My sense of Taoism is that it reflects a realistic understanding of spirituality comparable to what we are now beginning to properly glimpse. It is plausible that this is part of the original package provided the Yellow emperor by the 'progenitors' along with script and Chinese medicine.
The need for a prophet is largely dispensed with which is disconcerting for those used to the traditional paths.
Yet there is also sense that we lack understanding of the texts as well. It likely needs inspired interpretation because of the passage of time.
Taoism
https://www.goodreads.com/author_blog_posts/9076860-taoism
Taoism is not a religion, nor a philosophy. It is a
“Way” of life. It is a River. The Tao is the natural order of things. It
is a force that flows through every living and sentient object, as well
as through the entire universe. When the Tao is in balance it is
possible to find perfect happiness.
The text central to all expressions of the Taoist spirit is the Tao-te Ching
(“Classic of the Way and Its Power”), previously known as Lao-tzu after
the name of the mysterious master traditionally said to have been its
author. The cardinal concept is that of the Tao, the ineffable, eternal,
creative reality that is the source and end of all things.
Tao
is the Absolute, the “Uncarved Block” experienced only in mystical
ecstasy. Te is the manifestation of the Tao within all things. Thus, to
possess the fullness of te means to be in perfect harmony with one’s
original nature. According to Chuang-tzu (4th century BC), an individual
in harmony with the Tao comprehends the course of Nature’s constant
change and fears not the rhythm of life and death.
As the Tao
operates impartially in the universe, so should mankind disavow
assertive, purposive action. The Taoist life is not, however, a life of
total inactivity. It is rather a life of nonpurposive action (wu-wei).
Stated positively, it is a life expressing the essence of spontaneity
(tzu-jan, “self-so”).
Taoism has been attributed to three sources, the oldest being the legendary ‘Yellow Emperor‘, (2,704 BCE) but the most famous is Lao Tse’s Tao Teh Ching.
(5th century B.C.) The “Yellow Emperor”, Huangdi, third of ancient
China’s mythological emperors, is a Chinese culture hero and patron
saint of Daoism or Taoism. Huangdi is reputed to have been born about
2,704 BCE. His legendary reign is credited with the introduction of
wooden houses, carts, boats, the bow and arrow, and writing.
Huangdi
himself is credited with defeating “barbarians” in a great battle
somewhere in what is now Shanxi—the victory winning him the leadership
of tribes throughout the Huang He (Yellow River) plain. Some traditions
also credit him with the introduction of governmental institutions and
the use of coined money. Huangdi’s wife was reputed to have discovered
sericulture (silk production) and to have taught women how to breed
silkworms and weave fabrics of silk.
Huangdi
is held up in some ancient sources as a paragon of wisdom whose reign
was a golden age. He is said to have dreamed of an ideal kingdom whose
tranquil inhabitants lived in harmonious accord with the natural law and
possessed virtues remarkably like those espoused by early Taoism. On
waking from his dream, Huangdi sought to inculcate these virtues in his
own kingdom, to ensure order and prosperity among the inhabitants. Upon
his death he was said to have become an immortal. (source: Encyclopedia Britannica)
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