The Unity of Heaven and Earth in the Zhuangzhi
Abstract
My scholarly approach is to consider and treat the inner chapters of the Zhuangzi as an
integral text regardless of whether its composition is the result of many hands. I treat this in much
the same fashion as Western biblical scholars study the Western bible for its meaning, whether or
not it actually came into being over many years and was the result of the work of multiple
authorship. It is my opinion that such an approach is more appropriate to the eminent status of the
text of the Zhuangzi in the traditional, Chinese cultural canon, to its philosophical and spiritual
value as a testament to the idea of the union of heaven and earth in the Chinese cultural tradition,
and to its actual functioning as a working guidebook to the understanding of how to achieve a
practical expansion of the spiritual dimension of human experience. In essence, I will
demonstrate that a proper academic, textual analysis of this seminal work is crucial to the
understanding of how it functions as a document designed to explain, illustrate and point the way
to spiritual freedom.
What I would like to present is the argument that the attempt to achieve the union of
heaven and earth is indeed the main theme of the Zhuangzi. My argument is that the inner
chapters are a literary and philosophical model of the cosmic unity of heaven and earth. My
method of showing this is to show the developmental nature of the inner chapters. I begin by
arguing that the myth of K’un transforming itself into P’eng with which Zhuangzi commences his
work prefigures the main theme of the Zhuangzi which is that of spiritual transformation. The
unity and integrity of the text is shown by a close examination of the chapters which follow.
The chapters form a developmental sequence. As the inner chapters develop, we are
treated to a progression of “monster” types from the gentle and honorable form of the crippled
military commander through physically crippled Shu to No-lips of triple deformity. Of Shu it is
said, how much better if Shu, who is physically crippled, had crippled virtue. Then, as a
philosophical development, Zhuangzi presents the madman whose conventional virtue is indeed
crippled. Each character dialectically progresses, allowing the mind of the reader to expand with
the progression of each monstrous character, until the mind of the reader can achieve the mental
freedom that it longs for. Just as the pheasant longs to be free of its cage, so does the mind of the
reader long for freedom from its cage of concepts. The mind is gradually prepared by the
progressive development of the monster forms until it can break free of its conventional concepts
to achieve the unity of heaven and earth.
Each monstrous character shows itself in turn to be more physically limited or monstrous
or different in kind than the previous example, but nonetheless capable of achieving a
transcendental freedom. This is the teaching of the Zhuangzi, that regardless of form and of
physical limitation, man can achieve the unity of heaven and earth. The gallery of monsters are
metaphorical role models for the reader to learn the lesson that physical limitation does not hinder
one from reaching heavenly unity, but the proper understanding of physical limitation is the key
to unifying heaven and earth. The physical oddities of Zhuangzi’s messengers work together to
function to break down conventional value judgments and enable the reader of the text to receive
their message which is the message of the achievement of transcendental freedom.