There was Taoism or Buddhism in China, and Buddhism or Taoism in China

Updated on culture 2024-06-04
24 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Depending on whether the Taoism you are talking about is Taoism or the Taoist doctrine of Lao Zhuang, Buddhism was introduced to China around 2 BC, during the Eastern Han Dynasty. If you are talking about Taoism, it was founded in the late Eastern Han Dynasty, that is, in the early period of the Three Kingdoms, when the Yellow Turban Army rebelled, the Taiping Taoist in it was the founder of Taoism, and the prototype was the eighth generation grandson of Zhang Liang, the founder of the Han Dynasty, about 120 AD. However, Taoism is a Taoist doctrine that originated in Lao Zhuang, and if it is a Taoist doctrine, it is early, probably around 560 BC.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Taoism arose in the Spring and Autumn Period, marked by the "Tao Te Ching" Buddhism in the Eastern Han Dynasty in 67 AD, Buddhism was officially introduced to China.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Eastern Han Dynasty Yongping 10 years A.D. 67 AD, Buddhism was officially introduced into China by the official, Taoism is China's native religion, origin and a certain foundation, as early as the Shang Dynasty has appeared hexagram a saying, and Taoism is Lao Tzu created more than 2000 years of history, which is enough to show that Taoism appeared early.

    Note: Li Er Laozi, surnamed Li Ming'er Zi Dan, was born on February 25, 571 BC.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Taoism came first. Buddhism was only introduced to China during the Han Dynasty.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Taoism for many years. The Yellow Emperor had it in that period.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    If you count from Lao Tzu, the generation period is about the same.

    From the Xuanyuan Yellow Emperor, it was produced earlier than the Buddhism.

    If you count from the five buckets of rice and the Taiping Dao, it will be later than the Buddhists.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    I don't know if you're talking about Taoism or Taoism. The Taoist school (Taoist doctrine) refers to Taoism founded by Lao Tzu, while Taoism was founded by Zhang Ling of the Han Dynasty, and the two are qualitatively different and cannot be confused. And the Buddhism you said should refer to Buddhism, in China there is Taoism, and then Buddhism, but China does not believe in Taoism but there are not as many people as Buddhism, which cannot be separated from the belief of Chinese emperors, just like the emperors of the Tang Dynasty basically believed in Buddhism, and Taoism was only believed in by a few emperors in the Song Dynasty.

    The emperors of other dynasties also mostly practiced Buddhism.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Taoism has a history of more than 5,000 years in China, but it did not form a religion at the beginning. It is only passed down from master to apprentice in the land of China. Later, it was established by Zhang Daoling in the Eastern Han Dynasty.

    Buddhism has a history of more than 2,550 years, which is recognized by various countries, but Buddhism began with the Buddha Shakyamuni, so Buddhism was established for a longer time than Taoism. But the emergence of Buddhist practices was much later than that of Taoism.

    As for which Buddha and Dao Ancestor have the most power, it is impossible to say, because there is no record of fighting between them at all.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    See the Taoist priest in the troubled times, see the Buddha in the prosperous times, hang the pot to help the world in the troubled times, and the Buddha in the prosperous times purify all sentient beings, Sanqing only needs the clay body, but the Buddha wants the golden body. Man is the Tao, and the mind is the Buddha.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Taoism is a native religion Taoism, which should have originated in the Spring and Autumn Period, and Qi Laozi was one of the founders of Taoism.

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Taoism is a local religion, of course, there is first, Buddhism was introduced in the Eastern Han Dynasty, at that time there was also a resistance to Taoism, so the emperor sat in the two competitions, Buddhism won for the white horse to burn the scriptures, the emperor gave to build 10 Buddhist temples, since then Buddhism has taken root in the land of China.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    This is your misunderstanding of Buddhism!!

    Buddhism pays attention to "karma", and the Buddha said: All dharmas arise from karma. He also said, "All the laws are born by cause, and they are destroyed by cause." This fundamental, in the final analysis, is also a manifestation of casualness.

    The Taoist "non-action" is non-action and non-action. If we use Zhuangzi's "Getaway" to explain, it is that Yukou is good at using the wind very powerfully, but Zhuangzi pursues a spiritual realm that does not even rely on the wind. Since we want to go with the flow, there must be ways to interfere and indulge, so inaction means that there is no fixed way to deal with problems, and there is no rigid attachment to certain inherent understandings.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    In other words, compassion for sentient beings is also for the purpose of guiding sentient beings and giving them the opportunity to realize the Buddha's knowledge, because in Buddhism, a person's ultimate happiness is determined by each person's own thoughts, words and actions (the so-called "three karmas of body, mouth and mind"), so Buddhism's compassion is inseparable from wisdom. Without a true understanding of the reality of life in the universe, it is impossible to get rid of the afflictions and the suffering of birth and death, so the ultimate goal of the Buddha is to make everyone understand their own true nature. To achieve this goal, there are various methods of practice, such as chanting sutras, mantras, chanting Buddhas, and meditation.

    The Taoist saying that "the supreme man has no self, the god and man have no merit, and the saint has no name" is also a kind of great wisdom that breaks the ego. And many people's desire for "Dao Wuwei" makes people feel that it is "cold". The end of the school believes that the Taoist "non-action" is a state of mind, which is slightly equivalent to the "emptiness" in Buddhism, and both take the meaning of "non-attachment" and the meaning of "transcendence".

    Only by doing everything with a transcendent heart and a spirit of non-attachment can we do things perfectly, because this is in line with the law of cause and effect in the universe. Therefore, "Wu Wei" is for "doing everything", otherwise, why does Lao Tzu say that "the Tao is in the world, and its ghosts are not gods", and "the Tao rules the world is like cooking Xiaoxian"?

    If you really want to talk about the family cold, maybe it has something to do with the lack of the convenient method of Mahayana Buddhism that advocates the bodhisattva path to lead sentient beings with a lot of compassion, right?

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    Haha, it's not cold, it's that you don't understand. Buddhists must be compassionate? There are also vajra demons, and there are thousands of methods, don't say it in a word.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Taoism goes with the flow, it is to do nothing and do everything. With the Buddhist constant shunning of sentient beings is one meaning. It's all in accordance with the will of sentient beings, not forced, not forced. But if sentient beings feel it, the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas will respond. Induction of the road, not at all. There is no Amitabha Buddha in the south.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Taoism goes with the flow, which also means to let go of fate, not to ignore people.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    Taoism is indeed a little colder, so throughout the ages, Taoism has always been unable to argue with Buddhism.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    "Buddha" is the general meaning of the immeasurable Buddhas, and it is in a broad sense. I will try to define "Buddha" as follows: A "Buddha" is a personality that has attained the most complete state of mind, emotion, and ability at the same time.

    Let me repeat: a "Buddha" is a person who has attained the most complete state of intellect, emotion, and ability at the same time, in other words: a Buddha is a person of great wisdom, great compassion (or full wisdom and full compassion) and great power.

    Notice here the difference between Buddhism and other religions: the Buddha is not omnipotent, the Buddha cannot give us liberation, he can only teach us, and we still have to work hard to achieve liberation. A Buddha cannot send us to heaven or condemn us to hell.

    It is not an easy task to define "Buddha". To put it simply, a Buddha is "an enlightened person", "an enlightened person", and "enlightened one" is transliterated by Sanskrit as Futu, Buddha, etc., and Buddha is the abbreviation of Buddha. Perhaps more explicitly, it should be said that a Buddha is a person who has a thorough understanding of the fundamental principles of life in the universe.

    There is also a concise definition, which is generally accepted by the general public, that is, a Buddha is a person who is consciously aware of others and has attained perfection in his actions. In other words, a Buddha is a person who has already attained enlightenment himself, and who has further helped others to become enlightened as well, and who has attained the most complete state of realization and awareness at the same time.

    Taoism is a traditional religion originating in ancient China, and is a form of polytheism that worships many gods.

    Immortals, relief to the world, and Lao Tzu's "Tao Te Ching" and other major classics. It not only occupies an important position in traditional Chinese culture, but also has a certain influence on the modern world. Although Taoism has been one of the hundred schools of thought since the Warring States Period, it was not until after the Han Dynasty that the Order was produced, and its individual factions were to worship Laozi as the moral celestial, deifying the original moral philosopher.

    By the time of the Northern and Southern Dynasties, the religious form of Taoism was gradually perfected. Taoism regards "Tao" as the highest belief and believes that "Tao" is the origin of all things in the universe. In traditional Chinese culture, Taoism (including Taoism, sorcerers, etc.) is considered to be the dominant theoretical doctrine along with Confucianism and Buddhism, and to seek practical ways to become immortals.

    The main methods of Taoism to become immortals or gods can be roughly summarized into five kinds, taking immortal medicine, outer pills, etc., refining qi and guiding, inner pill cultivation, and through Taoist rituals and their own magic cultivation and other rituals to become immortals.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    Buddhism seeks to cross sentient beings, and the Buddha has a fate to enter the world.

    The Taoist seeks to be at ease and away from the red dust.

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    In 142 AD, Zhang Daoling of the Eastern Han Dynasty founded the Five Bucket Rice Road, Buddhism was introduced to the Central Plains from India through the Western Regions at the end of the Western Han Dynasty and the beginning of the Eastern Han Dynasty. However, this view of history cannot be accepted by Taoist insiders, who generally believe that Taoism originated from the legendary Yellow Emperor.

  21. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    The credible history is that Zhang Jiao (active c. 168-184), who founded the Taiping Dao in the late Han Dynasty, and Zhang Xiu (active c. 178-191), who organized the Wudou Mi Dao.

    Buddhism was founded more than 2,500 years ago, by King Shakyamuni, the prince of King Johan, around 500 BC, and it can be seen that Buddhism first appeared.

    It is now generally popular to say that Buddhism was introduced to China during the Han Dynasty, that is, after BC, in the 10th year of Emperor Yongping of the Han Dynasty, and in 67 AD, it can be seen that Buddhism was earlier.

  22. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    That, of course, is Taoism. Legend has it that Buddhism was introduced to China during the Han Dynasty.

  23. Anonymous users2024-01-20

    Taoism is a native religion, and Buddhism was introduced to China before the Tang Dynasty.

  24. Anonymous users2024-01-19

    Which was founded in China, Taoism or Buddhism? We all know why Taoism is not as widespread as Buddhism.

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