Aztec Philosophy
Aztec Philosophy
Aztec Philosophy
1. Introduction
a. Who were the Aztecs?
The indigenous peoples of Mesoamerica enjoy a long and rich tradition of philosophical speculation. The Aztecs and other
Nahuatl-speaking peoples of the High Central Plateau of Mexico were no exception. Nahuatl-speaking peoples originated in
northern Mexico and southwestern United States, migrating south in successive waves to the central Mexican highlands during
the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. Nahuatl is a member of the Uto-Aztecan linguistic family and related to Ute, Hopi, and
Comanche. Nahuatl-speakers included among others the Mexicas (known to us but not to themselves as Aztecs), Texcocans,
Chalcans, and Tlaxcaltecs. Due to their common language and culture, scholars standardly refer to Nahuatl-speakers as
Nahuas, and to their culture, as Nahua culture. I follow this practice here. Nahua culture flourished in the fifteenth- and
sixteenth- centuries prior to 1521 (CE), the fall of the Aztec capital, Tenochtitlan, and official date of the Conquest.
2. Metaphysics
a. Teotl as Ultimate Reality and Root Metaphor
At the heart of Nahua philosophy stands the thesis that there exists a single, dynamic, vivifying, eternally self-generating and
self-regenerating sacred power, energy or force: what the Nahuas called teotl (see Boone 1994; Burkhart 1989; Klor de Alva
1979; Monaghan 2000; H.B. Nicholson 1971; Read 1998; Townsend 1972). Elizabeth Boone (1994:105) writes, The real
meaning of [teotl] is spirit a concentration of power as a sacred and impersonal force. According to Jorge Klor de Alva
(1979:7), Teotl implies something more than the idea of the divine manifested in the form of a god or gods; instead it signifies
the sacred in more general terms. The multiplicity of gods in official, state sanctioned Aztec religion does not gainsay this claim,
for this multiplicity was merely the sacred, merely teotl, separated, as it were by the prism of human sight, into its many
attributes (I. Nicholson 1959:63f).
Teotl continually generates and regenerates as well as permeates, encompasses, and shapes the cosmos as part of its endless
process of self-generation-andregeneration. That which humans commonly understand as nature e.g. heavens, earth, rain,
humans, trees, rocks, animals, etc. is generated by teotl, from teotl as one aspect, facet, or moment of its endless process of
self-generation-and-regeneration. Yet teotl is more than the unified totality of things; teotl is identical with everything and
everything is identical with teotl. Since identical with teotl, they cosmos and its contents ultimately transcend such dichotomies
as personal vs. impersonal, animate vs. inanimate, etc. As the single, all-encompassing life force of the universe, teotl vivifies the
cosmos and its contents. Lastly, teotl is both metaphysically immanent and transcendent. It is immanent in that it penetrates
deeply into every detail of the universe and exists within the myriad of created things; it is transcendent in that it is not
exhausted by any single, existing thing.
Nahua metaphysics is processive. Process, movement, becoming and transmutation are essential attributes of teotl. Teotl is
properly understood as ever-flowing and ever-changing energy-in-motion not as a discrete, static entity. Because doing so
better reflects teotls dynamic and processual nature, I suggest (following Coopers [1997] proposal that we treat God of the
mystical teachings of the Jewish Kabbalah as a verb) that we treat the word teotl as a verb denoting process and movement
rather than as a noun denoting a discrete static entity. So construed, teotl refers to the eternal, universal process of teotlizing.
The Nahuas notion of duality contrasts with Zoroastrian-style eschatological dualisms. The latter claim: (1) order (goodness,
life, light) and disorder (evil, death, darkness) are mutually exclusive forces; and (2) order (life, etc.) triumphs over disorder
(death, etc.) at the end of history. Acording to Nahua duality, order and disorder, life and death, etc. alternate endlessly without
resolution. It neither conceives death as inherently evil and life as inherently good nor advocates the conquest of death or the
search for eternal life (see Caso 1958; Burkhart 1989; Carmack, et al. 1996; Hunt 1977; Knab 1995; Leon-Portilla 1963; Lopez
Austin 1988, 1993, 1997; Monaghan 2000; Read 1998; Sandstrom 1991).
The created cosmos consists of the unending, cyclical tug-of-war or dialectical oscillation of these polarities all of which are
the manifold manifestations of teotl. Because of this, the created cosmos is characterized as unstable, transitory, and devoid of
any lasting being, order or structure. Yet teotl is nevertheless characterized by enduring pattern or regularity. How is this so?
Teotl is the dynamic, sacred energy shaping as well as constituting these endless oscillations; it is the immanent balance of the
endless, dialectical alternation of the created universes interdependent polarities.
Because essentially processive and dynamic, teotl is properly characterized neither by being nor not-being but by becoming.
Being and not-being are simply two dialectically interrelated presentations or facets of teotl, and as such inapplicable to teotl
itself. Similarly, teotl is properly understood as neither ordered (law-governed) nor disordered (anarchic) but as unordered.
Indeed, this point is fully general: life/death, active/passive, male/female, etc. are strictly speaking not predicable of teotl. Teotl
captures a tertium quid transcending these dichotomies by being simultaneously neither-alive-nor-dead-yet-both-alive-anddead, simultaneously neither-orderly-nor-disorderly-yet-both-orderly-and-disorderly, etc.
In the end, teotl is essentially an unstructured and unordered, seamless totality. Differentiation, regularity, order, etc. are
simultaneously fictions of human unknowing and artistic-shamanic presentations of teotl. In Western philosophical
terminology, one perhaps best characterizes the radical ontological indeterminacy of Nahua metaphysics as an extreme
nominalist anti-realism, and teotl, as a Kantian-like noumenon.
c. Pantheism
Nahuas philosophers also conceived teotl pantheistically: (a) everything that exists constitutes an all-inclusive and interrelated
unity; (b) this unity is sacred; (c) everything that exists is substantively identical and hence one with the sacred; (d) the sacred is
teotl. There is only one thing, teotl, and all other forms or aspects of reality and existence are identical with teotl; (e) teotl is not a
minded being or person (in the Western sense of having intentional states or the capacity to make decisions). (See Levine 1994
for discussion of pantheism.)
Hunt (1977) and I. Nicholson (1959) offer closely similar interpretations of pre-Hispanic metaphysics. Eva Hunt writes:
reality, nature and experience were nothing but multiple manifestations of a single unity of being The [sacred] was both the
one and the many It was also multiple, fluid, encompassing of the whole, its aspects were changing images, dynamic, never
frozen, but constantly recreated, redefined (Hunt 1977:55f.).
Alan Sandstroms ethnography of contemporary Nahuatl-speakers in Veracruz, Mexico, offers a similar interpretation:
everybody and everything is an aspect of a grand, single, overriding unity. Separate beings and objects do not existthat is an
illusion peculiar to human beings. In daily life we divide up our environment into discrete units so that we can talk about it and
manipulate it for our benefit. But it is an error to assume that the diversity we create in our lives is the way reality is actually
structured everything is connected at a deeper level, part of the same basic substratum of being The universe is a deified,
seamless totality (Sandstrom 1991:138).
A further consequence of Nahua monism is the metaphysical impossibility of human beings perceiving de re anything other than
teotl, for teotl is the only thing to be perceived de re! But then how can Nahua tlamatinime claim that humans normally
misperceive and misunderstand teotl? Humans normally perceive and conceive teotl de dicto or under a description, e.g. as
Nezahualcoyotl, as maleness, as death, as night, etc. When doing so they perceive and conceive teotls nahual (self-disguise) and
consequently perceive and conceive teotl in a manner that is ahnelli i.e. untrue, unrooted, inauthentic, unconcealing, and
nondisclosing. It is humans misperceiving and misunderstanding teotl as its disguise (nahual) which prevents them from
seeing teotl (reality) as it really is.
The only way humans experience teotl knowingly is to experience teotl sans description. Humans experience teotl knowingly via
a process of mystical-style union between their hearts and teotl that enables them to experience teotl directly i.e. without
mediation by language, concepts, or categories. One comes to know teotl through teotl. Ones perception and conception are no
longer befogged by the cloud of unknowing (to borrow from the fourteenth century English mystical text by the same name) or
the breath on the mirror (to borrow from the Mayan Popol Vuh) constituted by de dicto perception and conception. Note
however that although metaphysically immanent within human hearts (in keeping with Nahua metaphysical monism), teotl is
nevertheless epistemologically transcendent in the sense that humans are not guaranteed knowledge of teotl.
A fundamental metaphysical difference thus divides the underlying problematics of Nahua and Cartesian-style Western
epistemology. The latter conceives subject and object dualistically and the relationship between subject and object as one
mediated by a veil of perception. The subjects access to the object is indirect, being mediated, for example, by appearances or
representations of the object. The Nahuas epistemological problematic conceives the subject and object monistically and the
relationship between subject and object in terms of a mask. And masks in Mesoamerican epistemology have different properties
than veils.
In their study of masks in Mesoamerican shamanism (in which sixteenth-century Nahua epistemology was deeply rooted and to
which it remained closely related), Markman and Markman (1989:xx) argue that masks simultaneously conceal and reveal the
innermost spiritual force of life itself. For example, the life/death masks mentioned above simultaneously conceal and reveal
the simultaneously neither-alive-nor-dead-yet-both-alive-and-dead figure. The mask does not symbolize, represent, or point to
something deeper, something hiding behind itself, for the simultaneously neither-alive-nor-dead-yet-both-alive-and-dead figure
rests right upon the surface of the figure. The simultaneously neither-alive-nor-dead-yet-both-alive-and-dead figure does not
lurk behind the mask; nor is our access to it obstructed by a veil or representation. It is fully present de re yet hidden de dicto by
our unknowing, i.e. by our normal tendency to misperceive reality as exclusively either dead or alive as opposed to neitheralive-nor-dead-yet-both-alive-and-dead. After years of ritual preparation, Nahua tlamatinime were able to see the life-death
mask de re or unmasked as it were, and in so doing discern the complementary unity and interdependence of life and death.
h. Time-space
Nahua metaphysics conceives time and its various patterns as the dynamic unfolding of teotl. Time and space form an
indistinguisable time-space continuum. The four cardinal directions, for example, are simultaneously directions of space and
time. Weeks, months, seasons, years, and year-clusters all had spatial directions. Time-space is concrete, quantitative, and
qualitative. It does not consist of a uniform succession of qualitatively identical moments, nor is it a neutral frame of reference
abstracted from terrestrial and celestial events and processes. The quantitative dimensions of time-space are inseparable from
its qualitative, symbolic dimensions. Different time-spaces bear different qualities.
All these dimensions coalesced in the activity of Nahua time-space-keeping (astronomy), which included observing, counting,
measuring, interpreting, giving an account of, and creating an artistic-written record of various patterns of time-space. Nahua
time-space-keeping included tonalpohualli (counting the days) or counting the days of the 260-day cycle; xiuhpohualli
(counting the years) or counting the days of the 360+5-day cycle; xiuhmolpilli (binding the years) or counting the 52 years of
the calendar round; counting the 65 years of the cycle of Quetzalcoatl (the Venusian cycle); and counting other cycles in
celestial and terrestrial processes. Nahua time-keepers (cahuipouhqui) were knowledgeable of the time-space rhythms of teotl
and responsible for keeping society and humankind in balance with the cosmos.
Calendrical cycles govern human existence. A persons birth date in the tonalpohualli determines her tonalli: a vital force having
important consequences for her character and destiny. The Nahuas used the tonalpohualli to divine the nature of this force. The
tonalpohualli assigned different daysigns to each day, each daysign having different effects on a persons character and destiny.
Time-space bears destinies, carried burdens, and conveyed these to events falling under its influence. The reckoning of any
period of time-space always leads one to investigate the tonalli or day-time-destiny associated with it. Everything happening
on the earth and in humans lives from birth to death is the outcome of tonalli.
The history of the universe falls into five successive ages or suns, each representing the temporary dominance of a different
aspect of teotl. The present era, the Age of the Fifth Sun, is the final one and the one in which the Aztecs believed they lived.
Like its four predecessors, the Fifth Sun is destined to cataclysmic destruction, at which time the earth will be destroyed by
earthquakes and humankind will vanish forever. (For further discussion, see Lopez Austin 1988, 1997; Leon-Portilla 1963; Read
1998; Carrasco 1990; Maffie [forthcoming].)
1989). Humans lose their balance easily on tlalticpac and so suffer misfortune frequently. They therefore desparately need
guidance.
Nahua tlamatinime conceived the raison detre of philosophy in terms of this situation, and turned to philosophy for practicable
answers to what they regarded as the defining question of human existence: How can humans maintain their balance upon the
slippery earth? This situation and question jointly constitute the problematic which functions as the defining framework for
Nahua philosophy. Morally, epistemologically, and aesthetically appropriate human activity are defined in terms of the goal of
humans maintaining their balance upon the slippery earth. All human activities are to be directed towards this aim. At bottom,
Nahua philosophy is essentially pragmatic.
Because of this I suggest Nahua philosophy is better understood as a way-seeking rather than as a truth-seeking philosophy.
Way-seeking philosophies such as classical Taoism, classical Confucianism, and contemporary North American pragmatism
adopt as their defining question, What is the way? or What is the path?. In contrast, truth-seeking philosophies such as
most European philosophies adopt as their defining question, What is the truth? (For discussion see Hall 2001; Hall and Ames
1998; Maffie [ed] 2001.)
To the question, How can humans maintain their balance upon the slippery earth?, Nahua tlamatinime answered, Humans
must conduct every aspect of their lives wisely. To the question, What is the best path for humans to follow on the narrow,
jagged surface of the earth?, they answered, The balanced, middle path since it avoids excess and imbalance, hence mistepping
and slipping, hence misfortune and ill-being.
humanity dead (Lopez Austin 1988:I,p.189). They are lump[s] of flesh with two eyes (Sahagun 1953-82:X,pp.3,11) and
defective human weight[s] (Sahagun 1953-82:X,p.11, trans. by Lopez Austin 1988:II,p.271).
The beastly apparent-human eschews the company of other humans and in so doing forsakes his humanness in yet another way.
Humans are essentially social; they need the company of others in order to become genuine human beings. Humans are born
faceless (i.e. incomplete or with undeveloped powers of judgment) and need other humans for the education and discipline
needed for acquiring a face, becoming balanced, and becoming fully human. Developing proper face and heart is only
possible through the opportunities provided by well-ordered social living. Unstable, foolish, and diseased, the loner slips
constantly upon the path of life.
The notion of maintaining ones balance plays a central role in other aspects of Nahua thought. Ones mind and body possess or
lack balance, and are healthy or not depending upon whether they possess the proper balance of opposing polarities such as hot
and cold, dry and wet, etc. (Lopez Austin 1988:I,ch.8). Ones home, neighborhood, polity, and environment are healthy or
diseased depending upon whether they are balanced or not. Personal, domestic, and social balancedness are interdependent.
Imbalance, iimpurity, and ill-being are contagious.
The Nahuas believed the human body serves as the temporary location for three different animistic forces, each residing in its
own center. Tonalli (from the root tona, heat) resides in the head. It provides the body with character, vigor, and the energy
needed for growth and development. Individuals acquire their tonalli from the sun. A persons tonalli may leave her body during
dreams and shamanic journeys. Tonalli is ritually introduced into an infant as one of her animistic entities. It is closely united to
a person as her link to the universe and as determining factor of her destiny. Everything belonging to a human by virtue of her
relation to the cosmos received the name of tonalli. Teyolia (that which gives life to people) resides in the heart. It provides
memory, vitality, inclination, emotion, knowledge, and wisdom. Unlike tonalli, ones teyolia is not separable while alive. It goes
beyond after death and enjoys a postmortem existence in the world of the dead. The Nahuas likened teyolia to divine fire
(Carrasco 1990:69). Finally, ihiyotl (breath, respiration) resides in the liver. It provides passion, cupidity, bravery, hatred, love,
and happiness.
Every human is the living center and confluence of these three forces. They direct humans physiological and psychological
processes, giving each person her own unique character. All three must operate harmoniously with one another in order to
produce a mentally, physically, and morally pure, upright, whole, and balanced person. Disturbance of any one affects the other
two. Only during life on earth are all three forces fully integrated within humans. After death, each goes its own way.
Lastly, individuals possess free will within the constraints imposed by their tonalli. One is born with either favorable or
unfavorable tonalli and with a corresponding predetermined character. While this places certain constraints upon what one may
accomplish, one freely chooses what to make of ones tonalli within these limits. Someone born with favorable tonalli may
squander it through improper action; someone with unfavorable tonalli may neutralize its adverse effects through knowledge of
the sacred calendar and careful selection of actions. (For further discussion, see Lopez Austin 1988, 1997; J. Furst 1995;
Carrasco 1990; Sandstrom 1991.)
4. Epistemology
a. The Raison Detre of Epistemology
The philosophical problematic above defines the raison detre of Nahua epistemology. The aim of cognition from the
epistemological point of view is walking in balance upon the slippery earth, and epistemologically appropriate inquiry is that
which promotes this aim. Nahua epistemology does not pursue goals such as truth for truths sake, correct description, and
accurate representation; nor is it motivated by the question What is the (semantic) truth about reality? Knowing (tlamatiliztli)
is performative, creative, and participatory, not discursive, passive or theoretical. It is concrete, not abstract; a knowing how, not
a knowing that.
b. Truth as Well-Rootedness-cum-Alethia
Nahua epistemology conceived knowing (tlamatiliztli) in terms of neltiliztli. Scholars standardly translate neltiliztli (and its
cognates) as truth (and its cognates) (Karttunen 1983; Gingerich 1987; Leon-Portilla 1963). However, unlike most Western
philosophers, Nahua philosophers did not understand truth in terms of correspondence (or coherence). According to LeonPortilla (1963:8), `truth was to be identified with well-grounded stability [well-foundedness or well-rootedness]. To say a
person cognizes truly is therefore to say she cognizes with well-grounded stability or well-rootedly. Nahua philosophers thus
possessed a concept of truth (neltiliztli) but they conceived truth in terms of well-grounded stability, well-foundedness, and wellrootedness not in terms of correspondence, aboutness, representation, reference, fit, or successful description. In short, they
understood neltiliztli (truth) non-semantically.
Willard Gingerich (1987:102f.) defends Leon-Portillas translation-interpretation of neltiliztli. He points out that truth occurs
in the early post-Conquest sources more often in its adverbial form, nelli, meaning truly or with truth (which I believe
reflects the Nahuas processive metaphysics). However, Gingerich contends well-rootedness does not exhaust the full meaning of
neltiliztli. The Nahuas understanding of neltiliztli contained an ineliminable Heideggerian component: non-referential alethia
[i.e.] disclosure, (1987:104), unconcealedness (1987:102), self-deconcealing (1987:105), and unhiddenness (1987:105).
That which is neltiliztli is both well-rooted and non-referentially unconcealing or disclosing. Nahuas understood neltiliztli
(truth) non-semantically, i.e. in terms other than correspondence, reference, representation, and aboutness. In sum, Nahua
epistemology conceives neltiliztli in terms of well-rootedness-cum-alethia.
The Nahuas characterized persons, things, activities, and utterances equally and without equivocation in terms of neltiliztli, and
understood neltiliztli in terms of well-rootedness in teotl. That which is well-rooted in teotl is genuine, true, authentic, and wellbalanced as well as non-referentially disclosing and unconcealing of teotl (Gingerich 1987, 1988; Maffie 2002). Created things
exist along a continuum ranging from those that are well-rooted in teotl (i.e. nelli) and hence authentically present and embody
teotl as well as disclose and unconceal teotl, at one end, to those things that are poorly rooted in teotl (i.e. ahnelli) and hence
neither authentically embody and present teotl nor disclose and unconceal teotl, at the other end. The former, which include fine
jade and well-crafted song-poems (flower and song), enjoy sacred presence.
The wise man: a light, a torch, a stout torch that does not smoke.
A perforated mirror, a mirror pierced on both sides.
His are the black and red ink, his are the illuminated manuscripts, he studies the illuminated manuscripts.
He himself is writing and wisdom.
He is the path, the true way for others.
He directs people and things; he is a guide in human affairs.
Teacher of truth, he never ceases to admonish.
He makes wise the countenances of others; to them he gives a face; he leads them to develop it.
He opens their ears; he enlightens them.
He puts a mirror before others, he makes them prudent, cautious; he causes a face to appear on them.
He attends to things; he regulates their path, he arranges and commands.
He applies his light to the world.
Thanks to him people humanize their will and receive a strict education.
(Codice Matritense de la Real Academia, VIII,fol.118, r.- 118,v. trans. by Leon-Portilla 1963:10-11).
Face and heart (in ixtli in yollotl) expresses the notion of character (Leon-Portilla 1963). To possess a perfected, wise face and
good heart is to exhibit sound judgment and sentiment: ones psychological, intellectual, and physical behavior promotes
balance-and-purity and averts imbalance-and-impurity. The person with good heart, humane and stout has is wise in the ways
of teotl. The person lacking such a heart has an enshrouded heart (Leon-Portilla 1963:175). He is mad, foolish, and dull-witted.
The Nahuas likened the person with a wise face and good heart to well-formed quetzal plumage, jade, and turquoise. These
objects faithfully and authentically present teotls balance-and-purity. They are green, the color of balance, purity, life, renewal,
and well-being (Sahagun 1953-82:XI, pp.224,248). As one of Sahaguns Nahua informants put it:
the pure life is considered as a well-smoked, precious turquoise: as a round, reedlike, well-formed, precious green stone. There
is no blotch, no blemish. Those perfect in their hearts, in their manner of life, those of pure life like these are the precious
green stone, the precious turquoise, which are glistening They are those of pure life, those called good-hearted (Sahagun 195382:VI, p.113).
Living wisely also requires performing ritual activities devoted to restoring lost balance-and-purity or to averting future
imbalance-and-impurity. Such activities included penitence, mortification, and straightening ones heart (neyolmelahualiztli;
confession) (Burkhart 1989:214). These helped restore balance to ones heart by purifying it of tlazolli, by casting off tlatlacolli,
and returning it to its proper shape. Humans also acquired moral merit through self-deprivation, moderation, and penitential
self-denial.
7. Aesthetics
The Nahuas used the expression flower and song to refer to artistic activity and its products. Broadly construed, flower and
song refers to creative activity generally including composing-performing song-poems, painting-writing, playing music,
featherworking, and goldsmithing. However, translating-interpreting flower and song in this manner is potentially misleading.
For the Nahuas did not have a concept of art in the modern Western sense of art for arts sake i.e. in the sense that art and
works of art deserve the title by virtue of being products and activities with no other purpose than their contemplation
(Wilkinson 1998:383). Since the Nahuas did not produce objects soley for aesthetic contemplation, we might, then, rightly say
that in this sense the Nahuas did not do or make art. They had no notion of a distinctly aesthetic as opposed to moral or
epistemological point of view from which to judge the value (or beauty) of human creativity activity and its products. Rather,
Nahua philosophers conceived aesthetics in terms of the problematic defining all philosophical speculation: helping humans
maintain their balance on the slippery surface of the earth. As with all other human activities, creative activity and its products
are meant to help humans maintain their balance and evaluated accordingly. Aesthetics is thus interwoven with moral and
epistemological purposes. That which is aesthetically valuable (or beautiful) is also morally valuable and epistemologically
valuable (and conversely). It is the well-rooted, well-balanced, true, disclosing, and pure. That which is aesthetically valueless
(or ugly) is disordered, duplicitous, perverse, unbalanced, impure, and deceptive since unrooted, undisclosing, inauthentic, and
false.
Nahuas aesthetics views creative activity and its products in the following terms. First, creative activity and its products are
aesthetically valuable if and only if they genuinely present and truly disclose teotl. Like well-formed jade, turquoise, and quetzal
plumes, they authentically unconceal balance-and-purity.
Secondly, creative activity and its products are aesthetically valuable if and only if they contribute positively to the existing store
of balance-and-purity in the cosmos. Works of art accomplish this by faithfully presenting and hence actually embodying
balance-and-purity, i.e. by literally being well-balanced and pure.
Third, aesthetically valuable creative activity and products must spring forth from a morally and epistemologically qualifed,
teotlized heart, and hence burgeon from and be well-rooted in teotl. The accomplished artist is necessarily morally upright and
knowledgable of teotl. Fools and rogues are incapable of creating beautiful works of art.
Fourth, aesthetically valuable creative activity and its products must have the appropriate effects upon their audience. Beautiful
art improves and uplifts its audience psychologically, physically, morally, and epistemologically. It promotes psychological and
physical balance-and-purity, moral righteousness, and proper understanding of teotl, and consequently helps humans attain
greater degrees of humaness and well-being. By contrast, ugly art promotes physical and psychological imbalance-and-impurity,
immorality, depravity, misunderstanding, and ill-being.
8. Conclusion
The ephemerality and fragility of earthly life loomed large over Conquest-era the Nahuatl-speaking peoples. Nahua wisdom
aimed at enabling them to make the best of life under such circumstances by helping them to walk in balance upon the slippery
earth. Walking in balance was simultaneously a moral, epistemological, practical, and aesthetic notion: it involved ones being
well-rooted, authentic, knowledgeable, true, pure, morally upright, and beautiful. A life wisely lived offered humans a fleeting,
momentary repose from the inevitable sorrow, suffering, and transience of earthly existence. It enabled humans, if only
momentarily, to flower and sing.
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