"Wu wei" is a Chinese term that translates to "non-doing" or "doing nothing" in English.
"Wu wei" is a Chinese term that translates to "non-doing" or "doing nothing" in English.
It sounds like a pleasant invitation to relax or worse, fall into laziness or apathy. Yet this concept is key to the noblest kind of action according to the philosophy of Daoism – and is at the heart of what it means to follow Dao or The Way.
It sounds like a pleasant invitation to relax or worse, fall into laziness or apathy. Yet this concept is key to the noblest kind of action according to the philosophy of Daoism – and is at the heart of what it means to follow Dao or The Way.
According to the central text of Daoism, the Dao De Jing: ‘The Way never acts yet nothing is left undone’.
According to the central text of Daoism, the Dao De Jing: ‘The Way never acts yet nothing is left undone’.
This is the paradox of wu wei. It doesn’t mean not acting, it means ‘effortless action’ or ‘actionless action’.
This is the paradox of wu wei. It doesn’t mean not acting, it means ‘effortless action’ or ‘actionless action’.
It means being at peace while engaged in the most frenetic tasks so that one can carry these out with maximum skill and efficiency.
It means being at peace while engaged in the most frenetic tasks so that one can carry these out with maximum skill and efficiency.
Something of the meaning of wu wei is captured when we talk of being ‘in the zone’ – at one with what we are doing, in a state of profound concentration and flow."
Something of the meaning of wu wei is captured when we talk of being ‘in the zone’ – at one with what we are doing, in a state of profound concentration and flow."