This work distinguishes between "great understanding", which is broad, and "little understanding", which is cramped and busy. To illustrate the danger of going against the nature of things, this work includes a parable about two kings who repay the kindness of a god by drilling holes in him. A character in this work has not had to change his knife for 19 years because he only cuts between the joints. This book's first seven "inner chapters" are the only ones clearly attributed to its author. Two characters in this work stand on a bridge and argue about whether the fish are happy. A passage in this work illustrates the "Transformation of Things" by noting that there must be a distinction between him and a certain animal. For 10 points, name this Daoist tome, one section of which asks whether the author imagined himself as a butterfly. ■END■
ANSWER: Zhuangzi
<Eric Mukherjee , Philosophy - Pre-20th>
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