All Thinkers

Laozi

Laozi is the name given to the author of the Daodejing, one of the most important books in Chinese thought. The name means 'Old Master'. We do not know if Laozi was a real person. The traditional story says he lived in the 6th century BCE, in the same period as Confucius. He is said to have worked as a keeper of royal records in the Zhou court. When the Zhou kingdom began to fall apart, he decided to leave. At the western gate, a guard asked him to write down his wisdom before he left. The result was the Daodejing, a short book of about 5,000 Chinese characters. Then Laozi rode away on a water buffalo and was never seen again. Most modern scholars think this story is a legend. The book was probably written by several people over time, and the oldest parts may come from the 4th century BCE, not the 6th. The name 'Laozi' may have been a title for a group of teachers rather than one person. But the book itself is real, and it has shaped Chinese culture for more than two thousand years. The Daodejing is the founding text of Daoism (also spelled Taoism). Daoism became one of the three main traditions of Chinese thought, alongside Confucianism and Buddhism. These three shaped China, Korea, Japan, and Vietnam for centuries. Daoism is both a philosophy and, later, a religion with temples, priests, and rituals. Laozi himself, real or not, became a god in the religious tradition. Statues of him stand in temples across China and East Asia today.

Origin
China
Lifespan
c. 6th century BCE (traditional) / 4th century BCE (modern view)
Era
Ancient
Subjects
Philosophy Daoism Ethics Political Thought Chinese Thought
Why They Matter

Laozi matters for three reasons. First, the Daodejing is one of the most translated books in the world, after the Bible. Its short verses have spoken to readers across cultures and centuries. People find in it a calm voice that questions power, ambition, and noise. In a busy modern world, many readers turn to it for a different way of thinking about life.

Second, Laozi's ideas shaped East Asian culture deeply. Chinese art, poetry, medicine, and martial arts all carry his influence. The idea of working with nature rather than forcing it appears in Chinese landscape painting, in tai chi, in traditional medicine, and in gardens. Without Laozi, East Asian culture would look very different.

Third, Laozi offers a real alternative to some common Western ideas. Most Western thought praises action, effort, and control. Laozi praises stillness, yielding, and letting things happen. He does not mean being lazy. He means acting in harmony with the way things naturally move, rather than forcing results. This idea, called 'wu wei' or 'non-action', is hard to grasp but important. For students, meeting Laozi can open a different way of thinking about success, leadership, and daily life. It does not replace other ways of thinking. It sits beside them and offers a useful contrast.

Key Ideas
1
The Dao: The Way of Things
2
Wu Wei: Acting Without Forcing
3
The Strength of Water
Key Quotations
"The Dao that can be spoken of is not the true Dao. The name that can be named is not the true name."
— Daodejing, Chapter 1
This is the opening of the Daodejing and one of the most famous lines in Chinese philosophy. Laozi starts by warning us: the moment we try to put the Dao into words, we miss it. Words divide things. They put boundaries around ideas. But the Dao is the flowing whole of reality, which has no boundaries. This does not mean we should stop talking. The book itself uses words, after all. It means we should not confuse our words for the thing they describe. For students, this is a useful starting point for any serious study. The map is not the land. The description is not the experience. Even the best book about swimming cannot teach you to swim.
"A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step."
— Daodejing, Chapter 64
This is perhaps the most famous line from the Daodejing in the Western world. It is often quoted as simple motivation. The full context is more interesting. Laozi is talking about how all great things start small. A tall tree begins as a seed. A tall tower begins with one basket of earth. A long journey begins with one step. The point is not just 'start now'. The point is that big results come from small, patient beginnings, and if you try to rush them, you ruin them. For students, this is a useful reminder that patience is part of any serious achievement. Grand plans often fail. Small daily steps often succeed.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When introducing students to Chinese thought
How to introduce
Explain that Chinese thought has three main traditions: Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism. Most educated Chinese people for centuries have held pieces of all three. Laozi is the legendary founder of Daoism. Read a few short lines from the Daodejing aloud. Let the class notice how different the style is from a Western textbook. This prepares students to read Laozi on his own terms, not through assumptions from other traditions.
Emotional Intelligence When discussing effort, stress, and forcing things
How to introduce
Ask students about a time when they tried too hard at something. Trying to sleep when you cannot sleep. Trying to be funny at a party. Trying to force a friendship. Often the harder we push, the worse it gets. Introduce Laozi's idea of 'wu wei', acting without forcing. This is not a rule about being lazy. It is a suggestion that sometimes letting go works better than pushing. Students usually recognise this from their own experience.
Further Reading

For a first introduction, the Daodejing itself is short and can be read in an afternoon. The translation by Stephen Mitchell is popular but takes liberties; the translation by D.C. Lau (Penguin Classics) is more reliable for beginners. The BBC's In Our Time has an episode on Daoism. For a clear short guide, Hans-Georg Moeller's Daoism Explained is a good starting point. For visual learners, videos on YouTube by the School of Life and Einzelgänger give friendly introductions.

Key Ideas
1
The Useful Nothing
2
The Sage Ruler
3
Returning to Simplicity
Key Quotations
"When the best leader's work is done, the people say: 'We did it ourselves.'"
— Daodejing, Chapter 17
Laozi describes four kinds of leaders. The worst is hated by the people. Next is the leader the people fear. Next is the leader the people love. The best of all is the leader the people barely notice. When that leader's work is done, the people think they did it themselves. This is a striking idea about leadership. It says the best leader does not want credit. The best leader creates conditions for others to succeed and then steps back. For students, this is a useful test. Think of a teacher, coach, or leader you admire. Did they make you feel powerful, or did they make themselves look powerful? The difference matters.
"Knowing others is intelligence. Knowing yourself is true wisdom. Mastering others is strength. Mastering yourself is true power."
— Daodejing, Chapter 33
Laozi distinguishes between two pairs: understanding and self-understanding, controlling and self-control. He values the second of each pair more highly. Understanding other people is useful, but it can become a way of manipulating them. Understanding yourself is harder and more important. Controlling other people looks impressive, but it often fails and always costs something. Controlling your own reactions is quiet, invisible work, but it is where real power lies. For students, this quote offers a different picture of success. The person who can stay calm when attacked, who can resist a tempting offer, who can keep working when bored, has a kind of power that cannot be taken away.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Creative Expression When discussing the role of empty space in art and design
How to introduce
Show students a traditional Chinese landscape painting. Notice how much of the paper is left blank. The empty space is not a mistake. It is part of the art. Compare with a crowded modern advertisement. Introduce Laozi's passage about the useful nothing: the clay pot, the room, the wheel. Artists and designers across East Asia have used this idea for centuries. Students can apply it to their own work: a photograph, a page of writing, a music composition, a piece of design.
Ethical Thinking When students discuss leadership and power
How to introduce
Share Laozi's four types of leader: hated, feared, loved, and barely noticed. Ask students which kind of leader they have met in school, sports, or family life. Which worked best? Laozi ranks the barely-noticed leader highest, which surprises many students. Discuss why. A leader who creates conditions for others to succeed does not need to be praised. This opens a conversation about the difference between looking powerful and being genuinely helpful.
Critical Thinking When teaching students to read short, dense texts
How to introduce
Give students one short chapter of the Daodejing, perhaps five or six lines. Ask them to sit with it for several minutes without explaining anything. Then ask what they notice. Then ask what they do not understand. Laozi's style is the opposite of a clear, explained textbook. It invites the reader to work. This is a useful exercise in slow, careful reading, a skill students need for poetry, scripture, legal texts, and any writing that rewards rereading.
Further Reading

For deeper reading, try the translation by Roger Ames and David Hall, which includes a thoughtful introduction. The Zhuangzi, the other great Daoist text, is longer and more playful, and repays careful reading. Livia Kohn's Introducing Daoism covers both philosophical and religious Daoism. For Chinese philosophy more broadly, Bryan Van Norden's Introduction to Classical Chinese Philosophy places Laozi alongside Confucius, Mencius, and others.

Key Ideas
1
The Problem of the Historical Laozi
2
Laozi and Confucius: A Deep Debate
3
Daoism as Philosophy and Religion
Key Quotations
"Govern a great nation as you would cook a small fish."
— Daodejing, Chapter 60
This short line is one of the Daodejing's most political statements. When you cook a small fish, you do not stir it constantly, or it falls apart. You let it cook. Laozi suggests that governing a nation works the same way. Too many new laws, too much interference, too much reform, and the society falls apart. Good government is light government. This is a surprising view. Many thinkers, then and now, think leaders should always be doing something. Laozi thinks they should mostly let things alone. Later Chinese rulers who tried 'wu wei' government, like some emperors of the early Han dynasty, actually produced long periods of peace and prosperity. For advanced students, the quote raises real questions about when action helps and when it harms.
"He who knows does not speak. He who speaks does not know."
— Daodejing, Chapter 56
This is one of the Daodejing's most famous paradoxes. It seems to attack the book itself, which is made of speech. Many readers have noticed this problem. One answer is that Laozi is warning against loud, confident talkers who claim to understand everything. Such people usually do not. A person with deep understanding is more cautious. They speak only when needed. They listen more than they talk. Their silence is not empty; it is full of attention. Another answer is that the deepest things really cannot be said directly. They have to be shown, pointed at, hinted at. The Daodejing itself often works this way, using images rather than arguments. For advanced students, this quote opens a real question: what can be taught by words, and what can only be learned by experience?
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When exploring how philosophical texts become religious traditions
How to introduce
Explain the two Daoisms: philosophical Daoism (the Daodejing and Zhuangzi) and religious Daoism (temples, priests, Laozi as a god). Show images of a Daoist temple. Ask students how a philosophical text can give birth to a religion. Compare with other cases, such as the relationship between early Buddhist philosophy and later Buddhist temples, or between the Hebrew Bible and rabbinic Judaism. This is a mature discussion about how traditions change over time.
Critical Thinking When students encounter texts with uncertain authorship
How to introduce
Tell students that most scholars doubt Laozi was a single historical person. Discuss the evidence: the legend comes 400 years after the supposed life, the text shows signs of multiple hands, archaeological finds show shorter early versions. Ask: does it matter? The Daodejing exists. It has shaped millions of readers. Does knowing its author matter as much as knowing the text? This question applies to other cases: the Homeric poems, parts of the Bible, some folk traditions. It teaches students to separate the value of a text from its author.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Wu wei means doing nothing and being passive.

What to teach instead

This is the most common misunderstanding of Laozi. Wu wei does not mean being lazy or doing nothing. It means acting without force, working with the nature of a situation rather than against it. A skilled craftsperson uses wu wei when they feel the grain of the wood and cut with it. A good swimmer uses wu wei when they move with the current. A wise parent uses wu wei when they guide a child without controlling every moment. Wu wei is still action. It is just action that does not waste energy fighting natural patterns. Students who take it as 'do nothing' miss the whole point.

Common misconception

Laozi definitely lived in the 6th century BCE and met Confucius.

What to teach instead

Most modern scholars doubt this. The story comes from the historian Sima Qian, writing about 400 years later. Sima Qian himself gives several versions and admits they do not agree. The Daodejing shows signs of being written in stages between the 4th and 2nd centuries BCE. Some scholars think Laozi was never a single person; 'Laozi' means 'Old Master' and may have been a title for a tradition of teachers. The text is real and important. The author remains uncertain. This is true of many ancient texts.

Common misconception

Daoism is about worshipping nature as a religion.

What to teach instead

This mixes up two things. Philosophical Daoism, in the Daodejing, is a way of thinking about life and nature. It has no gods or worship. Religious Daoism developed later, from about the 2nd century CE, and does have gods, temples, and rituals. In religious Daoism, Laozi himself became a god. But philosophical Daoism is not a religion in the usual sense. Readers should not approach the Daodejing as a sacred scripture like the Bible. It is a philosophical poem. The religious tradition that grew around it is a separate and later development.

Common misconception

The Daodejing is a simple book of life advice, like a self-help book.

What to teach instead

The Daodejing can be read for life advice, and many readers find practical wisdom in it. But it is also a difficult philosophical text. Its short verses often contain paradoxes and puzzles. Chinese scholars have written commentaries on it for two thousand years and still disagree about what it means. Reading it as simple self-help misses its depth. The book rewards slow, careful, repeated reading. Students who meet Laozi only through short quotes on social media miss most of what he has to offer.

Intellectual Connections
In Dialogue With
Confucius
Confucius and Laozi are the two great voices of early Chinese thought. Traditional stories say they met, but this is probably legend. Their ideas, however, are in real dialogue. Confucius taught that people become good through learning rituals, duties, and proper roles. Laozi thought rituals were signs that natural goodness had been lost. This debate runs through all later Chinese thought. Most educated Chinese held both views at once: Confucian in public life, Daoist in private moments. Reading them together gives students a fuller picture of Chinese philosophy.
Complements
Dogen
The 13th-century Japanese Zen master Dogen was shaped by centuries of East Asian thought that included Daoism. Zen Buddhism itself grew partly from the meeting of Buddhism with Chinese Daoist ideas. Dogen's attention to nature, to simple acts, and to thought without forcing ideas has deep roots in Laozi. The two thinkers never met, but Dogen could not have written as he did without the Daoist tradition Laozi represents. Reading them together shows how ideas travel across centuries and cultures.
Complements
Nagarjuna
The Indian Buddhist philosopher Nagarjuna worked on ideas of emptiness that resemble some Daoist ideas about non-being. When Buddhism travelled from India to China, it was often understood through Daoist language. Chinese translators used Daoist terms to explain Buddhist ideas. This created new forms of thought, including Zen Buddhism. Laozi and Nagarjuna worked in different traditions, but their ideas met in China and shaped each other's later readers.
Anticipates
Friedrich Nietzsche
Nietzsche and Laozi lived more than two thousand years apart and in very different cultures, but some of their ideas echo. Both were suspicious of loud moral rules. Both thought forcing life into fixed categories damages it. Both wrote in short, poetic forms rather than long arguments. Nietzsche read some Asian thought, though his knowledge of Laozi was limited. Students who enjoy Nietzsche often find Laozi a useful counterpart: a calmer, older voice asking related questions.
In Dialogue With
Marcus Aurelius
The Roman Stoic emperor Marcus Aurelius and Laozi both wrote short, private-style reflections on how to live. Both valued calm, self-control, and working with nature rather than against it. Both were suspicious of loud ambition. The two traditions, Stoicism and Daoism, developed entirely separately, but they often reach similar practical advice. For students, reading them together shows how different cultures can arrive at related insights about living well.
Complements
Robin Wall Kimmerer
The contemporary Indigenous botanist Robin Wall Kimmerer writes about working with nature rather than dominating it. Her view of plants and land as teachers echoes some Daoist ideas, though it comes from Potawatomi tradition, not from Chinese thought. Both Laozi and Kimmerer offer alternatives to the modern Western habit of forcing nature to serve human goals. Teaching them together shows that similar wisdom has grown up in different parts of the world, independently.
Further Reading

For research-level engagement, the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on Laozi is excellent. A.C. Graham's Disputers of the Tao remains a major study of early Chinese philosophy. For the historical problem of Laozi's existence, Mark Csikszentmihalyi and Philip Ivanhoe's edited volume Religious and Philosophical Aspects of the Laozi is important. The Guodian manuscripts, discovered in 1993, are discussed in Robert Henricks's Lao Tzu's Tao Te Ching: A Translation of the Startling New Documents Found at Guodian. For religious Daoism, Isabelle Robinet's Taoism: Growth of a Religion is authoritative.