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1.1: Introduction

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    195649
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    道德經 

    Translated by Robert Eno 

    Version 1.3a (2010) 

     

    © 2010, 2016, 2019, 2022 Robert Eno  

    This online translation is made freely available for use in  

    not for profit educational settings and for personal use.  

    For other purposes, apart from fair use, copyright is not waived. 

    Additional translations and other materials may be found at: 

    http://chinatxt.sitehost.iu.edu/Resources.html 

    Note for readers: 

    This translation was originally prepared for use by students in a general course on early Chinese  thought. It should not be regarded as a scholarly translation, which, in the case of the Daodejing,  would involve a great deal of analysis concerning the variant versions of the text now available, both  traditionally received versions and the archeologically recovered version mentioned in the  Introduction. The list of projects I prepared for my retirement includes replacing this classroom  version of the text with a truly scholarly online edition; however, I have not yet done so, and it seems  increasingly unlikely that I will.  

    This translation does not follow a strong or innovative theory of the philosophy behind the Daodejing:  I am, in fact, skeptical that a consistent philosophy lay behind the gradual generation of the text we  have today. My initial intention in preparing this translation was simply to provide my own students  with a version that conveyed the way I thought the text was probably best understood. Of course, I  was also happy to make a reasonably responsible rendering of the text available for my students at no  cost. I later posted the text online with this latter goal in mind for teachers who wished to select  portions of the text for classroom discussion without requiring students to make additional costly  purchases or dealing with issues of copyright in assembling extracts.  

    There are many thoughtful English translations of the text in commercially published form, and the  best of these reflect critical analysis derived from scholarly devotion to the text beyond my own. This  translation is not intended to replace them, and anyone interested in the serious study of Daoism  should look to published translations more scholarly than this one.  

    Bob Eno 

    December 2016 

    Version 1.3 retains the 2010 translated text unchanged, but bows to scholarly convention in the form of the  text title (“Daodejing,” rather than “Dao de jing”), and restores with modifications an appended Glossary of  terms, inadvertently omitted from the previous posted version of this translation. Version 1.3a corrects the omission of chapter 42 <e>.


    1.1: Introduction is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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