Again we have, "Without moving, you shall know; without looking, you shall see; without doing, you shall achieve."
Meanwhile, we are left to gather from isolated maxims some shadowy idea of what Lao Tzŭ meant by the Way.
It seems to have been a perpetual accommodation of self to one's surroundings, with the minimum of effort, all progress being spontaneous and in the line of least resistance.
From this it is a mere step to doing nothing at all, the famous doctrine of Inaction, with all its paradoxes, which is really the criterion of Lao Tzŭ's philosophy and will be always associated with Lao Tzŭ's name.
Thus he says, "Perfect virtue does nothing, and consequently there is nothing which it does not do."
Again, "The softest things in the world overcome the hardest; that which has no substance enters where there is no crevice."
"Leave all things to take their natural courses, and do not interfere."
"Only he who does nothing for his life's sake can be truly said to value his life."
"Govern a great nation as you would cook a small fish,"—do not overdo it. Do not try to force results. The well-known Greek injunction, "not to go beyond one's destiny," οὐκ ὑπὲρ μόρον, might well have fallen from Lao Tzŭ's lips.
All this is the Way, which Lao Tzŭ tells us is "like the drawing of a bow,—it brings down the high and exalts the low," reducing all things to a uniform plane.