Archive for the ‘Allgemein’ Category

I Ching Secrets 03.05. to 01.06. 2011: The hexagram pairs of Great Harmony form the old pictogram „Residence of Mankind“! They summon harmony for the earth!

Montag, Mai 2nd, 2011

The hexagram pairs of Great Harmony form the old pictogram „Residence of Mankind“! They summon harmony for the earth!

In the last blog hexagram pairs of harmony were defined. Hexagram pairs of harmony compensate the “imbalance of Yin and Yang”.
Yin and Yang are balanced in a hexagram pair when each of the six places of the two hexagrams is occupied by a Yin line and a by a Yang line. The two hexagrams that do this, commonly referred to as complementary.  To be a hexagram pair of harmony the two hexagrams must also belong to the same pair group. The ordinal numbers of the two hexagrams can be further apart, but they can also follow one another directly. If the complementary hexagram with an even atomic number follows the hexagram of the preceding odd atomic number, then I call such a hexagram pair a hexagram pair of Great Harmony. Such a hexagram pair is not only a couple, because they are balancing yin and yang on each of its six places and they are belonging to the same pair group, but they also form a pair due to their ordinal numbers. An example for this is the hexagram pair 29/30.


1085-hexagrams-29-und-30.jpg 

The following table shows the eight hexagram pairs of Great Harmony. At the same time the table shows the solar periods, which are represented by these hexagram pairs:

Table

       The eight Hexagram Pairs of Great Harmony

Hex. 11) Peace 11 End of Summer
12) Stagnation 12 End of Summer
17) Following 17 End of Autumn
18) Work on What Has Been Spoiled 18 End of Autumn
27) Providing Nourishment 3 Spring Equinox
53) Development 5 End of Spring
54) The Marrying Maiden 6 End of Spring
61) Inner Truth 13 Begin of Autumn
62) Preponderance of the Small 14 Begin of Autumn
63) After Completion 15 Autumn Equinox
64) Before Completion 16 Autumn Equnox
1) The Creative 1 Begin of Spring
2) The Receptive 2 Begin of Spring
29) The Abysmal, Water, Moon 5 End of Spring
30) The Radiating, Fire, Sun 6 End of Spring

Hexagrams can be represented graphically by connecting the two trigrams, they consist of, by a straight line. If the first six hexagram pairs of great harmony in this way are graphically represented in the circle of the Early Heaven, one obtains the following diagram:

 1085-diagram-of-the-first-six-hexagrams-of-great-harmony.jpg

What is the meaning of this Diagram?


In the lexicon of Chinese Symbols by Wolfram Eberhard I read something like:
The earth is square in the old view of the Chinese and divided into rectangular fields, houses, city borders etc. The Chinese cities, where geologically possible, are built in the form of a square. While a circle is the symbol of the Heaven, the earth is symbolized by a cross and a square, independently of the pictogram for the earth in use today.
When I was looking in a dictionary of Chinese Pictograms for a square with a cross in it I found a square with a parallel to the sides adjusted cross as the pictogram for a field.
 1085-residence-of-mankind.jpg
In the oracle bone writing (BC 17 to about 11 cent.) the meaning of this pictogram, however, was comprehensive and more important. At that time this pictogram meant Residence of mankind. It seemed to me that the diagram that was build up by the hexagrams of great harmony was the emblem for Mother Earth? The pictogram seems to summon great harmony for the earth.

Two of the hexagram pairs are part of the pair group heaven / earth, two of the hexagram pairs part of the pair group man / earth and four hexagram pairs part of the pair group heaven / man. Since the latter hexagram pairs represent the ends of the seasons, they are more pronounced than the beginnings of seasons, and solstices and equinoxes.
Spring and autumn are present with all solar periods, the winter with no solar period and the summer with only two. The beginning of summer and the summer solstice are missing. The summer solstice was considered a less favorable time, as after the days are shortening.
Great Harmony is thus summoned to the earth, especially in spring when sown, and for the autumn when the fruit is harvested. This and the lack of winter probably means that the diagram is a conjuration of the harmonious growth and harvesting of grain and other crops to feed on the people. The emblem of Mother Earth is apparently part of the agri cult. The change in the meaning of the pictogram, supports this. In earlier time it meant the residence of man, now a field. 

The two major hexagram pairs 1) heaven / heaven, 2) earth / earth and 29) water / water, 30) fire / fire are also Hexagram Pairs of Great Harmony. They are represented by circles around the trigrams from which they are composed.
1085-i-ching-emblem-of-the-earth.jpg  

There remains the question of the meaning of these four hexagrams with two identical trigrams heaven, earth, water (moon) and fire (sun). The circles at the ends of the cross, which represent these hexagrams, correspond to the points at which in the Forbidden City in Beijing the Temple and Altar of Heaven, the Temple and Altar of Earth, the Temple and Altar of the Sun (trigram fire) and the Temple and Altar of the Moon (trigram water) have or had their place. Maybe these four hexagrams represent these temples and altars?

I Ching Secrets 06.04. to 02.05. 2011: The beautiful triple star of harmony – the fingerprint of the structure of the I Ching!

Samstag, April 2nd, 2011

The beautiful triple star of harmony – the fingerprint of the structure of the I Ching!

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The beautiful triple star of harmony – the fingerprint of the structure of the I Ching!


Previous weblogs show how the 32 Hexagram pairs of the I-Ching are divided in three pair groups, namely in the Hexagram pairs of the pair group Heaven / Earth, in the Hexagram-pairs of the pair group Man / Earth and in the Hexagram pairs of the pair group Heaven / Man. The Hexagrams of the three pair groups differ by their meaning, their distribution of trigrams and their Hexagrams, consisting of two identical trigrams. The latter are the leaders of the three pair groups. The Hexagrams of the pair group Heaven / Earth represent the seasons starts and a new beginning, the Hexagrams of the pair group Man / Earth the equinoxes and solstices and the preservation of creation and the Hexagrams of the pair group Heaven / Man represent the ends of the seasons and the dissolution of creation. The three pair groups meet in Indian mythology, the three deities Brahma, the creator, Vishnu the preserver and Shiva the Destroyer.
Since it is known how the 64 Hexagrams of the I-Ching are distributed to these three pair groups, Hexagram pairs of harmony can be defined, comprising less than 32 Hexagram pairs.
In what ways can the beings and things and thus the Hexagrams gain harmony?
The Daodejing (Tao Te Ching in older spelling) (translation by Stephen Mitchell) says:
„All things have their backs to the female
and facing the male.
When male and female combine, all things achieve harmony“.
The following statements, which are attributed to Zhuangzi, is in line with this:
If Yin and Yang combine, he says, in substance, and
Harmony act, the things come into existence.
Elsewhere he says:
„The essence of the Dao is the cessation of opposites,“ and continues:
„The union with the Dao is by correcting the imbalance of Yin and Yang.“

Based on these statements Hexagram pairs of harmony can be defined:
To form a Hexagram pair of harmony, the two Hexagrams must compensate the „imbalance of Yin and Yang“.
Yin and Yang, however, are in a Hexagram pair balanced when each of the six lines of the two Hexagrams is occupied by a Yin and a Yang line. The two Hexagrams that do this, commonly referred to as complementary. (Complementarity is a structural relationship between two trigrams or Hexagrams, in which each line of one is the opposite, i.e., Yin vs. Yang, of the other. For example, Water and Fire, and the Hexagrams 8) Holding Together and 14) Possession of great Measure.

 

 

 

1080-hexagram-pairs-of-harmony.jpg

 

 

The atomic numbers of the two Hexagrams can follow each other, but they may also be further apart.
If harmony  is “ The just adaptation of parts to each other, in any system or combination of things, as is said in a dictionary, then there is between a Hexagram and its complementary Hexagram harmony because on each of the six lines of the two Hexagrams, the two elemental forces Yin and Yang are in balance. But now, each of the 64 Hexagrams has its complementary Hexagram. To find a prominent group of Hexagrams of harmony, there must still be made a selection among the 32 complementary Hexagram-pairs:
Friendships and marriages between members of various ethnic groups are generally more stress exposed as a partnership between members of the same ethnic group. The causes are different manners
and traditions, different languages
​​
or different understanding of language. Between members of the same ethnic group these conflicts do not exist
and the conditions for harmony between the partners are better.
In analogy, one can assume that the compliance between a Hexagram and its complementary Hexagram is greater when both are members of the same pair group.
When a Hexagram and its complementary Hexagram belong to the same pair group of Heaven / Earth, Heaven / Man or Man / Earth, I think therefore the harmony between them is greater, as if the two partners are belong to different pair groups.
Such a complementary Hexagram pair therefore I define as a
Hexagram pair of harmony.
In the pair group Heaven / Earth, eight Hexagrams have their complementary partner in their own pair group
(Namely, the four complementary Hexagram pairs 1 / 2, 7 / 13; 8 / 14 and 61/62),
in the pair group Heaven / Man there are twelve,
(Namely, the six Hexagram pairs 5 / 35, 6 / 36; 11/12; 17/18; 29/30, and 53/54)
and in the pair group Man / Earth also twelve,
(Namely, the six Hexagram pairs 9 / 16; 15/10; 27/28, 51/57, 52/58 and 63/64).
These 16 complementary Hexagram pairs are according to the above definition, Hexagram pairs of harmony.

The graphical frequency distribution of the trigrams that make up these Hexagrams of harmony, shows in the circle of the Early Heaven the following figure:

1080-the-beautiful-triple-star-of-harmony-the-fingerprint-of-the-structure-of-the-i-chingufo.jpg

 

 

 

 I call the figure the triple star of Harmony.
The distribution of the trigrams of the 16 Hexagram pairs of harmony  separate for each of the three pair groups shows a beautiful and harmonious figure. In fact, there are three stars, from which  
the two stars of the pair groups Heaven / Earth and Heaven / Man
have their maxima at the trigrams Heaven and Earth
(The parents) as well as at the trigrams Water and Fire (the small parents). But the pair group Man / Earth has its maxima at the trigrams Wind and Lake, Thunder and Mountain (the children of the great and little parents). The focus is on the trigrams Heaven and Earth.

Why is the triple-star of harmony the fingerprint of the structure of
the I Ching?
The three pair groups form with their trigrams of its 16
Hexagram pairs of harmony this star. Since all complementary Hexagrams, which have their partners in their own pair group, contained therein, it is specific to the structure of the I Ching.

I Ching Secrets 16.03. to 05.04.2011: One of the deep secrets of the I Ching: Why are the eight hexagrams, constituted of two identical trigrams, assigned to the ordinal numbers 1 / 2, 29/30, 51/52 and 57/58?

Samstag, März 12th, 2011

One of the deep secrets of the I Ching: Why are the eight hexagrams (four hexagram-pairs), constituted of two identical trigrams, assigned to the ordinal numbers 1 / 2, 29/30, 51/52 and 57/58.

The distribution of these eight hexagrams on the 24 Solar periods, the three annual cycles and the three pair-groups of hexagrams according to the nature of their ordinal numbers. 

The positions of the hexagrams composed of two   identical trigrams are not arbitrary.At the three annual cycles, the position of each of them is at the beginning as the first of its pair-group of hexagrams.   Each hexagram can be understood as composed of two constituent trigrams that consist of three lines. (There are two different kinds of lines, broken or not broken, Yin or Yang.) Eight hexagrams are constructed out of a single trigram that is doubled. The Chinese names of the resulting hexagrams are the same as the trigrams. Although the meanings are something different, the interpretation of these eight hexagrams has been strongly influenced by the meanings associated with their constituent trigrams.         1069-hexagrams-heaven-and-earth.jpg 

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1069-hexagrams-water-and-fire.jpg

1075-the-abysmal-and-the-brightness.jpg1069-hexagrams-thunder-and-mountain.jpg

1069-hexagrams-wind-and-lake.jpg

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The eight trigrams that constitute these eight hexagrams which are double signs are characterized as follows:God comes forth in the sign of Arousing; he brings all things to completion in the sign of Gentle; he causes creatures to perceive one another in the sign of Radiation (light); he causes them to serve one another in the sign of the Perceptive. He gives them joy in the sign of the Joyous; he battles in the sign of the Creative; he toils in the sign of the Abysmal; he brings them to perfection in the sign of Keeping Still.” “The Creative acts in the horse,the Receptive in the cow,the Arousing in the dragon,the Gentle in the cock,the Abysmal in the pig,the Radiation in the pheasant,Keeping Still in the dog,the Joyous in the sheep.”  (Discussion of the Trigrams in the Shuo Kua, translated by Richard Wilhelm) Are the positions of the eight hexagrams, constituted of two identical trigrams, within the 64 hexagrams reached by chance or by a rule? The positions of the atomic numbers of these eight hexagrams are1 / 2, 29 / 30, 51 / 52 and 57 / 58. They are arranged symmetrically on the Bagua of the Early Heaven and furthermore also symmetrically distributed on the three annual cycles as well as on the three pair-groups of hexagrams, according to the nature of their ordinals. Apart from this, however their positions seem to be arbitrary. In reality, this is not the case. How can this be shown? One comes closer to the solution of this question, if one looks at the positions of the four hexagram-pairs on the Solar cycle with its 24 Solar periods. 1069-the-8-hexagrams-represent-the-solar-periods-1-to-6-and-9-to-10.jpg The hexagram-pair 1 / 2 corresponds to the  Solar periods 1 and 2 of spring-beginning in the first year (hexagrams 1 to 24), the hexagram-pair 29 / 30 corresponds to theSolar cycles 5 and 6 of the end of spring time in the second year (hexagrams 25 to 48), the hexagram-pair 51 / 52 corresponds to the Solar periods 3 and 4 of the Spring Equinox in the third year (hexagrams 49 to 64) and the hexagram-pair 57 / 58 corresponds  to theSolar periods 9 and 10 of the summer solstice in the third year (hexagrams 49 to 64).  The hexagram-pair 1 / 2 is a member of the pair group Heaven / Earth which represents the beginnings of seasons, according to the nature of their ordinals. It corresponds to the first beginning of seasons in the first year, which is the beginning of spring-time in the first year. The hexagram-pair 29 / 30 is a member of the pair group Heaven / Man which represents the ends of seasons, according to the nature of their ordinals. It corresponds to the first end of seasons in the second year, which is the end of spring-time in the second year. The hexagram-pairs 51 / 52 and 57 / 58 are members of the pair-group Man / Earth which represents the equinoxes and the solstices, according to the nature of their ordinals. The hexagram-pair 51 / 52 corresponds to the first equinox in the third year which is the spring equinox in the third year. The hexagram-pair 57 / 58 corresponds to the first solstice in the third year which is the summer solstice in the third year. The positions of the eight hexagrams (four hexagram-pairs), constituted of two identical trigrams, therefore are outstanding. The I Ching seems to emphasize that they are the leaders of the different groups of hexagrams within the I Ching, the book of wisdom. 

I Ching Secrets 22. 02. to 15. 03. 2011: Numbers that bring power and good luck! The decoding of the secret meaning of the natural numbers by the I Ching.

Samstag, Februar 19th, 2011

Numbers that bring power and good luck!

The decoding of the secret meaning of the natural numbers by the I Ching.

The 64 hexagrams of the I Ching pulsate in a 24er rhythm, as was shown in the weblogs before. A 24 rhythm is furthermore also basic to the tripartite division of natural numbers by Peter Plichta. I assumed therefore that the division of the ordinal numbers of the 64 hexagrams into three parts could perhaps be decisive for the order of the hexagrams in the I Ching.
The tripartite division of natural numbers described by Peter Plichta is explained in the following:
Mathematic books share the natural numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 … into even and odd numbers. The natural numbers are such divided in the class of even (2, 4, 6, 8 …) and odd numbers (1, 3, 5, 7 …).
A further classification of the natural numbers is that of prime. A natural number n is prime if it is divisible only by itself and by 1. The number 1 is in the traditional mathematics regarded as a special case and is by definition not considered to be prime.
If a number is divisible by another, this means, that the division rises exactly and leaves no residue.
If the primes are defined in this way, then every natural number greater than 1, either is a prime or can be written as a product of primes in a unique way. Primes are therefore considered as the fundamental building blocks of natural numbers and compared with the elements in chemistry and the elementary particles in physics.

The three sets of numbers in which the natural numbers are divided according to the system of Plichta result in the following way:
The first group consists of
– the numbers that are divisible by three (3, 6, 9, 12, 15 …),
the second group of
– the numbers that are divisible by two, but not divisible by three are
(2, 4, 8, 10, 14, 16 …),
and the third group of
– the other numbers. They are mostly prime.
(1, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 25 (25 = square of the prime number 5), 29, 31, 35 (35 = product of primes 5 and 7), 37 …). After the system of Plichta number 1 is prime, but the numbers 2 and 3 are not prime, because they are the origin of the two other groups of numbers.
When you do this classification, it accounts for the 24 number line of interlocking 24er-circles:
8 straights are consisting of the numbers of the Prime group
8 straights are consisting of the numbers of the Group of two and
8 straights are consisting of the Group of three 

1062-the-3-2-and-prime-group-of-the-ordinals-of-the-i-ching-hexagrams.jpg

1062-numbers-that-bring-power-good-luck-and-happiness.jpg

One, Two and Three are the initial numbers of the three different groups of numbers, described by Peter Plichta. In ancient China was:

One the number of Heaven

Two the number of Earth and

Three the number of Man.

The three groups of numbers cover all natural numbers. For this reason, the ordinals of the hexagrams are assigned either to the group of numbers beginning with 1 or to the Heaven, to the group of numbers beginning with 2 or the Earth or to group of numbers beginning with 3 or Man. Not only the ordinals of the hexagrams, also the hexagrams themselves are assigned to Heaven, Earth or Man.

The hexagrams of the group, whose atomic numbers are derived from the One, which in particular is the leader of the „powerful“ prime numbers, are accordingly

the hexagrams of Heaven,

the hexagrams of the group, which derived their atomic numbers from the Two, are

the hexagrams of the Earth and

the hexagrams of the group, which derived their atomic numbers from the Three, are the hexagrams of Man.

Heaven, Earth and Man are the focus of the Chinese world view. They are interrelated with each other.

The number of hexagrams of Heaven and Man, is both 21, the number of hexagrams of the Earth 22.

The 21 hexagrams of Heaven, which derive their atomic numbers from 1, are the hexagrams

1,5,7,11,13,17,19,23,25,29,31,35,37,41,43,47,49,53,55,59 and 61

16 of them are prime numbers in the traditional sense.

25 and 49 are the squares of the primes 5 and 7. The hexagrams, assigned to them, are particularly powerful. They are with hexagram 1 (and their female partners) assigned to the beginning of spring and the beginning of the year.

The 22 hexagrams of Mother Earth, whose atomic numbers are derived from the 2, are the hexagrams

2,4,8,10,14,16,20,22,26,28,32,34,38,40,44,46,50,52,56,58,62 and 64

The 21 hexagrams of Man, whose atomic numbers are derive from the 3, are the hexagrams

3,6,9,12,15,18,21,24,27,30,33,36,39,42,45,48,51,54,57,60 and 63

1062-pair-group-heaven-earth-with-good-hexagrams-and-numbers.jpg

1062-pair-group-heaven-man-with.jpg

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The hexagrams with odd atomic numbers are male, those with even numbers are female. (Odd numbers were marked in ancient China by a white, even numbers by a black circle.)

All numbers, assigned to Heaven, are odd, more than 2/3 of them are prime numbers in the traditional sense. No other group of numbers could represent better the strength, activity and creativity of Heaven.

All hexagrams of Mother Earth are female.

Half of the hexagrams of Man are female and half of them male.

In the hexagrams of Heaven, the number of the trigram Heaven is represented above average. It consists of three Yang-lines.

The number of Yang-lines in total is 68, the number of Yin-lines 58. In the hexagrams of Earth Yin and Yang are almost balanced. Yin predominates with two lines. In the hexagrams of Man the number of Yin-lines is 67, the number of Yang-lines 59. Yin dominates with 8 lines.

In the I Ching the pairing of two hexagrams is of great importance.  A hexagram with an odd atomic number is connected with the hexagram of the next even number as a pair. A hexagram with an odd atomic number is male, a hexagram with an even atomic number female. The female hexagram is produced from the previous male by inversion.

Considering this pairing, the hexagrams of Heaven, Earth and Man, as defined above, are shared each into two groups that differ in that they have partners from two different groups. By connecting these hexagrams with their partners, you get three Pairs of Groups

In the first Pair Group the (male) hexagrams of Heaven with atomic numbers of the form 6n + 1 combine with the (female) hexagrams of Mother Earth with atomic numbers of the form 6n + 2 with n = 0, 1, 2, 3, … 10

These (male) hexagrams of Heaven have in total 41 Yang- and 25 Yin-lines. The ratio 41/25 = 1.64. Yang dominates with 16 lines. Their female counterparts are balanced in Yin and Yang..

Here, the Sons of Heaven, vast in Yang, are connected with Daughters of the Earth.

These pairs of hexagrams belong to the Pair Group Heaven / Earth, as I call them.

Surprisingly, it turns out that the omen of the 22 hexagrams is mostly positive.

The 11 pairs of hexagrams of the Pair-Group Heaven / Earth are linked to the Beginnings of the Seasons and to the creative forces of the cosmos.

All hexagrams are of mainly positve Omen. The same applies to the atomic numbers of the hexagrams. The reason for this is shown in a later blog.

In the second Pair Group the (male) hexagrams of Heaven with atomic numbers of the form 6n – 1 are connected with the female hexagrams of Man with atomic numbers of the form 6n with n = 1, 2, 3, … 10.

In these hexagrams of Heaven the number of Yin-lines is 33 the number of Yang-lines 27. The ratio of Yang to Yin is 27/33 = 0.82. This is half of 1.64, the ratio of Yang to Yin of the Sons of Heaven in the Pair Group Heaven / Earth. The yin stressed Sons of Heaven „marry“ the daughters of Man.

I call the group, they form, the Pair Group Heaven / Man.

The 10 pairs of hexagrams of the Pair-Group Heaven / Man are linked to the Ends of the Seasons and to the cosmic forces of dissolution and decay.

Half of the hexagrams, namely 10, are of predominantly negative Omen.

Since the omens of half of the hexagrams in the Pair Group Heaven / Man are predominantly negative, they form a contrast to the predominantly positive hexagrams of the Pair Group Heaven / Earth. The Pair Group Heaven / Earth corresponds to the life-giving hand of Heaven and Earth, the Pair Group Heaven / Man in contrast, is the firm hand of Heaven (and Man).

In the third Pair Group, finally, the male hexagrams of Man with atomic numbers of the form

6n + 3 are connected with the (female) hexagrams of Mother Earth with atomic numbers of the form 6n +4 with n = 0, 1, 2, 3, … 10.

In the male hexagrams of Man the number of Yin-lines is 36, the number of Yang-lines 30. The ratio of Yin to Yang 30/36 = 0.833333 …, after the 8  again and again comes the 3, the number of Man. Coincidence?

The Sons of Man are connected, like the Sons of the gifts-giving hand of Heaven with Daughters of the Earth.

I call the group, they form, the Pair Group Man / Earth.

The 11 pairs of hexagrams of the Pair-Group Man / Earth are linked to the Equinoxes and Solstices and to the sustaining forces of the cosmos. Most of the hexagrams are of mainly positive Omen.

The hexagrams of this Pair Group in relation to  predominantly favorable or unfavorable omens, take a middle position. The hexagrams lean however more to the Pair Group Heaven / Earth than to the Pair Group Heaven / Man. In both Pair Groups the female hexagrams are Daughters of Mother Earth and therefore sisters.

The names of the hexagrams of the Pair-Group Heaven / Earth that correspond to the life-giving hand of Heaven and Earth

 

1 The Creative – The Creative works sublime success.

2 The Receptive – The Receptive brings about sublime success.

7 The Army – Good fortune without blame.

8 Holding Together (Union) – Whether you possess sublimity,         constancy, and perseverance; then there is no blame.

13 Fellowship with Men

14 Possession in Great Measure – Supreme success.

19 Approach – Approach has supreme success.

20 Contemplation (View)

25 Innocence (The Unexpected) – Supreme success.

26 The Taming Power of the Great

31 Influence

32 Duration

37 The Family (The Clan)

38 Opposition – In small matters, good fortune.

43 Break-through (Resoluteness)

44 Coming to Meet

49 Revolution (Molting) – Supreme success.

50 The Caldron – Supreme good fortune. Success.

55 Abundance (Fullness)

56 The Wanderer – Success through smallness. Perseverance brings good fortune.

61 Inner Truth

62 Preponderance of the Small

The names of the hexagrams of the Pair Group Heaven / Man, the firm hand of Heaven  (and Man). Half of the hexagrams are of negative omen.

5 Waiting (Nourishment)

6 Conflict – Heaven and water go their opposite ways, the image of Conflict.

11 Peace – Good fortune. Success.

12 Standstill (Stagnation) – Heaven and earth do not unite: the image of Standstill.

17 Following – Following has supreme success.

18 Work on What Has Been Spoiled (Decay) – The wind blows low on the mountain: the image of decay.

23 Splitting apart – It does not further one to go anywhere.

24 Return (The turning point) – Return. Success.

29 The Abysmal (Water) – Repetition of danger.

30 The Clinging, Fire

35 Progress – The sun rises over the earth: the image of Progress.

36 Darkening of the Light – The light has sunk into the earth: the image of Darkening of the Light.

41 Decrease – At the foot of the mountain, the lake: the image of Decrease.

42 Increase – Wind and thunder: the image of Increase

47 Oppression (Exhaustion) – There is no water in the lake: the image of exhaustion.

48 The Well

53 Development (Gradual Progress) – Good fortune.

54 The Marrying Maiden – Undertakings bring misfortune.

59 Dispersion (Dissolution)

60 Limitation

Da Liu speaks in his book about the I Ching of four predominantly strong negative hexagrams,
namely, the hexagrams
23) Splitting apart

47) Oppression (Exhaustion),
29) The Abysmal, water, and

39) Obstruction.
Of these, three belong to the Pair Group Heaven / Man and the
last (Hex 39) to the Pair Group Man / Earth.
The Pair Group Heaven / Earth contains none of them. The hexagrams of the Pair Group Heaven / Earth are predominantly of positive omen, as already their names reveale. The same is the case for their ordinals, as will be shown later.

Names of the hexagrams and description after Richard Wilhelm.

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Christine Lehmann – Weg der Bilder (christinelehmann.eu)

I Ching Secrets 01.02. to 21.02. 2011:The hexagrams of the I Ching form symbolic images of the equinoxes and solstices.

Sonntag, Januar 30th, 2011

The hexagrams of the I Ching form symbolic images of the equinoxes and solstices.

The author has assigned the 64 hexagrams of the I Ching to the 24 solar periods (See weblog from Oct 17 to Nov 06, 2010!)Thus the 64 hexagrams represent two years and eight months. The hexagram with an odd atomic number is the partner of the following hexagram with an even atomic number. These pairs of hexagrams represent the equinoxes, solstices and the beginnings and ends of the four seasons.

A hexagram can be represented graphically. Further down this is done for the hexagrams of the equinoxes, solstices, early spring and early winter. A hexagram is made up of two trigrams. These two trigrams are in the circle of the Early Heaven connected by a straight line. This line is a picture of the hexagram. On the straight line, representing a hexagram, the atomic number of the hexagram is attached in the vicinity of the trigram, which has its place at the bottom of the hexagram. A hexagram, consisting of two identical trigrams, is represented by a circle around the corresponding trigram. Drawing the images of the hexagrams for the equinoxes, solstices, early spring and early winter results in the following emblems:

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The graphical representations of the hexagrams of the equinoxes and solstices show the following: The equinoxes are preferably represented by horizontal lines, because then day and night are of equal length and are balanced. Of the six possible horizontal lines four belong to the equinoxes. At the solar periods of the summer solstice the lines preferably extend upward in the direction of the trigram heaven and back. They thus represent the peak of the annual solar cycle, the sun reaches at the summer solstice. Afterwards the path of the sun is going down again. At the solar periods of the winter solstice the lines preferably extend downward toward the trigram earth and back again. Thus they represent the lowest level of the sun at winter solstice. Afterwards the path of the sun is going up again.  To the summer solstice Yang dominates with 26 (continuous) lines. Yin has only 10 (broken) lines. For the winter solstice Yin dominates with 14 lines. Then Yang has only 10 lines. Early spring, like the summer solstice, has many Yang-lines (22), Yin has few lines (14). In the emblem of early spring one line runs up to the trigram heaven and one line back, forming an open triangle, as well as in the emblem of the summer solstice. In the emblem of early winter one line runs down to the trigram earth and one line back, forming an open triangle, as well as in the emblem of the winter solstice. Between early spring and early winter are laying nine months, between summer solstice and winter solstice only six. The months between early spring and early winter, the vegetation period, is thus emphasized. The vegetation period was in old China, an agricultural country, of great importance. In the emblem of early spring two lines run from the top to the trigram fire at the left; to the winter solstice two lines run from the bottom to the trigram fire, symmetrically to the two lines above. The trigram fire represents inter alia the fire of the sun. The coming together of these four lines should probably say, that without the return of the sun to the winter solstice, there would be no spring-time.

 

 

 

 

Each of the 64 hexagrams of the I-Ching consists of two trigrams, of which there are 8. The 8 trigrams represent inter alia Elements of nature processes. In a figurative sense, they mean a lot of other things.Trigram Heaven for example is the Creative, Dynamic and Strong, trigram Earth the Receptive, Adaptive and Yielding.

 

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I Ching Secrets 11.01. to 31.01.2011:Dragon is the master of thunder, by which all things come forth/The rhythm of the 64 hexagrams of the I Ching

Samstag, Januar 8th, 2011

Dragon is the master of thunder, by which all things come forth/

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Dragon is the master of thunder, by which all things come forth/

The rhythm of the 64 hexagrams of the I ChingThe rhythm of the 64 hexagrams of the I Ching

The highlight of the sum 10!

The 64 hexagrams of the I-Ching probably show the rhythm of the 24 solar periods of two years and 16 month. Each hexagram stands for a solar period. 
In the following, therefore, the 64 hexagrams are divided into three parts. Their numbers are put on three circles. On the first and second circle are 24 each and on the third circle 16 hexagrams. Each hexagram is composed of two trigrams. The differences between the trigrams in these three groups show that the I-Ching is based on a tripartite division. The hexagrams 1-24, 25-48 and 49-64 form these three groups with different characteristics. The distribution of the trigrams and double signs show this and also the meaning of the hexagrams. (A double sign is a hexagram, composed of two identical trigrams. There are eight of them.)
One main difference between the trigrams and hexagrams of the three groups is the following: On the first 24er circle the number of hexagrams with the trigrams heaven or earth amounts to 20, on the second 24er circle the number amounts to 10 and on the third circle with 16 hexagrams the number of hexagrams with these trigrams is zero. (The hexagrams 11 and 12 are to be counted twice here, as each of them containing the trigrams heaven and earth.) The amount of hexagrams with the trigrams heaven or earth is thus twice reduced by 10.
The influence of heaven and earth, standing also for father and mother is, when the sum of hexagrams with these trigrams measures the years, on the first circle twice as large as on the second and on the third circle disappeared. Up to the age of 24 a human being needs the help of his parents most. Between the age of 25 and 48 they help him still, but being older, he has to cope alone.
While the trigrams heaven and earth in the third annual circle are gone, the sum of the other trigrams is larger than normal, except for the trigram water. The trigram fire, which symbolizes the sun as well as mental power and clarity, is located on the third cycle by 50% over the value you get,
when the trigrams are equally distributed. The same is the case with
the trigrams wind and sea. Wind is the eldest daughter,
but also a gentle and penetrating mind. The trigram sea stands for the youngest daughter and for serenity and joy.
The listed features characterize according to the I Ching primarily
the older generation 49-64 years. The final two hexagrams 63 and 64 of the  I Ching also speak of perfection.

Furthermore the amount of the number of hexagrams with the trigram water plus the amount of the number of hexagrams with the trigram fire is on all three groups ten.
The sum 10, the amount of the number of fingers, the
decimal system is stressed here again.
The amount of the number of hexagrams with the trigram fire increases from the first to third circle from 4 to 6, the trigram water diminishes from 6 to 4. According to the I Ching mental is greatest after the age of 49. Instinctive behavior then is lowest.

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Why the emphasis on the sum 10!


Why the emphasis on the sum 10 in connection with the three
annual cycles?

One finds an explanation if one considers that
the sum 10 has significance, even as a figure and as a symbol.
The sum of fingers of both hands is 10, a
manageable sum, not too big and not too small.
The decimal system is based on this amount of numbers. The system is mentioned in Europe for the first time in a Spanish manuscript from the year 976.
In China, the decimal system is much longer in use. It was as the number system of today, a positioning system, the position of each digit determines its value. In ancient China also a symbol for zero was used, but in other form than in ancient India.
In an inscription of the 13th Century BC, the number 547 is written in the following way:
Five hundred plus four tens plus seven days.
That is the first known example of a dezimal sytem, the
number system, which is now present virtually all over the world.

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The number 10 as a symbol
As a symbol in ancient myths outside China, 10 characterized
completion of travel and the return to the starting point.
Odysseus wanders for nine years and returns home in the tenth year. Troja was nine years under siege, and fell in the tenth. When the name Elohim – a Hebrew name for God – in the biblical story of creation occurs the tenth time, it says:
„The water under the heaven be gathered into one place so
the dry land appear.“
In these examples, the ten characterizes completion and the beginning of a new rhythm that starts with that number.
On Mount Sinai Moses received the Ten Commandments.
Here is 10 the perfect sum and the law.
The 10 is obviously a symbol of perfection, simultaneously it represents a new beginning, but at a different level than the previous one.
In the commentaries to the hexagrams of the I Ching, 10 appears at four
times. In hexagram 3.2 (the second line of text below in Hexagram 3) had the free to wait 10 years for the bride. Ten years is here a fulfilled cycle of time.
Hexagram 27.3 says: „Do not act thus for 10 years“. In both cases, this should not mean that you have to wait exactly 10 years.
10 holds here is no precise time quantity, but
means wholeness and completeness, perfection and integrity.
According to R. Wilhelm 10 years are a perfect cycle.
Hexagrams 41.5 and 42.2 are speaking of 10 pairs of turtles or turtle shells. Tortoise shells were used for divination purposes.

The carapace of the turtle is a symbol of the macrocosm:
the curved upper tank shell represents the heavens, the bottom surface symbolizes the earth. 10 means a harmonious closed totality.
The 10 stands thus in ancient China as well as in the West for both
perfection – it is the end of the simple numbers – and for the
return to the starting point and a new beginning – on a
higher level than the previous one.
In this double sense is also the amount 10 of the number of
hexagrams with the trigram fire ore water in all three groups and the decrease of 10 in the amount of the number of hexagrams with the trigram heaven or earth from the first to the third circle to be seen. The sum 10 means that on each circle a new rhythm on a different level begins.
The trigrams heaven and earth are known as the great parents, fire and water as the little parents of the other trigrams.
As the hexagrams with the trigrams heaven or earth
disappear on the third circle, so the amount of the number of hexagrams with the other trigrams increases from circle to circle. On the first circle, there are only 6 hexagrams without the trigrams heaven or earth, on the second circle already 14 hexagrams without these trigrams and on the third circle all 16.

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The distribution of the eight double signs on the three circles of two years and 16 months.

(Double signs consist of a doubling of one of the 8 trigrams.)

The eight double signs are distributed symmetrically on the three circles. On the first circle (diagram above) is the double sign
Heaven or father at the highest point above the double sign
2) earth or mother at the lowest point below.Heaven and earth are not randomly at these two different places. Richard Wilhelm writes about it: “There is heaven, the upper world of light, which, though incorporeal, firmly regulates and determines everything that happens, and over against heaven there is the earth, the lower, dark world, corporeal, and dependent in its movements upon the phenomens of heaven. With this differentiation of above and below there is posited ,in one way or another, a difference in value, so that the one principle, heaven, is the more exalted and honored, while the other, earth, is regarded as lesser and lower.”
The two double signs are displayed as circles around the two trigrams heaven respectively earth.
At the second annual circle, there are two double signs
horizontally opposed,
the double sign 29) The water, the abysmal and the double sign
30) The fire, the radiating
They are as circles around the two trigrams fire and water
shown, which are considered the „small parents“ of the remaining four trigrams.
On the third circle, the four „children double signs” are
to be found in the four „corners“. They form a circle around the
trigram thunder, the arousing, the dragon, the trigram mountain, the trigram wind and the trigram sea. In this third group the children of heaven and earth are acting, in the family the children, the sons and daughters, which are now grown up.
The trigram thunder, the arousing is the eldest, the trigram mountain the youngest son, the trigram wind is the eldest daughter, sea the youngest, water and fire is the middle son and the middle daughter.

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Dragon, the master of thunder, by which all things come forth 

The trigram thunder is the symbol of the dragon, by which all things come forth.The qualities of the trigram thunder are energetic, arousing and moving. The trigram thunder is the symbol for the dragon, by which all things come forth. It is this dragon that awakens the seed of the old year in springtime. In winter he is “sleeping” in the earth. Those who concentrate on the ground in winter can feel his great energy below the surface, even in town.The root crops are then filled with his Chi power. In springtime the dragon rises above the surface of the earth. For this reason the trigram thunder, the symbol of the dragon, has its place in the winter half year at the bottom of the hexagrams, but in the summer half year on top of it.

I-Ching Secrets, 19.12. to 10.01. 2011: Is I-Ching Diagram no. 8 the star-boat that reveals the true function of the boat on the disc of Nebra?

Samstag, Dezember 18th, 2010

Is I-Ching Diagram no. 8 the star-boat that reveals the true function of the boat on the disc of Nebra?

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The I-Ching Diagram No. 8 of the autumn equinox is shaped like a boat. Some other features are also that of a boat. Its symbolism points to the true funktion of the boat on the disc of Nebra. 

The I-Ching diagram No. 8 of the period from 7.9. – 7.10 corresponds to the solar cycles 15) White Dew and 16) Autumn Equinox. 22-23. September is the autumn equinox, when day and night are of equal length and keep balance. The chart is made up of the trigrams of the hexagrams 15.16 (first year), 39.40 (second year) and 63.64 (third year). The I-Ching Diagram No. 8 is the frequency distribution of the trigrams of these hexagrams.At the equinoxes were inter alia the scales examined. What was too much should be taken away and what was too little to be added. In hex 15 says the text of the picture:„…Thus the superior man reduces that which is too much, and augments that which is to little. He weighs things and makes them equal.“Also, man should then find his mental balance. The two hexagrams 63 and 64 of the autumn equinox in the third year, symbolize the completion. Hexagram 64 is the last in the I-Ching.Ancient civilizations celebrated the earth and her changing seasons. The autumnal equinox marks the final harvest. Throughout the world many cultures celebrate the autumn equinox with the common theme of balance and equality.The ancient Chinese believed that the two basic forces of the cosmos Yin and Yang at the equinoxes celebrated wedding. Light and darkness are in balance at the two dates.The  I-Ching speaks twelve times of„Crossing  the great water.“ Even so it’s not surprising that an I-Ching diagram shows a boat. The large water could correspond to the river in certain valleys, there was a limit to the Sanctuary area on the other side. In the Sanctuary area, the festivals were celebrated at the equinoxes. To cross the large water also meant to come together with the ancestral spirits. Shaman clothes show small boats and oars. Boats were a symbol of a journey into the „hidden reality“.The Milky Way was the great water in the sky.

 

 

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Shows the I-Ching diagram of the autumn equinox, the celestial boat Tianchuan in the Milky Way? 

In Chinese astronomy, an arc of nine stars from the constellation Perseus, the constellation formed Tianchuan, a boat in the river of the Milky Way.In the 4th Century BC, the boat Tianchuan was after sunset already to see  in the eastern sky. It culminated against two clock at night (now about two hours later) and went about four hours after sunrise. At the celebration of the autumn equinox the boat Tianchuan was to be seen with clear autumn weather throughout the night.The resemblence of the shape of the I-Ching diagram of the autumn equinox and the shape of the boat Tianchuan in the Milky Way could hardly be greater. Other characteristics and especially the time of appearance in the sky point in the same direction. So it’s fairly likely that the I-Ching Diagram No. 8 is the celestial boat Tianchuan in the Milky Way.

Secrets of the Nebra disc

The Nebra disc was developed in four stages (by Meller 2004, abridged text).

1) Initially the disc had thirty-two small round gold circles (today are thirty visible), a large circular plate, and a large crescent-shaped plate attached. The circular plate is interpreted as either the Sun or the full Moon, the crescent shape as the crescent Moon (or either the Sun or the Moon undergoing eclipse and the dots as stars, with the cluster of seven dots likely representing the Pleades.

2) At some later date, two arcs were added at opposite edges of the disk. The two arcs span an angle of 82°, correctly indicating the angle between the positions of sunset at summer and winter solstice at the latitude of the Mittelberg (51° N).

3) The final addition was another arc at the bottom, the „sunboat„.

4) By the time the disk was buried it also had thirty-nine or forty holes punched out around its perimeter, each approximately 3 mm in diameter.

 

 

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The Nebra Sky Disc – What purpose was the Boat on the disc actually for! 

On the Nebra Sky Disc there were two arcs, opposite to each other, of 82.7 degrees each – the distance between the northern- and southernmost points of sunset and sunrise from Saxony-Anhalt in the bronze-age. The archaeologists say, if the disc was intended as an astronomical tool, the only thing on it that is accurate is the pair of arcs. With the disc in a horizontal plane, these could be used to examine the position of sunrise and sunset in relation to the Brocken mountain. (From the hill (Mittelberg) the sun sets on the summer solstice (June 21st) behind the Brocken. The Brocken is in a direct line of sight on a clear day, 85 km to the north-west.)The short arc in between the two big ones at the bottom is interpreted as a „sun barge“ travelling between sunset and sunrise. For this reason the archaeologists believe the ship was the symbol of a new religious idea with no practical relevance to astronomy. The disc should at the end only been regarded as a cult object.The author of this blog believes that this is wrong. He will show for what purpose the boat actually was used. A boat is a vehicle that is in equilibrium with the water. Otherwise it sinks. At the equinox day and night are of equal length and therefore also in equilibrium. A boat is because of that a symbol for the equinox. If the boat on the Nebra disc is a symbol for the equinox then the boat should be used for determining the equinox and the disc should show it. And it does. The disc shows the angle of 41 degrees between the ends of each of the two arcs at the side und the first dot or hole on each side of the boat that is in contact with the bottom of the boat. (There are 39 or 40 dots at the rim of the disc) 41 degrees was the distance between solstice and equinox at Nebra in the bronze-age. It stood for the 91 days between solstice and equinox. The ship on the Nebra disc was used to determine the equinoxes with the help of one of the two arcs at the sides and the Brocken. The 39 or 40 holes or dots at the rim of the disc supported the measurements. The average distance between two holes is 21 days. To determine the time of the equinox as precisely as possible, measurements had to be done weeks in advance, every time when with clear weather the Brocken was seen. The end of one of the two lateral archs on the Nebra disc (or a simple duplicate) was directed to the Brocken. The setting sun was near of one of the holes under the ship to see. The distance to the hole of the equinox, showed how many days were there until the equinox. One can easily think over how this works. To know especially the date of the spring equinox is of great importance for people who live on agriculture. They had to know when it was time to put the seed into the earth. Only with the boat the Nebra disc is a real Bronze Age clock that told man it was spring.

 

I Ching-Secrets, 28. 11. to 18. 12. 2010: Represent the secret images 1 to 12 groups of stars? Are these constellations or asterism not only necessary for timekeeping, but also for getting the support of heaven, when using the I Ching for divination?

Freitag, November 26th, 2010

Represent the secret images 1 to 12 groups of stars? Are these constellations or asterism not only necessary for timekeeping, but also for getting the support of heaven, when using the I Ching for divination?

Astronomy in China has a long history. The first record of an eclipse of the Sun for example was made in China in 2136 BC. The divisions of the sky began with the Big Dipper (the Plough), also called Northern Dipper, and the 28 lunar mansions. Star names of the 28 mansions have been found on oracle bones, dating back to about 1300 BC. As lunar mansions have such an ancient origin, the meaning of most of their names has become obscure. The meaning of them also could vary at different times in history. Ancient Chinese astronomers divided the sky into three Enclosures, twenty-eight mansions and four mythical animals or Images.

Astronomy was mainly a government activity. The astronomers had to keep track of the solar, lunar and planetary motions and they had divine what astronomical phenomena such as eclipses, comets and the lack or a great number of sunspots may mean for the ruling emperor. The astronomers were responsible for producing the calendar each year, a document known as an almanac. No one else was allowed to calculate a calendar. The calendar was considered to be an important symbol of a dynasty. The I-Ching  was as well a book of divination as an almanac we speak of today. Besides Divination the main purposes of astronomical observation was timekeeping. The animals of the four directions are first mentioned in the I Ching, The Book of Changes (Yijing). Here, a map of the heavens, Sifang, shows mythical animals holding court over not only the directions of the earth, but also over the seasons of the year. The mythical animals Azure Dragon, Vermilion Bird, White Tiger and Murky Tortoise are since oldest times associated with the four points of the compass and the four seasons of the year. The constellations which belong to the four animals represent the main stars on or near the ecliptic, the Earth’s orbital plane, throughout the four seasons. They are divided into 28 lunar mansions, i.e. in constellations, the moon goes through in its 28 days.

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The calendar contained predictions of major events in the sky such as eclipses of the sun and the moon, which affirmed the emperor’s divine link to the heavens. During the long period of observations, astronomers discovered the now so-called Saros cycle.sun

 In this cycle have sun, moon and earth about every 18 years, 11.3 days, the same position to each other. Because of this, solar and lunar eclipses repeat in this period. This enabled the astronomers to predict solar and lunar eclipses with some accuracy.

One of the main purposes of astronomical observation in ancient China was timekeeping. The Chinese used a calendar system based on the phases of the moon (measured through observing the position of the stars in the 28 mansions) and the time of the solar year, or season. They determined seasons and the passage of time through the astronomical phenomena at early evening, lunar mansions in the southern sky and the Big Dipper or Northern Dipper through the pointing direction of its handle. In the winter the „handle“ of the Northern Dipper points north at early evening, in the spring the „handle“ points east at early evening, and so on. Accordingly, ancient Chinese divided the horizon into twelve sections and gave them names for linking the directions to which the „handle“ of Big Dipper points in twelve months.

Because the cycles of the Sun and the Moon are different, intercalation had to be done. A lunar year is eleven days shorter than the solar year because 12 synodic months, or 12 returns of the moon to the new phase, take only 354 days. To make the calendar follow the seasons, in old China the insertion of lacking days and months into some calendar years was done by using calculations of lunar phases.

 

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The Chinese constellation Beidou consists of seven stars and is recognized in many cultures as a distinct grouping. In western countries is it named the Big Dipper. As a part of the constellation Ursa Major it is in western countries an asterism. The Big Dipper belongs to the oldest constellations in the sky. In eastern Asia its stars are colloquially named „The Seven Stars of the Northern Dipper”. The Big Dipper indicates with the direction of its „handle“ beginning and ending of seasons. Therefore “Beidou decides about the calendar”, as Sima Qian wrote before more than 2000 years.

Taoists believe that the goddess Dou Mu is the Mother of the Big Dipper. She is considered a personification of light and dawn. As a savior and healer, she is invoked through visualization. Shi unites with cosmic light and “oneness with cosmic principles”. In qigong the Big Dipper is a reservoir of cosmic qi. Above 40 degrees the light of the seven stars of the Big Dipper falls on earth day and night. Here the Seven Stars sink never under the horizon. In this region the influence of these stars respectively the influence of the souls of these stars on human beings is probably greater than that of those, which are no circumpolar stars.

 

 

 

 

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The energies of the hexagrams that build up diagram 12 are the energies of the Taoist Goddess Dou Mu, “the Mother of Beidou”.

Gives Dou Mu people insight in their problems, who use the I Ching for divination earnestly? 

The two brightest stars of the Big Dipper are Dubhe and Merak. When the author asks for it, he finds that the seat of the goddess Dou Mu is the star Dubhe. The diagrams 11 and 12 which seem to represent the Big Dipper are build up by the I Ching hexagrams 21, 45, 22 and 46 (diagram 11) and 23, 47, 24 and 48 (diagram 12). Each hexagram has a special energy. The energies of the hexagrams that build up the two diagrams 11 and 12 which represent probably the Big Dipper are energies of spiritual development and healing. In Dou Mu “the Mother of the Big Dipper” in Taoist believe, the author finds especially the energies of the hexagrams 23, 24, 47 and 48 that build up diagram 12.  Walter NIesel has assigned the energies of these hexagrams to the following affirmations:

Hexagram 23) BO / SPLITTING APART: I AVOID DESTRUCTIVE FORCES!

Hexagram 24) FU / RETURN: I RENEW THE NATURAL FLOW OF MY LIFE!  

(The energies of the hexagrams 23 and 24 are important for healing. The Author finds them in nearly every form of healing. They stand for the solar cycles 23 and 24 at the end of winter, when in the ground already the new life of the coming springtime unfolds.) 

Hexagram 47) KUN / OPPRESSION (EXHAUSTION): I OVERCOME DIFFICULTIES BY INERT STRENGTH!

Hexagram 48) JING / THE WELL: I DRINK FROM INEXHAUSTIBLE SOURCES! 

These are in fact energies of spiritual development and healing. Hexagram 24) FU / RETURN also includes the energy of divination. With the energies of hexagrams 23 and 24) Dou Mu is a healer, but she probably knows also the Laws of Change and gives people insight in their problems, which use the I Ching for divination earnestly.

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Represent the diagrams 11 and 12 the Big Dipper, in ancient China called Beidou?

The image that is represented by the two graphs 11 and 12, contains seven points – seven is the number of stars of the Big Dipper – and it rotates. Graph 12 is rotated relative to figure 11 to 90 degrees in the counterclockwise sense. The Big Dipper turns as well. It rotates around Polaris. The two graphs 11 and 12 are of a form resembling a car. In ancient China the Big Dipper was regarded as the chariot of the emperor Di.  Sima Qian described it as follows: „It serves as a chariot of the emperor Di and controls the four cardinal points of the world by revolving around the center, it divides the yin and the yang and regulates the four seasons, it maintains equilibrium between the five phases, it regulates the moving of the celestial objects, it decides about the epoch of all periodic evolutions and the calendar „.The pointing direction of the handle of the car is north in the winter at early evening, in the spring the „handle“ points east at early evening, and so on. Within a month, the handle rotates 30 degrees in the clockwise sense. The Big Dipper determines so the seasons through the pointing direction of its handle. To know how far the year has progressed, has always been of great importance for agriculture.

How likely is it that the secret pictures 1 to 12 of the I Ching represent star constellations necessary for divination and timekeeping! 

It is reported that the I Ching in ancient China was used as a calendar. Like all the calendars in ancient China it was created by astronomers, and was for the rule of a dynasty of great importance. Those for the government working astronomers observed the sky, the moon, the sun and the stars. Their observations could play an important role. Deviations from normal conditions in the sky could be interpreted that the ruler had lost the mandate of heaven. His rule was then threatened. Therefore, these astronomers were not allowed to talk with others. One of their tasks was divination for the government, for which the events in the sky were decisive, e.g. the star constellations, in which appeared a comet. The different star constellations were assigned to specific regions in the kingdom. The abnormal conditions in the sky should show irregularities in the corresponding region. Furthermore, the seasons were determined by the astronomers. Since the lunar year is shorter than the solar year, and because the time of the year contains fractions of a day this was an important and not so easy task. One year must contain whole days. To determine the time of the year, they observed the phases of the moon and the stars, namely the lunar houses, and the direction of the handle of the Northern Dipper at the evening. The sky was thus both an important basis for divination as well as for the determination of the seasons. With such great importance of the sky, it is not surprising that the most important star constellations were taken in a calendar like the I Ching. The probability that the secret graphs 1 to 12 of the I Ching are groups of stars, is therefore quite large. 

I-Ching-Secrets, 7.11. to 27.11. 2010: Which secret lies behind diagram number 5 of the I-Ching– is it perhaps the alter ego of the sun?

Samstag, November 6th, 2010

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Which secret lies behind diagram number 5 of the I-Ching – is it perhaps the alter ego of the sun?

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(Diagram number 5 is the frequency distribution of the trigrams of the hexagrams  9, 10, 33, 34, 57 and 58 of the I Ching)

In the 1900s The Chinese Taoist Wang Yuan-lu discovered in the Dunhuang Mogao Caves at the Chinese Silk road thousands of old manuscripts. He was selling them piece by piece to support himself and the monastery. In 1907, Aurel Stein and Paul Pelliot bought over 9000 objects and manuscripts from him and sent them to the British Museum in London. Most of the Dunhuang documents are religious texts on Buddhism. But among these manuscripts also was the first known graphical representation of stars from ancient Chinese astronomy, dated back to the years +(649-684) of the early Tang Dynasty. The map contains over 1,300 stars in thirteen sections. The first detailed scientific analysis of the star chart performed in 2010 reveals that it has a accuracy of 1.5 to 4° for the brightest stars. This accuracy is remarkable. It is the oldest known star chart from any civilisation and the first pictorial representation of the classical Chinese constellations.

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A section of the Dunhuang star map shows a star constellation that resembles strongly diagram number 5 of the I-Ching. It lies before the Chinese star constellation Yi, the wings of the Red Bird zhu que. At this position on the Sumerian sky is a Crow named UGA. This crow is after Sun Xiaochun and Jacob Kistemaker probably identical with the three-legged raven san zu wu, representing the Sun in Chinese mythology. Therefore I think diagram number 5 is the three-legged raven san zu wu, representing the sun. If diagram 5 represents the sun, then its properties must have something to do with the sun. Properties of the diagram are especially its trigrams and the time of appearing. In fact, both of them have much to do with the sun:Figure 5 shows the trigram distribution of the two solar cycles from 06/06 to 07/06. In these two solar cycles is the summer solstice. The sun is then at the height of its power. The vegetation explodes. The Yang force reaches its maximum of 26 lines. Yin is represented with only ten lines. The trigram heaven increases with the number four for the second time of the year in its maximum value. The first falls on the beginning of spring. Also reach the trigram wind and the trigram lake their maximum values. The wind trigram symbolizes not only the wind, but also the growth of plants and the trigram lake not only a swamp, but also joy and happiness. The star constellation of the three-legged raven san zu wu could in the city of Xian in the territory of the Wei River, 200 BC. be observed at the summer solstice for several hours in the evening sky. It had passed its climax and was in the south-westerly direction in the descent.

I-Ching-Secrets, Jotin, 17.10. to 06.11. 2010: There are many diagrams hidden in the I-Ching. What secret lies behind the following 12?

Sonntag, Oktober 17th, 2010

What secret lies behind the following 12 charts hidden in the I-Ching?

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What secret lies behind the following 12 charts hidden in the I-Ching?

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The 12 diagrams of the picture above are the frequency distributions of the trigrams of the 64 hexagrams of the I Ching which were elected in the following  manner:

In assigning the 64 hexagrams of the I Ching to the 24 solar periods of a Chinese year, the 64 hexagrams represent 2 years and 16 months.

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The components of the hexagrams are the 8 trigrams sky, wind, water, mountain, earth, thunder, fire and sea. Diagrams of the frequency distributions of sums of the trigrams of the hexagrams of the two solar cycles of beginning, middle or end of the four seasons show the 12 diagrams below. Each of the 12 diagrams is the result of the frequency distribution of the trigrams of 4, respectively 6 hexagrams of the named periods. The order of the trigrams in the frequency distribution is the same as that of the trigrams in the Early Heaven sequence. The frequency distributions of the trigrams in the Late Heaven sequence show only confused results.

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Some of the diagrams show a great symmetry and are very beautiful. Because of that someone must have planned them. By chance, there are no such graphs. What could these pictures mean?  What secret lies behind them? They are linked to the seasons. Because of that they should show something of the seasons. But what do they show? Plants perhaps? Diagram 6 and diagram 10 look like flowers. But the diagram with the day of the autumn equinox seems more like a boat.  At the day of the equinox day and night are of equal length. Day and night are then in balance. A boat must be in balance with the water. When a boat is out of balance, it is in danger to sink.

64-a1-show-some-graphs-dragons.jpgFigure 1 (beginning of spring) and Chart 3 (end of spring) have the same shape. Only the position is different. Figure 1 extends in the vertical direction, Figure 3 in the horizontal direction. The same shape too have the graphs 11 (midwinter) and 12 (end of winter). Their shape is that of a carriage. Their position however is also different. They are rotated 90 degrees to each other. Perhaps there are also figures which show dragons. Dragons occupy a very important position in Chinese mythology. It shows up in arts, literature, poetry, architecture and songs. Dragons appear also in the hexagram 1 and 2 of the I-Ging. Hexagram 1 and 2 stand for the beginning of spring. There is a dragon in the Chinese myths which is a figure of the spring. Diagram 1 therefore might show the dragon of the spring.

 

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