This article examines ideal agents and salient praxes in the Inner Books of the Zhuāngzǐ (莊子). I argue that an ideal agent (1) exhibits a heart-mind (xīn 心) that is empty of impositions on Dào (道) and (2) integrates with their phenomenal field, within which (a) their locus of self is lost, (b) perception, cognition, emotion, and sensation spontaneously occur at separate loci, and (c) constituent phenomena agentively elicit responsive action from the receptive agent. These arguments are developed from my psychological interpretations and analyses of ideal agents, primarily the spirit-person (shénrén 神人) and Zǐqí Southwall (南郭子綦), and pivotal praxes, primarily fasting the heart-mind (xīn zhāi 心齋) and sitting and forgetting (zuò wàng 坐忘), in sections of the Inner Books. This article foregrounds the phenomenology and symbolism of ideal agents and the agentive and psychological implications of prominent praxes.