I live along the Front Range of the Rockies, near Cheyenne Mountain, and blog at Cafe Philos.
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“The Tao is the law of nature, which you can’t depart from even for one instant. Thus the mature person looks into his own heart and respects what is unseen and unheard. Nothing is more manifest than the hidden; nothing is more obvious than the unseen. Thus the mature person pays attention to what is happening in his inmost self.” Tzu-ssu (483–402 BCE)
Note: Grandson of Confucius, founder of a philosophy and doctrine of humanism…unlike the religion of Taoism.
Oh yes, so very true.
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I myself sometimes forget it, and go off looking for something less obvious. I can be silly that way. 😀
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Yep, me too, at times.
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“The Tao is the law of nature, which you can’t depart from even for one instant. Thus the mature person looks into his own heart and respects what is unseen and unheard. Nothing is more manifest than the hidden; nothing is more obvious than the unseen. Thus the mature person pays attention to what is happening in his inmost self.” Tzu-ssu (483–402 BCE)
Note: Grandson of Confucius, founder of a philosophy and doctrine of humanism…unlike the religion of Taoism.
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Thanks for the quote, Ron!
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Stunning, beautiful.
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Yes! Sometimes it’s right in front of your face.
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Indeed! But wasn’t it Hegel who said that the obvious is quite often overlooked? Ironic, that.
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