor" in ahuachi花池 (lit. "flower pond"), "a vinegar solvent" (fortified withsaltpeter[52]). This is simpler to produce than traditionaljiuding九鼎 "nine tripods" elixirs (attributed to theYellow Emperor), but more expensive – eight doses cost 400,000cash.

It is true that the nine medicines are the best ofHsien medicines. Yet the materials for their compounding are quite numerous. They are easily procurable only in large cities which have good facilities for communication, but are not to be obtained at other places. Furthermore, in the compounding of the medicines, the fires should be tended for tens of days and nights with industrious application and close adjustment, which is a great difficulty. The compounding of the Gold Fluid is much easier. There the only thing which is difficult is to get the gold. One pound in the old measure is equivalent to two in our contemporary measure. Such a quantity of gold would cost only some three hundred thousand cash. The other auxiliary materials are easy to procure. In the compounding, no fire is required. All that needs to be done is to have the mixture in aHua Ch'ih (Flower Pond) for the necessary number of days. A total expenditure of four hundred thousand cash will make an amount large enough to transform eight persons intoHsien. Just as no wine is formed by the fermentation of small quantities of rice, so small quantities of materials will not be able to interact to give the medicine. (4)[53]

Pregadio says recent studies show Ge's intent was "glorifying the religious and ritual legacy ofJiangnan江南 (the region south of the lower Yangtze River), emphasizing the superiority of certain traditions over others, and enhancing their prestige among the social elite to which Ge Hong belonged."[54] Nonetheless, Pregadio concludes,

Ge Hong's testimony deserves attention as a valuable overview of the religious traditions of Jiangnan just before the Way of the Celestial Masters (Tianshi dao) spread to that area, soon followed by theShangqing andLingbao revelations. From this point of view, theBaopuzi documents important links between the earlier and later history of Taoism, as it also does for medicine and other fields.[55]

References

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Footnotes

  1. ^Puett, Michael (2007)."Humans, Spirits, and Sages in Chinese Late Antiquity: Ge Hong's Master Who Embraces Simplicity (Baopuzi)", inExtrême-Orient, Extrême-Occident,29, pp. 95-119.
  2. ^Tr. Mair, Victor H. 1990.Tao Te Ching: The Classic Book of Integrity and the Way, by Lao Tzu; an entirely new translation based on the recently discovered Ma-wang-tui manuscripts. Bantam Books. p. 181.
  3. ^Baopuzi, "Outer Chapters (外篇), 52 Autobiography (自敘),"8
  4. ^Ware 1966, p. 10.
  5. ^abDavis & Ch'en 1941, p. 301.
  6. ^Sailey 1978, p. 251.
  7. ^abWu & Davis 1935, p. 224.
  8. ^Pregadio 2006, p. 2.
  9. ^Tr.Ware 1966, p. 17, cf.Sailey 1978, p. 264.
  10. ^Ware 1966, p. 20.
  11. ^Komjathy, Louis. 2004.Daoist Texts in Translation. p. 22.
  12. ^Sivin 1969, p. 389.
  13. ^Waley 1930, p. 10.
  14. ^Inner Chapter 10, tr.Ware 1966, p. 165.
  15. ^Lai 1998, pp. 191–2.
  16. ^Ware 1966, pp. 379–85.
  17. ^Adapted fromWare 1966.
  18. ^Needham 1956, p. 437.
  19. ^Ware 1966, pp. 61–2.
  20. ^Needham 1956, p. 439.
  21. ^Ware 1966, p. 273.
  22. ^Wu & Davis 1935, p. 232.
  23. ^Adapted fromSailey 1978.
  24. ^Wu & Davis 1935.
  25. ^Davis & Ch'en 1941.
  26. ^Feifel, Eugene (1941)."Pao-p'u tzu 抱朴子 nei-p'ien 內臂, chapters I-III".Monumenta Serica.6 (1/2).Taylor & Francis:113–211.ISSN 0179-261X.JSTOR 40725239.
  27. ^Feifel, Eugene (1944)."Pao-p'u tzu 抱朴子 nei-p'ien 內臂, chapter IV".Monumenta Serica.9.Taylor & Francis:1–33.ISSN 0179-261X.JSTOR 40726375.
  28. ^Feifel 1946.
  29. ^Verellen, Franciscus. 1999 . "The Master Who Embraces Simplicity," inSources of Chinese Tradition, edited by Wm. Theodore de Bary and Irene Bloom, pp. 399-400, Columbia University Press.
  30. ^Pregadio 2006.
  31. ^Ware 1966.
  32. ^Ware 1966, pp. 6–21.
  33. ^abKroll, Paul W. January 1982. "Reviewed Work: The Master Who Embraces Simplicity: A Study of the Philosopher Ko Hung, A. D. 283-343 by Jay Sailey"Chinese Literature: Essays, Articles, Reviews 4.1:139-140.
  34. ^Huard, Pierre and Ming Wong. 1968. "Review [of Ware 1966]",Isis 59:113-4.
  35. ^Sivin 1969, p. 388.
  36. ^Ware 1966, pp. 1–2.
  37. ^Ware 1966, p. 3.
  38. ^abHo Peng-Yoke. November 1967. "Reviewed Work: Alchemy, Medicine and Religion in the China of A.D. 320. The Nei P'ien of Ko Hung. by James R. Ware,"The Journal of Asian Studies 27.1:144-145. p. 145.
  39. ^Tr.Davis & Ch'en 1941, p. 311.
  40. ^Tr.Feifel 1946, p. 2.
  41. ^Ware 1966, p. 178.
  42. ^Sailey 1978.
  43. ^Sailey 1978, pp. 509–45.
  44. ^Wu & Davis 1935, p. 221.
  45. ^Waley 1930, p. 13.
  46. ^Sivin, Nathan. 1978."On the Word "Taoist" as a Source of Perplexity. With Special Reference to the Relations of Science and Religion in Traditional China",History of Religions 17:303-330. p. 325.
  47. ^Benn, James A. 2003. "Review [of Campany'sTo Live As Long As Heaven and Earth: Ge Hong’sTraditions of Divine Transcendents],"Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 13.1:138-140.
  48. ^Lai 1998, p. 199.
  49. ^Lai 1998, pp. 210.
  50. ^Tr.Wu & Davis 1935, pp. 260–1.
  51. ^Ware 1966, p. 268.
  52. ^Ware 1966, p. 347.
  53. ^Tr.Wu & Davis 1935, p. 251.
  54. ^Pregadio 2006, p. 215.
  55. ^Pregadio 2006, p. 217.

Further reading

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  • Hu Fuchen. 1991.Baopuzi neipian yanjiu (Research on the Inner Chapters of The Master Embracing Simplicity). Xinhua chubanshe.
  • Kominami Ichirō小南一郎, 1978. "Gishin jidai no shinsen shisō: Shinsenden o chushin toshite", in Yamada Keiji (ed.),Chugoku no kagaku to kagakusha, Kyoto daigaku jimbun kagaku kenkyujo, pp. 573–626.(in Japanese)
  • Lin Lixue. 1980.Baopuzi nei wai pian sixiang xi lun (An Analysis of the Thought of the Inner and Outer Chapters of The Master Embracing Simplicity). Xuesheng.
  • Poo, Mu-chou. 2005. "A Taste of Happiness: Contextualizing Elixirs in Baopuzi," in Roel Sterckx ed.,Of Tripod and Palate: Food, Politics and Religion in Traditional China, Palgrave, 123–139.

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