Item 3 in Taoist Three Treasures
Not Daring to Be First
Avoid domination, self-promotion and the impulse to place oneself ahead of everyone else.
- Position
- 3
- Form
- Virtue to cultivate
- Obligation
- Aspirational
- Wording status
- Editorial paraphrase
- Intended audience
- Readers and practitioners of philosophical and religious Taoist traditions
- Last reviewed
- 28 June 2026
Names and terminology
Canonical name: Not Daring to Be First
Original term: Bù gǎn wéi tiānxià xiān
Source wording
Editorial paraphrase: Avoid domination, self-promotion and the impulse to place oneself ahead of everyone else.
Literal meaning
Avoid domination, self-promotion and the impulse to place oneself ahead of everyone else.
Broader interpretation
Interpretation depends on the framework's historical purpose, intended audience and relationship to its other principles.
Ethical purpose
To shape conduct or character in a way consistent with the wider ethical framework.
Modern application
Modern application requires attention to consent, rights, evidence, foreseeable harm and changing social conditions.
Criticism and difficult cases
Application can become difficult when this principle conflicts with another duty, when harm is indirect, or when ancient social assumptions do not fit modern conditions.
Truth By Reason analysis
Truth By Reason assesses this principle according to evidence, rights, intentions, foreseeable consequences and consistency with the treatment of all affected beings.
Ethical themes
Sources
- Heshanggong Laozi, Chapter 67 Primary source