Lao Zi or Lao Tzu (580BC-500BC), with the family name as Li, given name as Er and respected name as Dan, the founder of Taoism, was born in today¡¯s Guoyang County of Anhui Province. He once held a post as the keeper of archives and records at the capital of the Zhou Dynasty (a title similar to today¡¯s national head librarian), and later lived in seclusion. According to a legendary story, Lao Zi rode on a water buffalo to retire in the mountains. When he passed by Hangu Pass, the official who was in charge of the Pass begged the sage for a book of his teachings, and Lao Zi then wrote Tao t King or The Way and its Power, a book of above 5,000 words. Tao t King or The Way and its Power is mainly composed of two parts of Tao (literal: Path or Way) and Te (literal: to achieve Dao). ¡°Tao¡± is nothing, yet this nothing is not zero; it is the total spontaneity of all things. ¡°Te¡± refers to how to realize ¡°Tao¡±. Small country with fewer people is the reflection of Lao Tzu¡¯s Taoist idea in the society. Taoism initiates the idea of upholding nature and living harmoniously with nature, which has dominated in Chinese cultures for thousands of years.