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Taoism - Deities |  | Taoism - Deities: Encyclopedia II - Taoism - Deities |  |
Taoism - Religious Taoism.
Traditional Chinese religion is determinedly polytheistic. Its deities arranged into a heavenly civil service that mirrors the bureaucracy of imperial China. Deities may be promoted or demoted. Many are said to have once been virtuous humans. The particular deities worshipped vary somewhat according to geography, and much more according to historical period (though the general pat ...
See also:Taoism, Taoism - History, Taoism - Warring States Period 403-222 BCE, Taoism - Han Dynasty 206 BCE - 220 CE, Taoism - Three Kingdoms Period 220-265, Taoism - Six Dynasties 316-589, Taoism - Tang Dynasty 618-907, Taoism - Song Dynasty 960-1279, Taoism - Yuan Dynasty 1279-1367, Taoism - Nationalist Period 1912-1949, Taoism - People's Republic of China 1949-present, Taoism - Adherents, Taoism - Beliefs, Taoism - Religious Taoism, Taoism - Philosophical Taoism, Taoism - Deities, Taoism - Religious Taoism, Taoism - Philosophical Taoism, Taoism - Practices, Taoism - Religious Taoism, Taoism - Philosophical Taoism, Taoism - Scriptures, Taoism - Religious Taoism, Taoism - Philosophical Taoism, Taoism - Symbols, Taoism - Relations With Other Religions and Philosophies |  | | Taoism, Taoism - Adherents, Taoism - Beliefs, Taoism - Deities, Taoism - Han Dynasty 206 BCE - 220 CE, Taoism - History, Taoism - Nationalist Period 1912-1949, Taoism - People's Republic of China 1949-present, Taoism - Philosophical Taoism, Taoism - Practices, Taoism - Relations With Other Religions and Philosophies, Taoism - Religious Taoism, Taoism - Scriptures, Taoism - Six Dynasties 316-589, Taoism - Song Dynasty 960-1279, Taoism - Symbols, Taoism - Tang Dynasty 618-907, Taoism - Three Kingdoms Period 220-265, Taoism - Warring States Period 403-222 BCE, Taoism - Yuan Dynasty 1279-1367, Western interpretations of Taoism, Dialectical monism, Eastern philosophy, Anarchism, List of Taoists, T'ai Chi Ch'uan, Tao Yin, Taoist diet, Yingtan |  | |
|  |  | Taoism: Encyclopedia II - Taoism - Deities
Taoism - Deities
Taoism - Religious Taoism
Traditional Chinese religion is determinedly polytheistic. Its deities arranged into a heavenly civil service that mirrors the bureaucracy of imperial China. Deities may be promoted or demoted. Many are said to have once been virtuous humans. The particular deities worshipped vary somewhat according to geography, and much more according to historical period (though the general pattern of worship is more constant).
There is also something of a disconnect between the set of gods which currently receive popular worship, and those which are the focus of elite Taoist texts and rituals. For example, the Jade Emperor is at the head of the popular pantheon, while the Celestial Masters' altar recognizes the divinized Laozi (Laojun, "Lord Lao") and the Three Pure Ones in that position. Some texts explain that Laozi has sponsored the apotheosis of various other gods.
Taoism - Philosophical Taoism
While a number of immortals or other mysterious figures appear in the Zhuangzi, and to a lesser extent in the Daodejing (e.g. the "mysterious female" in ch. 6), these have generally not become the objects of cultic worship. Academic commentators on Taoism are rather more likely to focus on the divinity of the Dao itself, which might be fruitfully compared to (and contrasted with) Western conceptions of God. Early texts describe Tao not as equal to "the One," but as a principle underlying both the One and the Many. One revealing phrase used to describe it is huntun (roughly, "chaotic mixture"). In the wake of Wang Bi, philosophical Taoists have tended to describe it as "nothingness," which is the origin of "being." (Cf. the apophatic tendencies of theism, including negative theology.)
Other related archives"five elements", 10th century, 12th century, 1966, 1976, Bagua, Anarchism, Benjamin Hoff, Buddhism, Caodaism, Chan Buddhism, Chinese alchemy, Chinese astrology, Chinese calendar, Chinese cuisine, Chinese dragons, Chinese folk religion, Chinese martial arts, Chinese traditional medicine, Communist Party of China, Confucianism, Confucius, Cultural Revolution, Daodejing, Daozang, Deng Xiaoping, Dialectical monism, Eastern philosophy, Fortune-telling, Fritjof Capra, Ge Hong, Genghis Khan, Ghost Festival, Ghosts, Guomindang, Han dynasty, Hanfeizi, Hell Bank Notes, Jade Emperor, Jin, Lao Tzu, Laozi, Legalist, Liezi, List of Taoists, Matteo Ricci, Mediumship, Ming, Neo-Confucian, Neo-Confucianism, New Agers, Qin Shi Huang, Quanzhen, Sichuan, Sima Qian, Song, Song dynasty, T'ai Chi Ch'uan, Taijitu, Tang, Tang period, Tao Yin, Taoist diet, The Buddha, The Tao of Physics, The Tao of Pooh, The Vinegar Tasters, Three Pure Ones, Tripitaka, Wang Bi, Way of Former Heaven, Western interpretations of Taoism, Xuanzong, Yellow Emperor, Yellow Turban, Yiguandao, Yijing, Yin and Yang, Yingtan, Zhang Daoling, Zhuangzi, apophatic, astrology, belles lettres, demonolatry, divination, dragon dances, emptiness, fengshui, five elements, gongfu, hermeneutic, lion dances, monasteries, negative theology, orthodoxy, palanquins, palmistry, phoenixes, phrenology, polytheistic, qi, qigong, relativism, sacrifice, shamanic, talismans, tourism, transliteration scheme, wu wei, yin and yang
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Deities", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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