51 pages • 1 hour read
Benjamin HoffA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
Chapter 1 begins with a parable to explain the philosophy of Taoism. Hoff tells the story of the three Chinese vinegar tasters, depicted in a painting titled The Vinegar Tasters. The three men represent the “Three Teachings of China”: K'ung Fu-tse (also known as Confucius), Buddha, and Lao-tse. Lao-tse is the author of the oldest known writings on Taoism. The first man in the painting is shown experiencing a sour taste from the vinegar. The second man’s expression is bitter, but the third man is smiling.
K'ung Fu-tse is the sour man, dissatisfied with the present. Because he believes the past is preferable to the present, K’ung Fu-tse advocates ancestor worship. This reverence is also evidenced in Confucians’ emphasis on ritual. K'ung Fu-tse views earthly government as out-of-step with heavenly government, and favors the emperor acting as mediator between the two realms. In contrast, Buddha viewed earthly desires as obstacles to Nirvana.
Lao-tse, however, believes humans brought about their own misery by living in discord with universal laws. Hoff summarizes Lao-tse’s philosophy by explaining how this discord occurs: “Whether heavy or light, wet or dry, fast or slow, everything had its own nature already within it, which could not be violated without causing difficulties” (4).