Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Non-Action in the Face of Mortality

Wu wei—effortless action—reveals how to live authentically toward death by ceasing forced resistance to finitude.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Wu wei, the Taoist principle of non-forcing action, directly addresses Heidegger's anxiety about being-toward-death. Rather than frantically grasping for permanence or denying mortality through busyness, wu wei teaches releasing struggle against the inevitable. Laozi suggests that authentic existence flows with reality as it is, not as we wish it to be. In confronting death, wu wei becomes the practice of surrendering rigid control, allowing natural acceptance of life's impermanence. This is not passivity but aligned action—moving with time's current rather than against it. By practicing wu wei, one stops the exhausting pretense of immortality and finds freedom in acknowledging finitude. The sage recognizes death not as enemy but as the grain of existence itself, and acts accordingly with grace and presence rather than denial.

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The Examined Path Through Heidegger's being-toward-death
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