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Taoism · Source book

Ttc Ch51 60

Tao Te Ching — Chapters 51–60

N=1 fine-grained distillation. Source: Legge, SBE 39 (1891), Gutenberg #216. Quotes pending Phase 7 verification. Tags & method: ../00-methodology.md.

Chapter-group role

The Dao produces and nourishes without claiming — "mysterious operation" (51); guard the mother and shut the senses to be free of peril (52); the great Dao is level, but people love by-ways; "robber" rulers (53); what is well-planted (the Dao) is not uprooted; cultivate it from self to family to realm (54); he full of de is like an infant; force ages (55); "he who knows does not speak" (56); govern by non-action, multiplied laws breed thieves (57); the dull-seeming government is best (58); moderation in all things (59); govern a great state like cooking small fish (60).

Atomic statements

T6-C1: The Dao produces and nourishes all yet claims, controls, and boasts nothing — its "mysterious operation." (FOUNDATIONAL / DAO+VIRTUE)

  • TTC 51: "All things are produced by the Tao… It produces them and makes no claim to the possession of them; it carries them through their processes and does not vaunt its ability… this is called its mysterious operation."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: de (the "operation" flowing from the Dao)

T6-C2: Guard the "mother" (the Dao) and close the senses, and you are free of peril for life; open them in busyness, and there is no safety. (OPERATIONAL / PU+DAO)

  • TTC 52: "When the mother is found, we know what her children should be… Let him keep his mouth closed, and shut up the portals (of his nostrils), and all his life he will be exempt from laborious exertion."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: supporting

T6-C3: The great Dao is level and easy, but people prefer crooked by-ways; rulers who hoard while fields lie waste are "robbers." (OPERATIONAL / GOVERN+RELATIVITY)

  • TTC 53: "The great Tao (or way) is very level and easy; but people love the by-ways… such (princes) may be called robbers and boasters. This is contrary to the Tao surely!"
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

T6-C4: What the Dao plants is not uprooted; cultivate de in oneself, the family, the neighbourhood, the state, the world. (FOUNDATIONAL / VIRTUE+GOVERN)

  • TTC 54: "What (Tao's) skilful planter plants Can never be uptorn… Tao when nursed within one's self, His vigour will make true; And where the family it rules What riches will accrue!"
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: de (Legge: "vigour"/"virtue")

T6-C5: He who holds de abundantly is like an infant — harmless and unharmed; "when things have become strong they become old," contrary to the Dao. (FOUNDATIONAL / PU+SOFT+LIFE)

  • TTC 55: "He who has in himself abundantly the attributes (of the Tao) is like an infant… When things have become strong, they (then) become old, which may be said to be contrary to the Tao."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: de, pu

T6-C6: He who knows does not speak; he who speaks does not know — "the Mysterious Agreement." (FOUNDATIONAL / KNOW)

  • TTC 56: "He who knows (the Tao) does not (care to) speak (about it); he who is (ever ready to) speak about it does not know it… This is called 'the Mysterious Agreement.'"
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

T6-C7: Rule by freedom from action; the more prohibitions, weapons, and laws, the poorer and more disordered the people. (OPERATIONAL / GOVERN+WUWEI)

  • TTC 57: "…the kingdom is made one's own (only) by freedom from action and purpose… the more display there is of legislation, the more thieves and robbers there are… 'I will do nothing (of purpose), and the people will be transformed of themselves.'"
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: wu wei, ziran ("transformed of themselves")

T6-C8: The government that seems most unwise serves the people best; the meddling one brings misery; the sage is square but cuts no one. (OPERATIONAL / GOVERN+SOFT)

  • TTC 58: "The government that seems the most unwise, Oft goodness to the people best supplies; That which is meddling, touching everything, Will work but ill… the sage is (like) a square which cuts no one (with its angles)."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

T6-C9: For serving Heaven and ruling, "there is nothing like moderation," which accumulates de and secures enduring life. (OPERATIONAL / VIRTUE+LIFE)

  • TTC 59: "For regulating the human (in our constitution) and rendering the (proper) service to the heavenly, there is nothing like moderation… the repeated accumulation of the attributes (of the Tao)."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: de

T6-C10: Govern a great state as one cooks small fish — gently, without overhandling. (OPERATIONAL / GOVERN+WUWEI)

  • TTC 60: "Governing a great state is like cooking small fish."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Step 4 — Clusters

Cluster Atomic statements Intent
The Dao nourishes without claiming C1, C2 Generative de that does not possess
Cultivating de C4, C5, C9 Plant the Dao within; infant-softness; moderation
Light, non-meddling governance C3, C7, C8, C10 Fewer laws; gentle rule; no over-handling
The silence of the knower C6 Real knowing is wordless

Step 5 — Internal tensions

None genuine.

Step 6 — Synthesized chapter-group principles

T6-P1: The Dao nourishes all without claiming, controlling, or boasting

The Dao produces, nurses, and completes all things yet possesses none of them — its "mysterious operation"; guarding this generative "mother" frees one from peril.

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: DAO · Covers: C1, C2 · Evidence: TTC 51, 52 · Untranslatable: de

T6-P2: Cultivate de from the self outward; keep infant-softness and moderation

What the Dao plants is unuprootable; nurse it in self, family, and state. He full of de is harmless as an infant, for hardening leads to aging and death; "nothing is like moderation."

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: VIRTUE · Covers: C4, C5, C9 · Evidence: TTC 54, 55, 59 · Untranslatable: de, pu

T6-P3: Govern by non-action; multiplied laws breed disorder

The realm is won by "freedom from action and purpose"; prohibitions, weapons, and legislation multiply thieves; the seemingly dull, non-meddling ruler serves best — "govern a great state like cooking small fish."

  • Tier: OPERATIONAL · Domain: GOVERN · Covers: C3, C7, C8, C10 · Evidence: TTC 53, 57, 58, 60 · Untranslatable: wu wei, ziran

T6-P4: The one who knows does not speak

Real knowledge of the Dao is wordless; the ready talker does not know it — "the Mysterious Agreement."

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: KNOW · Covers: C6 · Evidence: TTC 56

Step 7 — Traceability

Principle Atomic statements Chapters
T6-P1 C1, C2 TTC 51, 52
T6-P2 C4, C5, C9 TTC 54, 55, 59
T6-P3 C3, C7, C8, C10 TTC 53, 57, 58, 60
T6-P4 C6 TTC 56

Step 8 — Quality

  • Coverage: 10/10 chapters (100%).
  • Orphaned: 0%.
  • Principles: 4.
  • Traceability: 100%.

Step 9 — Validation

  • Standalone comprehension: T6-P3 (light governance; over-legislation breeds disorder) and T6-P4 (the knower is silent) are intelligible and frame-independent — T6-P3 is among the corpus's most quoted political teachings. T6-P1 (the Dao's "mysterious operation") carries the metaphysical warrant. Claim-vs-warrant note: T6-P2's "cultivate de from self → family → state" structurally echoes Confucian self-cultivation outward, but the Taoist warrant (infant-softness, moderation, non-forcing) differs from the Confucian ritual-virtue warrant — a same-shape/different-warrant flag for the Atlas.