Abstract
At first glance, one sees an apparent contradiction upon reading the title of this article. This is due to the fact that when one suggests, the implication is that one is at the same time pushing for a certain course of action or, perhaps, is trying to endorse some product. It would be quite absurd if one says “You do this” and then tell this same person “You do the opposite of what I tell you”. This notion of suggestion, nevertheless, is not to be equated with the way we understand the thoughts of the Chinese philosopher Zhuangzi whom one day dreamt that he was a butterfly and upon awaking no longer knew whether he was a person dreaming that he became a butterfly or vice versa, that he was a butterfly traveling in a dreamland as a man. The Zhuangzi is a protean text which meansthere is certainly more than meets the eye in the entire text. Thus, to read the Zhuangzi from one point of view only or to interpret it according to a limited perspective is to altogether miss its entire message. For Zhuangzi, man fails to distinguish between reality as seen in nature and man’s way of describing it through language. Obviously, for him, the constant use of metaphors betrays a hidden thesis in which he accepts that man's best guide or, should we say, the best chance of finding the way lies in the things surrounding him – practically anything that has already existed even before he came into this world.
Recommended Citation
Tiempo, Alex
(2019)
"Suggesting Without Recommending: Relativism in the Zhuangzi,"
CNU Journal of Higher Education: Vol. 13:
Iss.
1, Article 5.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.70997/2546-1796.1015
Available at:
https://jhe.researchcommons.org/journal/vol13/iss1/5