Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Book_Author - Lau-tzu

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 98    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Lau-tzu:     more books (15)
  1. Lau-Dsis Weg durch Seele, Geschichte und Welt (Das Atelier) (German Edition) by Erwin Arthur Rousselle, 1973

21. WebSite/quotes.shtml - Diff - 1.3
you make them untrustworty. you make them untrustworty. Lau-tzu - ToaTe Ching /pre , - Lau-tzu - Tao Te Ching /p . /p , p , p . pre ,
http://www.peerfear.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/WebSite/quotes.shtml.diff?r1=1.2&r2=

22. LitSearch: An Online Literary Database
Lautzu (0-0) Works by this author Tao Teh King, or The Tao And Its Characteristics.Copyright 2001 Keith Ito. All Rights Reserved. Admin Control Panel.
http://daily.stanford.edu/litsearch/servlet/DescribeAuthor?name=Lau-tzu

23. LitSearch: An Online Literary Database
Vergne comtesse de Lamb, Charles LamotheLangon, Etienne Leon, baron de Landers,J. Lang, Andrew Lanier, Sidney Larcom, Lucy Latimer, Hugh Lau-tzu Lawrence, DH
http://daily.stanford.edu/litsearch/servlet/DescribeAuthor?name=L

24. Mercury House Authors: Bill Porter/Red Pine
Click here to read a short sample. Lautzu'S TAOTECHING Eastern Spirituality 6 x9, 224 pp Photographs, Glossary, Biographies Paper, $14.95 1-56279-085-4 World.
http://www.mercuryhouse.org/porter.html
LAU-TZU'S TAOTECHING Eastern Spirituality 6 x 9, 224 pp Photographs, Glossary, Biographies Paper, $14.95 World Add to CartView Shopping Cart/Checkout LAO-TZU'S TAOTECHING FINALIST, 1997 PEN CENTER WEST AWARD FOR TRANSLATION The Taoteching, written some 2,500 years ago by a man known only as Lao-tzu (“the Old Master”), encapsulates the wisdom of Taoism. Red Pine’s translation of this most revered of Chinese texts recreates the ancient poetry that has made the Taoteching the most quoted book in the Chinese language.
Bill Porter ROAD TO HEAVEN:
Encounters with Chinese Hermits
Translations by Bill Porter writing as
Red Pine LAO-TZU'S TAOTECHING: Translated by Red Pine With Selected Commentaries of the Past 2000 Years THE ZEN WORKS OF STONEHOUSE: Poems and Talks of a Fourteenth-Century Chinese Hermit GUIDE TO CAPTURING A PLUM BLOSSOM (by Sung Po-jen)
ROAD TO HEAVEN
Literary Travel/Religion
6 x 9, 240 pp
Paper, $14.00
Add to Cart
View Shopping Cart/Checkout ROAD TO HEAVEN
Accounts of travels in remote Chinese mountains, richly illustrated with photographs, with numerous interviews of contemporary hermits illuminating ancient Chinese approaches to enlightenment Photographs by Steven Johnson and Bill Porter
Yoga Journal Road to Heaven
— Jim Harrison Click here to read a short sample.

25. Telluride Foundation - Education
Knowing others is wisdom. Knowing the self is enlightenment. Lau-tzu.
http://www.telluridefoundation.org/education.html
Knowing others is wisdom. Knowing the self is enlightenment.
-Lau-tzu
Arts
Athletics Charity Education Telluride Foundation
620 Mountain Village Blvd.
Suite 2B Telluride, CO 81435
Fax 970.728.9007
B elieving that education is a life-long pursuit and one of the greatest gifts one can share with others, the Telluride Foundation supports those programs that contribute to educational development. For example, the Telluride Academy is dedicated to innovative, enrichment programs for young people in the areas of outdoor education, adventure sports, academics, travel, and visual and performing arts. As the historian of Telluride, the Telluride Historical Museum provides a compelling and entertaining experience for residents and visitors by showcasing the events, artifacts and personal accounts of Telluride's cultural heritage. The Telluride Education Foundation offers opportunities to expand and enrich the educational outlets for all students in the region.
This site designed by Glen Group

26. Faith Not Western - Buddhism, Hinduism / Zen, Hindoeïsme,
5229 Lautze Lao-tzu ingeleid en Vertaling / Thomas Cleary / Arnoel DiemondWen-tzu lessen van Lau-tzu Utrecht, Kosmos - Zomer en Koenig, 1993.
http://www.antiquariaten.com/tergouw/catalogs/6330-faith.notwestern.htm

27. 100 Most Desired Articles [Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy]
Humanism. Informal Logic. James. Kripke. Language, Philosophy of. Lautzu. Locke,John. Logic, Philosophical. Mathematics, Philosophy of. Metaphysics. Mill, John Stuart.
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/desired.htm
100 Most Desired Articles This list of our top 100 needed entries is based on our desire to cover the key figures and topics, and also to replace the current proto articles. Anaxagoras Anselm of Canterbury Apprehension A Priori Aquinas, Thomas Artificial Intelligence Augustine Baier, Kurt Biology, Philosophy Of Buddhist philosophy Category Chuang-Tzu Chrysippus Confirmation of Scientific Theories Consequentialism Deism Divine Command Theory Dualism Duties and Deontological Ethics Empiricism, British Encyclopedists Environmental Ethics Ethics, Ancient Erasmus Evolution Free Will Functionalism German Idealism Greek Philosophy Hedonism Hindu philosophy Hobbes, Thomas Humanism Informal Logic James Kripke Language, Philosophy of Lau-Tzu Locke, John Logic, Philosophical Mathematics, Philosophy of Metaphysics Mill, John Stuart Mind, Philosophy of Modal Logic Monism Moore, G E Natural Theology Naturalistic Fallacy Noncognitivism Nozick Objectivity Ockham, William of Ordinary Language Paley, William Perception Peripatetics Pluralism Putnam Pragmatism Pyrrho Rationalism, Continental

28. Martin's Disney Page's Dreambook
Comments mooie site zeg. Wednesday, September 4th 2002 031924 AM NameIrene. E-mail address Lau-tzu@planet.nl. Comments Hoi Martin, Leuke site!
http://books.dreambook.com/taranprydain/taranprydain.html
Martin's Disney Page Welcome to Dreambook , a nifty new free service from:
New Dream Network
Dreamhost , and Dreamservers If you have a minute, please sign my Dreambook too! Name: Melissa Friday, March 28th 2003 - 05:51:48 PM Name: tineke Thursday, January 9th 2003 - 09:30:27 AM Name: Judy E-mail address: Rrose111@CS.COM Comments: My children really enjoyed the theme park and we are going to take them back this coming summer.
Thank you for have ride for all ages. Wednesday, October 16th 2002 - 07:26:38 AM Name: Hans E-mail address: hwalther@xs4all.nl Homepage URL: http://www.xs4all.nl/~hwalther Comments: Mooie site met nuttige informatie! Kijk ook eens op mijn site, waar een gedeelte van mijn verzameling animatiekunst op staat, waaronder ook veel Disney-originelen.
Keep up the good work!! Sunday, September 29th 2002 - 04:15:32 AM Name: hett Homepage URL: http://groothuizen.babbelt.nl Comments: mooie site zeg
Wednesday, September 4th 2002 - 03:19:24 AM Name: Irene E-mail address: lau-tzu@planet.nl Comments: Hoi Martin,
Leuke site!
GA nog ff verder kijken zie je morgen wel weer.

29. Asian
Lautzu Tao Teh King NOTES Hsuan Chiao Tao Teh King Legge, James trans. Gutenberg FTP UITXT 67 Kb - ZIP28 Kb SLTXT - ZIP ENTXT - ZIP.
http://www.saxakali.com/youth/asian1.htm
Asian
Home
links Asians and South Asians Saxakali links Asia Society Zhongwen.com Chinese Characters and Culture The Displaced Japanese-Americans by American Council on Public Affairs (frame-dependent page images at MSU) Japanese AmericansEvacuation and Relocation,1942-1945 (frame-dependent page images at MSU) online books by author Blood, Peter , ed.: Pakistan: A Country Study (HTML at LOC) Buddha The Gospel (Vt.edu) The Word (Vt.edu) Confucius Lady Daibu 12th century Japanese poet; a selection from her memoirs, with historical and critical notes by Lloyd Daub Far, Sui Sin:
A Chinese Ishmael 1899 [Illustrations] (23 KB) A Love Story From the Rice Fields of China 1911 (15 KB) The Bird of Love 1910 (16 KB) An Autumn Fan August 1910 (15 KB) Chan Hen Yen, Chinese Student

30. WannaLearn: Original Tao
The verses contained within this short work rival and often surpassthose found in the more well known Taoist classic, Lautzu.
http://www.wannalearn.com/Spiritual_and_Paranormal/Organized_Religions/Taoism/02
Original Tao
A WannaLearn Recommended Instructional Book Pick
Hardcover
15 December, 1999
Columbia University Press
ISBN: 0231115644 Original Tao by Harold David Roth
Amazon.com's Price:
THIS TITLE IS CURRENTLY NOT AVAILABLE. If you would like to purchase this title, we recommend that you occasionally check this page to see if it has become available. Find Out More About This Book Buy from Amazon.com
Buy from Amazon.ca

Buy from Amazon.co.uk
Comments from people who have read this book Rating: /5 -
Rating: 5/5 - Excellent introduction to early Taoist thought
Original Tao is a wonderful translation of an often over-looked text. The verses contained within this short work rival and often surpass those found in the more well known Taoist classic, Lau-tzu. In addition to the translation, Professor Roth's commentary on Chinese mysticism is phenomenal and provides an interesting back-drop to the history of Taoist thought. I highly recommend this book to both newcomers and veterans of Taoism Rating: 5/5 - A foundational text of early Taoism.

31. Quotations
Quotations Alphabetical by Author. - L -. Major citations Lau-tzu, LincolnMarquis de Lafayette. Humanity has won its battle. Liberty now has a country.
http://home.planetinternet.be/~smitsr/quotes/l.html
Quotations - Alphabetical by Author
- L -
Major citations: Lau-Tzu, Lincoln
Marquis de Lafayette
  • Humanity has won its battle. Liberty now has a country.
    Jean de La Fontaine
  • Everyone believes very easily whatever they fear or desire.
    Alphonse de Lamartine
  • There is a woman at the begining of all great things.
  • Sad is his lot, who, once at least in his life, has not been a poet.
    Karen Lamb
  • A year from now you may wish you had started today.
    Leslie Lamport
  • A distributed system is one in which the failure of a computer you didn't even know existed can render your own computer unusable. (corrected after a note from Leslie)
    Ann Landers
  • Don't accept your dog's admiration as conclusive evidence that you are wonderful.
  • The poor wish to be rich, the rich wish to be happy, the single wish to be married, and the married wish to be dead.
    Andrew Lang
  • He uses statistics as a drunken man uses lampposts for support rather than for illumination.
    k.d.lang
  • Even in the darkest phase be it thick or thin, always someone marches brave here beneath my skin.
    Dorothea Lange
  • The camera is an instrument that teaches people how to see without a camera.
  • 32. Title
    Lawrence , David Herbert 30. Loon , Hendrik Van 31. Lamb , Charles and Mary 32. Lautzu, 33. Livingstone , Dr. David 34. Ling , Princess Der 35. Lobo , Father.
    http://www.d-library.com.cn/wstsg/e_index.php?pageauthor=L

    33. Lau Tzu's Eggwalking Demonstration
    The mysterious world of Lau Tzu Shaolin Monk origins a mystery, his special Shaolin powers unfathomed, Lau Tzu can sometimes be seen demonstrating his Kung Fu skills
    http://www.bluntproductions.com/archive/feb2002/lau_tzu.htm
    The mysterious world of Lau Tzu: Shaolin Monk His origins a mystery, his special Shaolin powers unfathomed, Lau Tzu can sometimes be seen demonstrating his Kung Fu skills in the local park between the time the day care centre closes and the all-night pharmacy opens. Beware the power of Lau Tzu !
    Just walk away. Ignore him. See some rare video footage of The Master in action... Click here for low-quality RealVideo (647 kb) Stream
    Click here for High Quality RealVideo (10.1 Mb)

    Click here for not-bad quality DIVX Avi (6.19 Mb)
    Click here to download DIVX for Windows media player
    i.e if the bloody video doesn't work
    Or here for RealPlayer 7 (windows)

    34. Tzu-ConwayCapeheart
    The complete text of The Art of War by Sun Tzu
    http://enloehs.wcpss.net/projects/west42002/laotzu8
    Lau Tzu
    Born
    March 24th, 604 BC
    Died
    6th Century B.C.
    in
    Honan, China
    http://www.chebucto.ns.ca/Philosophy/Taichi/lao.html
    Works Of Art:
    T ao-Te-Ching The Way of Life Wen-Tzu
    Birth Place
    Biography Reviews of his works Home Bibliography Project Homepage
    Created By: Z. Conway And Christina C. In Loving memory of Christina's Grandmother who recently passed away

    35. Tao Te Ching By Lau Tzu- Part One
    Tao Te Ching by LaoTzu (Translated by C. Ganson). 1. The Tao describedin words is not the real Tao. Words cannot describe it. Nameless
    http://metropolis.ninsei.org/books/tao1.html
    Tao Te Ching
    by Lao-Tzu (Translated by C. Ganson) The Tao described in words is not the real Tao.
    Words cannot describe it.
    Nameless, it is the source of creation.
    Named, it is the mother of all things. To see Tao the observer must be motiveless.
    Those with selfish motives see only
    the surface, not the innermost depths. These two kinds of observers look alike,
    but differ in the insight of their observations.
    They look alike because they are both human.
    Within humanity is the key to the door of creation. Whenever the most beautiful is perceived
    ugliness arises, the least beautiful. Whenever good is perceived evil exists, its natural opposite. Perception involves opposites: Reality and fantasy are opposing thoughts. Difficult and simple oppose in degree. Long and short oppose in distance. High and low oppose in height. Shrill and deep oppose in tone. Before and after oppose in sequence. The truly wise accept this, and they work diligently without allegiance to words. They teach by doing, not by saying; are genuinely helpful, not discriminating; are positive, not possessive.

    36. The Metaphysics Of Quality Mailing List: MD From Lau Tzu To Sal
    MD from Lau Tzu to Salman Rushdie. From Jonathan B. Marder (marder@agri.huji.ac.il)Date Sun Jun 11 2000 213119 BST Next message
    http://alt.venus.co.uk/hypermail/moq_discuss/0006/0036.html
    MD from Lau Tzu to Salman Rushdie
    From: Jonathan B. Marder ( marder@agri.huji.ac.il
    Date: Sun Jun 11 2000 - 21:31:19 BST Hi all,
    I want to share something that I read recently that nearly blew me
    away. I assume that other Pirsig fans will appreciate it:
    "Love is the relationship between level of reality.
    Love produces harmony and is the ruler of the arts. As artists we seek
    to achieve, in our art, a state of love.
    Love is the attempt to impose order on chaos, meaning on absurdity.
    It is inventive, double-natured, holding the keys to everything.
    There is love in the cosmos.
    Love was born before, and is more potent than, the laws of nature. Love raises us above the limitations of our bodies and gives us free will.

    37. The Metaphysics Of Quality Mailing List: Re: MD Brilliance And
    In reply to Richard Budd Re MD Brilliance and the ramblings of a madman ;Next in thread Jonathan B. Marder MD from Lau Tzu to Salman Rushdie ;
    http://alt.venus.co.uk/hypermail/moq_discuss/0006/0034.html
    Re: MD Brilliance and the ramblings of a madman
    From: hugh.greenaway ( hugh.greenaway@diamond.co.uk
    Date: Sun Jun 11 2000 - 13:12:52 BST - Original Message -
    rmb007Q1@hotmail.com

    moq_discuss@moq.org

    Sent: 11 June 2000 12:08:am
    Subject: Re: MD Brilliance and the ramblings of a madman
    > ....They ask questions like, "Does a dog have Morality?" And they become
    > > incredulous when I answer, "Yes, dogs have Morality. So do individual
    > cells."
    RICK:
    You write this as if you believe that they would be persuaded by concrete reasons and definitions.... I promise you they won't. Your best shot is to get them to read the book. My own experience teaches me that trying to

    38. Tao Te Ching By Lau Tzu- Part Two
    Tao Te Ching by LaoTzu (Translated by C. Ganson).
    http://www.idstratus.com/TheRealm/Archive/arctao2.html
    Tao Te Ching
    by Lao-Tzu (Translated by C. Ganson) Verses 41 - 50
    Verses 51 - 60

    Verses 61 - 70

    Verses 71 - 81
    ...
    Tao Te Ching - Verses 1 - 40
    Whenever the truly wise hear of Tao
    they strive earnestly to use it.
    Whenever the mediocre hear of Tao
    they are aware, yet unaware of it.
    Whenever the stupid hear of Tao they laugh aloud at it.
    If it were not laughed at it would not be Tao. Therefore it is said of Tao: enlightenment seems dullness; progress seems regression; the true path seems misleading. The highest character seems recessive like a valley; the purest virtue seems tarnished; the most adequate seems somehow insufficient; the most firm seems frail; the most fundamental seems changeable. Great space has no corners; great ability takes time to mature; great music is soft and mellow; great form is shapeless, contourless. Tao is hidden; it is nameless; yet it stimulates; it brings fulfillment. Out of Tao comes Unity; out of Unity comes two; from two comes three; from three all things come. The shade of Yin is on the back of everything; the light of Yang is on the face of everything.

    39. Wing Chun's Combat Mentality
    Lau Tzu wrote, It is because arms are instruments of ill omen and there are Thingsthat detest them that one who has the way does not abide by their use
    http://www.wckfc.com/article/dave/dave.htm
    Wing Chun's Combat Mentality
    Putting it all Together
    by
    "Gau Lin" David Pangan "No man is invincible,
    and therefore no man can fully understand that which would make him invincible. "
    Musashii

    The martial arts were developed for the sole purpose of defending one's self, family, beliefs, and country from aggression. Naturally, with a difference in cultures various methods and tools were developed according to fighting experiences and study. Often, people believe that victory in fighting is obtained merely through the application of proper techniques and by learning these techniques anyone should be capable of winning. So the question arises why if all techniques are basically the same and acquire their validity from universal principles is it that one man prevails over another? The answer is the fighting mentality, the mind of the warrior.
    Martial arts were developed to survive the reality of combat not for sport or entertainment. A true warrior does not fight for trophies, money, or recognition; to do so is a perversion of martial arts and a desecration of the honor and virtues upon which a warrior builds his character. At what price will one sell his honor?
    An essential component of a warrior mind set is humility. Humility is the realization that one does not know everything and that every person has the ability to teach us something about ourselves. A great fighter realizes that there are no guarantees and that anyone can win or lose on any given day. He does not boast of his ability nor instigate a confrontation he respects everyone and degrades no one. Lau Tzu wrote, "One who excels as a warrior does not appear formidable; One who excels in fighting is never roused in anger, One who excels in defeating his enemy does not join issue; One who excels in employing others humbles himself before them."3

    40. Wing Chun's Combat Mentality
    Translate this page Charles E. Tuftle Co. Boston. 1994. P. 3. 2. Lau DC Lau Tzu. Penguin Classics. England.1963. P. 89. 3. Lau DC Lau Tzu. Penguin Classics. England. 1963. P. 130.
    http://www.wckfc.com/article/dave/dave_spanish.htm
    La Mentalidad del Combate
    del Wing Chun
    formando un conjunto Por
    Jo Gau David Pangan.
    "Ningún hombre es invencible, y por lo tanto, ningún hombre puede completamente comprender lo que le haría invencible. "
    Musashii
    Las artes marciales se crearon con el único propósito de defenderse a uno mismo, a su familia, a sus creencias y a su patria de la agresión. Naturalmente, habiendo diferentes culturas, se desarrollaron varios métodos y sistemas de acuerdo con las diferentes experiencias y estudios de el combate. Frecuentemente la gente cree que la victoria en una pelea se obtiene tan solo por la aplicación propia de técnicas, y al aprender estas técnicas, cualquiera es capaz de ganar. Así que la pregunta se nos presenta: ¿si todas las técnicas son básicamente iguales, y adquieren su validez de los mismos principios universales, por qué es que un hombre prevalece contra otro? La respuesta es: la mentalidad de el combate. La mente de el guerrero. Las artes marciales se desarrollaron para sobrevivir la realidad del combate, no se desarrollaron como deporte ni forma de entretenimiento. Un verdadero guerrero no peléa por troféos ni por reconicimiento; el hacerlo es una perversión de las artes marciales, y es profanar el honor y las virtudes sobre los cuales un guerrero basa su caracter. ¿A qué precio venderá uno su honor? Hay un principio que declara que al pelear, uno saldrá golpeado.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 2     21-40 of 98    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter