yes
"The more laws and order are made prominent, the more thieves and robbers there will be," is a quote from Laozi, the founder of Daoism. So, it's Daoism.
The US has plenty of what can be considered moral laws, from marriage laws, to vice laws which are defined as victimless in nature, but suffer morally objectionable behavior. The US also has laws which would be in contradiction of a moral law, such laws in how we slaughter animals which are FDA regulated that require exemption to slaughter animals according to the moral law. Other laws against what we would consider moral laws are usually in prohibition of enforcing or acting in one's moral laws , so anti-moral laws suffer a prohibitive law.
They say that the best rulers are the ones who do the least. To much laws its hard to be in peace with nature with a lot of laws
Confucianism is still practiced today. It is an ethical and philosophical system of values developed by the Chinese philosopher Confucius. At its roots, this system stresses education for people's moral development. In that way, States can be governed by virtue rather than by laws.
Yes, moral laws in a society are generally derived from the laws of the state, because obeying the laws of the authority is usually deemed moral. However, law was initially derived from the moral principles of the primary faith or religion of an area. Thus we still have archaic codes such as cursing in front of women and children being unlawful in some places.
Those would be the 10 Commandments from Exodus 20. There are other laws that Adventists ascribe to (dietary laws from Leviticus, for example), but those are not moral laws.
what are the customs of daoism
there is no religious daoism. it was created as a philosophy only.
No.
Because YOUR morals may not be the same as mine, and I may not consent to living under YOUR moral laws. And YOU my not want to live under MY moral laws.
what are the fundametal beliefs of Daoism?