Laozi — "The truth is not always beautiful, nor beautiful words the truth."
The truth is not always beautiful, nor beautiful words the truth.
The truth is not always beautiful, nor beautiful words the truth.
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"The sage attends to the belly, and not to what he sees."
"All things in the world come from being. And being comes from non-being."
"Govern a great nation as you would cook a small fish. (Do not overdo it.)"
"He who controls others may be powerful, but he who has mastered himself is mightier still."
"Fill your bowls to the brim and they will spill. Sharpen your blade to the sharpest and it will soon blunt."
Reputed founder of Taoism and author of the Tao Te Ching, whose wu wei (effortless action) shaped East Asian philosophy. Closely associated with Zhuangzi (later Taoist who extended Laozi's framework). For an intellectual contrast, see Confucius, near-contemporary Chinese sage of social ritual and duty — Confucius systematized social order through ritual and hierarchy; Laozi argued that all such systems were the disease, not the cure — the two founding poles of Chinese moral philosophy.
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Honest statements often sound blunt, rough, or uncomfortable, while polished and flattering speech tends to hide distortion or deception. What pleases the ear is usually shaped to please rather than to inform, and what actually describes reality rarely arrives wrapped in elegance. The line warns listeners to separate style from substance: do not trust a claim because it sounds graceful, and do not dismiss one because it sounds harsh.
Laozi, credited founder of Taoism and traditionally an archivist in the Zhou royal court, valued simplicity, quietness, and wu wei over ornament and persuasion. The Tao Te Ching repeatedly criticizes clever rhetoric, showy virtue, and rulers who dress up policy in fine language. Having reportedly left civilization in disgust at its decay, he distrusted courtly eloquence, which matches this saying's suspicion of polished words and its preference for plain, unforced truth.
Laozi lived during the late Zhou period, around the 6th century BCE, as central authority crumbled into the rivalries that produced the Warring States era. Courts competed for power by hiring persuaders, diplomats, and ritual specialists skilled in elegant speech, while ordinary people suffered under warfare and taxation. In that climate of propaganda, flattering envoys, and ceremonial language masking brutality, warning against beautiful words was a direct critique of how power sustained itself through rhetoric.
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