Book contents
- The Cambridge History of China
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures and Tables
- Maps
- Preface
- Six Dynasties Chronology
- Introduction
- Part 1 History
- Part 2 Society and Realia
- Part 3 Culture, Religion, and Art
- Chapter 22 Confucian Learning and Influence
- Chapter 23 Qingtan and Xuanxue
- Chapter 24 Buddhism
- Chapter 25 Daoism
- Chapter 26 Popular Religion
- Chapter 27 The World of Prose Literature
- Chapter 28 The World of Poetry
- Chapter 29 Art and Visual Culture
- Chapter 30 Music
- Abbreviations of Frequently Cited Primary Sources
- Journal Titles: Acronyms (single-word titles do not use acronyms)
- List of Asian Journal Titles
- Primary Texts
- General Bibliography
- Glossary–Index
Chapter 25 - Daoism
from Part 3 - Culture, Religion, and Art
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 October 2019
- The Cambridge History of China
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures and Tables
- Maps
- Preface
- Six Dynasties Chronology
- Introduction
- Part 1 History
- Part 2 Society and Realia
- Part 3 Culture, Religion, and Art
- Chapter 22 Confucian Learning and Influence
- Chapter 23 Qingtan and Xuanxue
- Chapter 24 Buddhism
- Chapter 25 Daoism
- Chapter 26 Popular Religion
- Chapter 27 The World of Prose Literature
- Chapter 28 The World of Poetry
- Chapter 29 Art and Visual Culture
- Chapter 30 Music
- Abbreviations of Frequently Cited Primary Sources
- Journal Titles: Acronyms (single-word titles do not use acronyms)
- List of Asian Journal Titles
- Primary Texts
- General Bibliography
- Glossary–Index
Summary
Among the many social, political, and ideological changes that took place during the period covered by this volume, none matches in impact or endurance those brought about in the realm of religion. We need recall here only a few of the changes: with increasing acceptance of Buddhism from roughly the third through the seventh centuries, Chinese gained new notions of the self, of time and cosmos, and of postmortem existence, and new possibilities for voluntary social organization. With the birth and growth of the Daoist religion, which began as an attempt to establish a kingdom, but ended as something we would recognize as a religious organization, China gained its first native translocal religion. This religion, too, introduced novel conceptions of the human body, of time, of cosmos, and of celestial hierarchies, both independently and in response to Buddhist innovations. Through these developments, Chinese culture was changed profoundly. To name but one indicator of this, in the second century ce, religious organizations were local and community-based.
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- The Cambridge History of China , pp. 553 - 578Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019