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中国哲学书电子化计划
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道家 -> 庄子 -> 外篇 -> 达生 -> 13

The artisan Chui made things round (and square) more exactly than if he had used the circle and square.
The operation of his fingers on (the forms of) things was like the transformations of them (in nature),
and required no application of his mind;
and so his Intelligence was entire and encountered no resistance.
To be unthought of by the foot that wears it is the fitness of a shoe;
to be unthought of by the waist is the fitness of a girdle.
When one's wisdom does not think of the right or the wrong (of a question under discussion),
that shows the suitability of the mind (for the question);
when one is conscious of no inward change,
or outward attraction,
that shows the mastery of affairs.
He who perceives at once the fitness, and never loses the sense of it,
has the fitness that forgets all about what is fitting.


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