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DAO

Dao, often rendered Tao, is a central concept in Chinese philosophy and religion, traditionally translated as "the Way" or "the Path." In Daoist thought, the Dao is the ultimate principle that underlies and unifies the cosmos. It is formless, ineffable, and timeless, yet it manifests in all things and governs change without force.

Foundational texts such as the Daodejing (Tao Te Ching) and the Zhuangzi present the Dao as the

Dao has informed both Daoist philosophy and religion, including ritual practice, alchemy, and traditional medicine, and

source
of
the
world
and
the
measure
of
proper
conduct.
Humans
are
urged
to
attune
themselves
to
the
Dao
rather
than
impose
rigid
schemes.
Core
ideas
include
wu
wei
(non-forced
action),
naturalness
or
ziran,
and
harmony
with
the
Dao's
rhythms.
The
Dao
is
often
linked
with
the
interplay
of
yin
and
yang
and
with
cyclical
cosmology,
emphasizing
a
flexible,
adaptive
order
rather
than
rigid
structure.
has
influenced
East
Asian
thought
more
broadly.
In
some
strands
of
Confucianism,
dao
denotes
the
proper
Way
of
ritual
and
governance,
though
the
emphasis
differs
from
Daoist
spontaneity.
In
modern
usage,
Dao
remains
a
versatile
term
for
discussions
of
the
ultimate
principle
of
reality
and
for
living
in
accordance
with
nature.