From Chamber's Dictionary of the Unexplained An ancient Chinese text, the authorship of which is traditionally attributed to the sage and philosopher Lao Tzu in the 6th century bc.
From Chamber's Dictionary of the Unexplained An ancient Chinese book thought to be some 3,000 years old. It consists of a series of 64 hexagrams (figures made up of six lines), and a text giving interpretations of these.
From The Essentials of Philosophy and Ethics
One of the great sages of CHINESE PHILOSOPHY, Chuang Chou stressed the unity of all things and dynamic interplay of opposites.
From The Essentials of Philosophy and Ethics Lao Tzu seems to have been a contemporary of CONFUCIUS (sixth to fifth century BCE), and is traditionally viewed as the author of the classic of TAOISM, the Tao Te Ching, or the ‘Classic of the Way and Its Power’.
From Bloomsbury Dictionary of Myth The Eight Immortals (Ba Xian), in Chinese Daoist myth, were a group of people who all lived mortal lives on Earth (and in some cases were historically real), who achieved immortality in different ways, and then spent eternity together, traveling to see and perform wonders.
From Britannica Concise Encyclopedia Most significant early Chinese interpreter of Daoism and the purported author of the Daoist classic that bears his name.
Study of the relative position of the planets and stars in the belief that they influence events on Earth. A strongly held belief in ancient Babylon, astrology spread to the Mediterranean world, and was widely used by the Greeks and Romans.
From The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy Chinese term for ether, air, corporeal vital energy, and the “atmosphere” of a season, person, event, or work. Ch’i can be dense/impure or limpid/pure, warm/rising/active or cool/settling/still.
The practice of putting oneself into, and remaining in, direct relation with God, the Absolute, or any unifying principle of life. Mysticism is inseparably linked with religion.
From Chamber's Dictionary of the Unexplained A Chinese system of exercise in which a series of slow, continuous movements are performed with synchronized breathing while the practitioner meditates on the flow of energy or ‘qi’ through the body.
Refers both to a Chinese system of thought and to one of the four major religions of China (with Confucianism, Buddhism, and Chinese popular religion).
From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia In Chinese religion, the supreme god of pantheistic Taoism, also known as the August Personage of Jade and Father Heaven, who watches over human actions and is the ruler of life and death.
The Chinese concept that everything is explicable in terms of two complementary but opposing principles. Yang represents heaven, and is the positive, male force.