Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Bit by Bit - Chapter 5, Part 8

Trey Smith


Confucius said, "I once went on a mission to Ch'u, and as I was going along, I saw some little pigs nursing at the body of their dead mother. After a while, they gave a start and all ran away and left her, because they could no longer see their likeness in her; she was not the same as she had been before. In loving their mother, they loved not her body but the thing that moved her body. When a man has been killed in battle and people come to bury him, he has no use for his medals. When a man has had his feet amputated, he doesn't care much about shoes. For both, the thing that is basic no longer exists. When women are selected to be consorts of the Son of Heaven, their nails are not pared and their ears are not pierced. When a man has just taken a wife, he is kept in posts outside [the palace] and is no longer sent on [dangerous] missions. If so much care is taken to keep the body whole, how much more in the case of a man whose virtue is whole? Now Ai T'ai-t'o says nothing and is trusted, accomplishes nothing and is loved, so that people want to turn over their states to him and are only afraid he won't accept. It must be that his powers are whole, though his virtue takes no form."
~ Burton Watson translation ~
Some people refer to it as the spirit or soul. Me? I don't know what it is, but there is more to each of us than just blood and guts. If I were to venture a guess, I'd say the sense of self originates in the brain and, when the brain ceases to function, the egoic self disappears. We are no longer self-aware and others see no self in us to relate to.

To view the Index page for this series, go here.

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