Volume II — Te
Chapter 73 of the Tao Te Ching
勇於敢則殺,勇於不敢則活。此兩者,或利或害。天之所惡,孰知其故?是以聖人猶難之。天之道,不爭而善勝,不言而善應,不召而自來,繟然而善謀。天網恢恢,疏而不失。
This verse contemplates the mysterious workings of cosmic justice and the paradox of courage. "Courage to dare brings death"—yong yu gan ze sha (勇於敢則殺). Gan (敢) is to dare, to be bold; sha (殺) is to kill, death. "Courage to not dare brings life"—yong yu bu gan ze huo (勇於不敢則活). Huo (活) is to live, life. The same courage (yong, 勇) leads to opposite outcomes depending on whether it manifests as daring or restraint. "Of these two, one benefits, one harms"—ci liang zhe, huo li huo hai (此兩者,或利或害). Huo (或) is perhaps, sometimes; li (利) is benefit; hai (害) is harm. The verse acknowledges uncertainty—sometimes daring succeeds, sometimes restraint prevails. "Who knows why heaven hates what it hates?"—tian zhi suo wu, shu zhi qi gu (天之所惡,孰知其故)? Wu (惡) is to hate, reject; gu (故) is reason, cause. Even wisdom cannot fully penetrate heaven's reasons for favoring one outcome over another. "Even the sage finds this difficult"—shi yi sheng ren you nan zhi (是以聖人猶難之). The sage does not claim to understand heaven's mysterious operations; he proceeds with caution precisely because the outcomes cannot be predicted. "The way of heaven does not contend yet excels at overcoming"—tian zhi dao, bu zheng er shan sheng (天之道,不爭而善勝). Shan (善) is skilled at, excelling in. Heaven wins without fighting. "Does not speak yet excels at responding"—bu yan er shan ying (不言而善應). Heaven responds to all things without words, without declaration of intent. "Does not summon yet things come of themselves"—bu zhao er zi lai (不召而自來). Zhao (召) is to summon, call. Heaven need not command; things naturally align with its way. "It is unhurried yet excels at planning"—chan ran er shan mou (繟然而善謀). Chan ran (繟然) is relaxed, unhurried, at ease; mou (謀) is to plan, strategize.
The full commentary continues with deeper analysis of internal cultivation, classical perspectives, and cross-references. Read the complete chapter →
The complete translation includes four classical perspectives — Wang Bi, Heshang Gong, Chan Buddhist, and Internal Martial Arts — plus a detailed character-by-character reference guide.
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