Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - Excerpt from the debate on the part of carefree travel. What thoughts did Zhuangzi mainly elaborate if he resisted the six qi with the meaning of heaven and earth?

Excerpt from the debate on the part of carefree travel. What thoughts did Zhuangzi mainly elaborate if he resisted the six qi with the meaning of heaven and earth?

Zhuangzi-wandering around. The context is: the husband benefits from the righteousness of heaven and earth, but resists the debate of six qi. If he swims endlessly, he will be punished! Therefore, to a person who has no one, God is useless, and saints are nameless.

The vernacular means: as for following the laws of all things in the universe, grasping the changes of "six qi" (referring to Yin, Yang, wind, rain, Yin and Ming) and roaming in the endless realm, what does he rely on? Therefore, the "supreme person" with noble moral cultivation can reach the realm of no self, the "saint" with completely detached spiritual world has no fame and career in his heart, and the "saint" with perfect ideological cultivation never pursues fame and status.

Zhuangzi raised the profound question of man's absolute freedom. But in his view, the only way to achieve this absolute freedom is to cancel life itself and return to nothingness, because the existence of physical life is also a restriction on life freedom. Zhuangzi Thought is also one of the sources of the great proposition of "Harmony between Man and Nature" in China's traditional philosophy.