Home >> Society >> Religion and Spirituality >> Taoism >> Texts


  Chuang Tzu
  I Ching
  Tao Te Ching


Inside language, text is a wide term for something that contains words to express something.

Within linguistics a text is a communicative work, fulfilling a sevener organic & a trinity regulatory lesson of textuality. Each speech & written language, or even language inside more media may be seen as a text inside linguistics.

Within literary theory a text is the object being exposed, whether it be the novel, a poem, a film, an advertisement, or anything else by using the linguistic component. A wide utilise of a term derives from either the rise of semiotics in the 1960s & was solidified per down the road cultural studies of the 1980s, which brought the corresponding broadening of what it was 1 may talk all all about while talking about literature.

Within mobile phone communication, a text (or even text message) occurs as short digital message between hardware, occasionally applying SMS (short message service).

Around computing, text refers to character data, or to one of a segments of a program inside memory.

Daoist Chinese Characters
Characters of many of the important Taoist concepts.

Tao of Pooh
Quotes and passages from the Tao of Pooh by Benjamin Hoff.

Sacred-Texts: Taoism
Complete text of Legges' 'The Texts of Taoism' (vols. 39 & 40 of the Sacred Books of the East) including footnotes and introduction. Includes The Tao te Ching and Chuang Tsu.

Chinese Classical Literature
Chinese classics online with every character linked to English definition and etymology.

Golden Elixir
Studies on the Taoist Canon. Index to a bibliographic essay on the Taoist Canon (Daozang)

The Daily Tao
Daily posts of Taoist thought.

Dao Zang
Houses the main texts of the Taoist Philosophy and religion.

Taoism from Dummies - Taoism Scriptures
Collection of TaoDeJing, ChuangTze, LiehTze in both Chinese and English.

Qingjing Jing
A short but popular text from the Taoist canon. From The Taoist Experience by Liva Kohn.






© 2005 GeneralAnswers.org