Chapter 53 from Dao De Jing – Tao Te Ching critiques humanity’s tendency to abandon the Great Dao in pursuit of greed, hypocrisy, and shortcuts. It offers timeless warnings and guidance for both individuals and societies.
If I possess even a little clear understanding,
I will walk upon the great Way—and fear only wayward paths.The great Way is perfectly level and easy,
yet people love shortcuts.The court is meticulously adorned,
while the fields lie utterly neglected;
the granaries are starkly empty.Yet they wear embroidered robes,
carry sharp swords at their sides,
gorge themselves on rich food,
and hoard surplus wealth.This is called “glamorous thievery”—
surely this is not the Way!
Note
Laozi warns against the illusion of shortcuts—exploitative actions (e.g., greed, deceit) that seem efficient but ultimately destabilize natural harmony.
Laozi also condemns rulers (or individuals) who prioritize superficial wealth over collective well-being. This mirrors modern critiques of inequality, consumerism, and performative success.
True fulfillment comes from simplicity and contentment, not materialism.
Practice the Wisdom of Chapter 53 in the Modern Era
- Be a Practitioner of the “Great Dao”: Choose steady accumulation over speculative shortcuts; reject opportunism.
- Be an Observer of Desires: Regularly declutter material and mental excess to cultivate inner clarity.
On Societal Level:
- Be an Improver of Systems: Advocate for sustainable policies and criticize short-sighted decision-making.
- Be a Guardian of Culture: Champion the value of deep thinking in an age of distraction and superficiality.
Chapter 53 acts as a mirror—it exposes humanity’s weakness for “crooked paths”, while illuminating a path of redemption through simplicity, responsibility, and long-termism. For modern individuals trapped in involution and anxiety, this wisdom is a sobering antidote.
Related Readings
- Chapter 52: Building on the key idea of “returning to and preserving the light” from the previous chapter, it further elaborates on how to “hold fast to the Great Tao” in practice and avoid going astray.
- Chapter 19: Both chapters contain critiques of social disorder. The proposal to “renounce cleverness and abandon profit” in Chapter 19 echoes the critique of rulers’ extravagance exposed in this chapter.
- Chapter 77: Both share the same thread of thought expressed as “the Way of Heaven is to diminish the excessive and supplement the deficient.” The description of “having surplus wealth and goods” in this chapter is a direct critique of the phenomenon that violates the Way of Heaven and leads to disparity between rich and poor.
使我介然有知,行於大道,唯施是畏。大道甚夷,而民好徑。朝甚除,田甚蕪,倉甚虛;服文綵,帶利劍,厭飲食,財貨有餘;是謂盜夸。非道也哉!
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