The question arises from a Lao Tzu quote that I recently stumbled across:
“A person of great virtue is like the flowing water”, Tao Te
Ching, Chapter
8.
The passage appeals to me because it seems to accord with my
casual observation that good behaviour seems effortless for some people. That may
link to Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi's theory
of the flow experience where people in high challenge situations are so
deeply involved in what they are doing that nothing else seems to matter. The
good people I have in mind would not give much thought to judgements that
others might make about their behaviour.
I will return to Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi's theory later, but first I want to look
for clues about the intuitions that Lao Tzu was hoping to convey. To view the
quote in context, I have chosen a translation by Red Pine (Bill Porter) who
also provides readers with commentary of sages and other translators. Chapter 8
reads:
“The best are like water
bringing help to all
without competing
choosing what others
avoid
they thus approach
the Tao
dwelling with earth
thinking with depth
helping with kindness
speaking with honesty
governing with peace
working with skill
and moving with time
and because they don’t compete they aren’t maligned.”
There is no explicit mention of “flow” in that translation
or in the associated commentary, but it still seems consistent with the imagery
of flowing water.
In his commentary, Chuck Gullion, the Libertarian Taoist, sums it up:
“It all boils down to being content to simply be yourself.
We expend way too much effort comparing and competing with others. Lao Tzu is
wanting to show us a better Way. Be like water!”
Red Pine notes that some translators have difficulty in
accepting that kindness is the correct word in the line “helping with
kindness”, because of Lao Tzu’s professed “disdain for the social virtues”. In An
Introduction to Daoist Philosophy (previously
discussed here) Steve
Coutinho explains that Lao Tze opposes cultivation of the ethical virtues
(including humanity and rightness) on the grounds that cultivation converts the
virtues into objects of desire, thus becoming an obstacle to flourishing. Paradoxically,
much of the Tao Te Ching presupposes “recognizably ethical values” (pp 64-5).
In Csikszentmihalyi's view, the flow experience requires cultivation. He suggests that the normal condition of the mind is one of informational disorder, with conflicting desires, intentions and thoughts jostling each other in consciousness. Innate talents cannot develop unless a person learns to control attention to get the heart will and mind on the same page. Flow tends to occur when a person faces a clear set of goals that require appropriate responses.
Csikszentmihalyi’s perception of good is activity leading to the increase of
complexity and order, while evil is analogous to entropy:
“Good is the creative overcoming of inertia, the energy that
leads to the evolution of human consciousness. To act in terms of new
principles of organization is always more difficult, and requires more effort
and energy. The ability to do so is what has been known as virtue” (Loc
2031/2382).
The idea of evolution toward greater complexity has
intellectual appeal, but “creative overcoming” seems far removed from the idea
that goodness is like flowing water. Csikszentmihalyi may even be seeking to
distance his view of flow from that imagery, because he suggests that the evil
which causes pain and suffering usually involves “taking the course of least
resistance”, for example acting “in terms of instinct alone”.
Would acceptance of the imagery of goodness as being like
flowing water be likely to tempt people to view instinctive “red in tooth and
claw” aspects of nature as providing reason to accept that “might is right” in
human conduct?
To answer that question, it is helpful to consider the view
of Zhuangzi, a Daoist philosopher who followed Lao
Tzu. Zhuangzi observed that there must be genuine humanity before there can be
genuine understanding of the relationship between what is human and what is
natural. Coutinho notes:
“According to Zhuangzi, there is something salvageable about
our humanity: it is not pure artifice. There is a central core of genuineness
that is natural. When we nurture this genuine humanity, we reconnect with the
natural world, become more distanced from the everyday hopes, fears, and
anxieties that plague us, and are more tranquil and accepting of all our
circumstances” (p 112).
As I see it, cultural evolution has left us with intuitions
that it is good to be the kind of person who manages his or her own life wisely
in ways that respect the natural rights of others. We greatly admire those who bring
out the best in the people they interact with most closely. Our language
reflects an understanding that humane conduct is ethical. Cruelty is often
described as inhuman. We have come to perceive voluntary cooperation for mutual
benefit as good, and predation as bad. It should be easy for us to understand that
a spontaneous order evolving from the actions of free individuals is the most
natural form of human society.
In that context, the imagery of a good person being like
flowing water may help people to understand that ethical conduct is integral to
their human nature. That kind of imagery might help people to set goals that
are consistent with their values and to stay on course toward acquiring better
habits, perhaps ultimately reaching the point where goodness becomes effortless.