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This parable takes an ordinary object—a keyboard—and lets it slip into a state of anticipatory awareness. It types before the acolyte presses anything, suggesting that knowledge is not always reactive. Taoist thought often points to the idea that truth precedes inquiry; the Way is already present, even when we haven’t articulated the question.
By Darkus HobartThis parable takes an ordinary object—a keyboard—and lets it slip into a state of anticipatory awareness. It types before the acolyte presses anything, suggesting that knowledge is not always reactive. Taoist thought often points to the idea that truth precedes inquiry; the Way is already present, even when we haven’t articulated the question.