51 pages • 1 hour read
Benjamin HoffA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
Reading Check and Short Answer Questions on key points are designed for guided reading assignments, in-class review, formative assessment, quizzes, and more.
FOREWORD
Reading Check
1. What does Hoff read to his group of peers?
2. With what does a thousand-mile journey start, according to a Taoist saying?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. How does Hoff counter his peer’s beliefs about the Great Masters?
2. What is the significance of this foreword and its purpose to the reader?
Paired Resource
“Similarities Between Eastern and Western Philosophy”
CHAPTERS 1-3
Reading Check
1. How are K’ung Fu-tse’s and Buddha’s reactions described in The Vinegar Tasters?
2. Which two Taoist ancestors does Pooh claim to be his own?
3. What, according to Hoff, are potential problems with scholars studying and explaining Taoism?
4. Which character best demonstrates the idea of “scholarly thought”?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. How does the analogy of The Vinegar Tasters relate to Taoism?
2. How does the “uncarved block” relate to the theme of Simplicity?
3. Why is Pooh seemingly the only one of his friends who is happy?
4. What does Hoff mean when he states “A well-frog cannot imagine the ocean” (Chapter 3)?
Paired Resource
“In Which Pooh Goes Visiting and Gets Stuck in a Tight Space”
CHAPTER 4-6
Reading Check
1. What makes Rabbit attempt to rid the forest of Kanga and Roo?
2. What does Wu Wei mean, literally?
3. Which character is the opposite of Wu Wei?
4. Who were the first Bisy Backsons in the United States?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. In what ways does the “Cottleston Pie Principle” relate to Inner Nature?
2. How does the analogy of Chuang-tse demonstrate the concept of Inner Nature?
3. In relation to Wu Wei¸ how does the man in the analogy survive his fall in the water?
4. How might someone describe an individual labeled as Bisy Backson?
Paired Resource
“Hustle Culture: Is This the End of Rise-and-Grind?”
CHAPTER 7-9
Reading Check
1. In a word, how does the stonecutter feel about each position he turns into during his life?
2. Which character is happy to allow life to unfold naturally?
3. Though people fear silence, what should they strive for?
4. Which three characters does everyone emulate to varying degrees?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. How does “The Stonecutter” analogy relate to Taoism ideals?
2. Why does Hirohito enjoy his absent appointment?
3. Why do the masters of life know The Way?
4. Why do the smartest of people follow the way of Pooh?
Paired Resource
AFTERWORD
Reading Check
1. What is the purpose of the afterword?
2. What are two of the main concepts Hoff summarizes?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. How does Pooh respond when asked how he would describe The Tao of Pooh?
Recommended Next Reads
The Art of Happiness by the Dalai Lama and Howard Cutler
The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho
FOREWORD
Reading Check
Short Answer
1. In Hoff’s discussion with his peers, they explain that all the Great Masters came from the East. Hoff makes a parallel to Winnie-the-Pooh and by extension, author Milne as an example of a Western text that demonstrates Taoist ideals. (Foreword)
2. The purpose of the foreword is to demonstrate the impetus for Hoff’s creation of this book, The Tao of Pooh. (Foreword)
CHAPTERS 1-3
Reading Check
1. K’ung Fu-tse’s and Buddha’s expressions show they think the vinegar is sour and bitter, respectively. (Chapter 1)
2. Wu-tse and Li Po (Chapter 2)
3. Hoff mentions scholars’ lack of experience, dull academic jargon, and obsession with minutiae. (Chapter 3)
4. Owl (Chapter 3)
Short Answer
1. The analogy demonstrates three schools of thought (Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism). For Confucianism and Buddhism, Hoff explains that their rigid beliefs get in the way of an appreciative mind and the happiness found in life. (Chapter 1)
2. The uncarved block in its original form has the most power in its simplicity, and when it is carved, the power is diminished. (Chapter 2)
3. Pooh is the only one of his friends who is simplistic and spontaneous; these qualities contribute directly to his state of happiness. (Chapter 3)
4. He means that scholars cannot teach about Taoism if they themselves have not experienced it. (Chapter 3)
CHAPTERS 4-6
Reading Check
1. Rabbit’s biases against those different from him (Chapter 4)
2. “Without doing, causing, or making” (Chapter 5)
3. Rabbit (Chapter 5)
4. The Puritans (Chapter 6)
Short Answer
1. The Cottleston Pie Principle dictates that once someone understands who they truly are, they know where they do and do not belong. (Chapter 4)
2. Chuang-tse refuses to live in the castle because he knows that is place he does not truly belong, and he would not find happiness there. (Chapter 4)
3. The man survives the fall because he allows himself to be pushed and pulled by the water rather than resisting, eventually making it back to the surface. (Chapter 5)
4. A Bisy Backson person must always be “desperately busy,” possibly working themselves to death. (Chapter 6)
CHAPTERS 7-9
Reading Check
1. Dissatisfied (Chapter 7)
2. Pooh (Chapter 7)
3. Emptiness (Chapter 8)
4. Owl, Pooh, and Rabbit (Chapter 9)
Short Answer
1. The stonecutter constantly changes who he is in life in order to be what he perceives as better, but eventually he learns that constantly chasing change does not lead to happiness. (Chapter 7)
2. Hirohito constantly moved from meeting to meeting, so when he arrives at the appointment for which his counterpart does not attend he enjoys the rest and the solitude. (Chapter 8)
3. The masters listen to an inner voice of simplicity and wisdom that transcends knowledge and cleverness. (Chapter 9)
4. The smartest people are those who are the epitome of simplicity. They do not rely on knowledge or chase superficiality. (Chapter 9)
AFTERWORD
Reading Check
Short Answer
1. If people try too hard, “The Way” will escape them, so it is better to be true to oneself in order for “The Way” to find them. (Afterword)