
Synopsis
Chuang Tzu: Mystic, Moralist, and Social Reformer presents the philosophical imagination of Zhuangzi through paradox, fable, dialogue, and comic inversion. Its world is one of dreaming butterflies, useless trees, skilled artisans, and disputatious sages, all arranged to unsettle rigid moralism and political ambition. In the context of early Chinese thought, it stands beside Confucian and Mohist traditions as a radical Daoist meditation on spontaneity, freedom, and the limits of language. Zhuangzi, traditionally placed in the fourth century BCE during the Warring States period, wrote amid social fragmentation, bureaucratic consolidation, and intense philosophical debate. His suspicion of office, reputation, and coercive reform reflects an age in which thinkers were pressed into service by rulers. Against this background, his advocacy of wandering, non-contention, and alignment with the Dao becomes both spiritual discipline and social critique. This book is recommended to readers interested in philosophy, comparative religion, classical literature, or political skepticism. It rewards slow reading: its jokes are arguments, its fantasies are ethical experiments, and its mysticism is inseparable from humane intelligence.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Good Press
- ISBN: 9788027286607
- Dimensions: 229 x 152 x 12 mm
- Weight: 312g
- Languages: English