From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

quing?

Hey, how about a few less references that require registration?

Also, the chinese character for quing (the musical instrument references in this article) would be nice. I can't find this in any pinyin -> hanzi (kangxi) dictionary, and indeed the "qui" combination seems extremely improbable in hanyu pinyin. What romanization system is this using?

Gods?

I think this article contains a bit too much 'interpretation' of the reader, who likely believes in sentient gods. Taoists Nei Tan, etc, don't have gods, only Neo-Taoists, who have combined their believes with Confusianism and/or Buddhism may believe in a higher sentient being. Taoists do not even go beyond today, to honor their ancestors, like confusianist do. Please investigate correctly before making World Information of this. -- Maddehaan ( talk) 09:40, 18 September 2010 (UTC) reply

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

quing?

Hey, how about a few less references that require registration?

Also, the chinese character for quing (the musical instrument references in this article) would be nice. I can't find this in any pinyin -> hanzi (kangxi) dictionary, and indeed the "qui" combination seems extremely improbable in hanyu pinyin. What romanization system is this using?

Gods?

I think this article contains a bit too much 'interpretation' of the reader, who likely believes in sentient gods. Taoists Nei Tan, etc, don't have gods, only Neo-Taoists, who have combined their believes with Confusianism and/or Buddhism may believe in a higher sentient being. Taoists do not even go beyond today, to honor their ancestors, like confusianist do. Please investigate correctly before making World Information of this. -- Maddehaan ( talk) 09:40, 18 September 2010 (UTC) reply


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