seattlegal said:
Well, according to the stories I have heard, Lao Tzu was disgusted by all of the corruption he saw around him in the Chinease bureaucracy, {where he supposedly worked as an archivist,} and got so fed up he wanted to leave the country. A border guard recognized him and wouldn't allow him to leave unless he left behind some of his words of wisdom. {At least that's how the story I've heard goes. Kinda sounds like Lao Tzu was coerced into writing the Tao Te Ching, according to this story. I like the "hands off" flavor in his response.}
If I may break into your lawyerly discussions re: the "mythical" Lao Tzu and his motivations for writing the Tao Te Ching ( by the way Seattle, that's the story I've always heard too), I do not believe that the story is meant to be taken literally.
I believe it is metaphorical because of the mystical nature of the materials that the author felt compelled to write about. He/She knew that to go across the boundary into the veiled territory to retreive the information, a full emotional commitment was necessary on His/Her part. Such a commitment cannot be induced through the partaking of drugs to alter the psyche, although certain native cultures believe that this is so (read your Castaneda... nice try on the Leary reference Abogado !)
Such a series of emotional commitments cannot be engendered either through coercion or deception on the part of governmental or other social institutions, such as the border guard story implies. The border passage to the veiled territory by the author must be an invited passage, "allowed" by the holders of the veiled territory and the "possessors" of the information. In a sense the author becomes the "shamanic figure" on a "mission" for His/Her community to retreive and disseminate the valued information that the community as an entirety is perceived to need. Remember, it was the utility truck driver in the film, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, that was chosen.
Now, maybe I'm reading too much into your conversation, but speaking as one who "believes" that he has been placed in just such a situation, several times, I can tell you that being the "shamanic" author is a life-rending experience. Also, the rate of pay is REALLY crappy ! And as one proceeds along the way after such experiences, such people usually cannot be expected to enter into the veiled territory again and again, and pursue such information without being provided "complete trust and security" by the community.
Bottom line, all roads these days have improvised explosive devices hidden along the way, and after a while one just gets sick and tired of the uncertainty and danger, not to mention the severe cases of hypertension and PTSS flashbacks. Look what happened to J.D.Salinger back in the day, Ralph Ellison...the list of "revealers of true things" that were coerced and/or repressed into not doing so goes on and on.
Of course we can choose to believe that Lao Tzu was just an escapee on a donkey trying to pass from China to Mongolia, or we can choose to believe the metaphorical version.
Experience is always the best teacher.
flow....