Brief introduction to Taoist classic catalogue

Catalogue of Taoist Collections is a book about the lost Taoist collections in the orthodox Taoist collections in the Ming Dynasty. The author is unknown, and it is divided into two volumes. The title on the paper reads: "Copy it in the old catalogue. At the end of the volume, there is a Record of Respecting the World in Taoist Collection written in the 12th year of Yuan Dynasty (1275), which describes the classification of three caves and four auxiliary Taoist scriptures, involving the number of Taoist scriptures collected by Lu Zhisong. Chen Yuan's Textual Research on New Taoism in Hebei Province in the Early Southern Song Dynasty (the fifth issue of Tibetan Scriptures) said: "At present, the last categories of Tibetan Scriptures are Xiuzhen Wen Yuan, Xia Yanlu, Yixian Biography and Wuxian Biography, and the Tomb of Tongzhenzi is a Supplement to Zhenzi (Qin). Jin Ping Mei Shi Lu has been included in the orthodox collection, so it is not included in the Quejing catalogue. The first volume of the Catalogue of Quejing has 388 volumes of Quejing, a total of 878 volumes; The second volume contains 406 missing classics, totaling 1 162 volumes, and the upper and lower volumes contain 794 missing classics, totaling 2400 volumes. Those who looked up the Quejing listed in the Quejing Catalogue, such as the Law of Zheng Yixin written by Taoist Ma Yi, didn't look it up seriously at that time. It is the word "group" that is included in the orthodox collection of Taoist scriptures and also found in the appendix of the index of Taoist scriptures.

Hu, editor-in-chief: China Taoist Dictionary (Beijing: China Social Sciences Press, 1995). Ren Yuji, editor-in-chief: A Summary of Collected Taoist Scriptures (Beijing: China Social Sciences Press, 199 1).