I-Ching in Black & White

5 July 2007

Binary count.

The premise of the I Ching lies primarily in its role as an oracle, the black lines indicating “no,” and the white, “yes,” however, the cycles of light and darkness, as well as mitosis, lunations, the seasons, sunspot cycles & the precession of the equinoxes follow all find themselves reflected in the ever-shifting symmetries between the hexagrams.

the white represents the solid lines and the dark  represents the broken lines of the I Ching


The Power of the Myth of the Planets and the Week

8 November 2006

Calendar Reform and the 7 Weekdays.

Comparing symbol systems, as if their inherent form and position were intentional, perhaps to survive in dormancy through a period of widespread lethargic oblivion.

Regardless, the current Weekdays observed in English & the Reformed order of Weekdays (which switches Tuesday and Friday)

Notice how the Chinese System, when arranged vertically, moves from the Sun to the Earth, from the divine ideal conception to the material intentional manifestation, which reflects the structure of the I Ching.

Babylonian Symbols for the Planets & Zodiac & the 13-Month Calendar

In the Reformed Weekday Sequence, the Week begins with the Sun, then the Moon and Venus, both feminine symbols, then Hermaphroditic Mercury, then Jupiter and Mars, both males symbols, and finally Saturn.

More importantly, the Reformed Weekday Sequence progresses in the order of the relative brightness of the object as visible from Earth. Also the Reform places the 2 inner planets, Venus & Mercury, together with the Sun & Moon.

Chinese Symbols for Planets & Elements & Cycle of Creation

From the Sun, the Heavens, the Moon, then descends through the five elements, Metal, Water, Wood, Fire and Earth. The progression from the ideal via the Creative arrangements of the elements, ending with Earth, the physical world.

Symbolically speaking, this relatively minor change would better suit the more widespread belief systems associated with these particular symbols.

However, this remains but a suggestion.


tao, i-ching, squares and pairs

7 November 2006

Terence & Dennis McKenna

Part 3: the I-Ching, and the King Wen Sequence

Quoting from The Invisible Landscape, by the McKenna brothers.

Chapter 8: The I-Ching as Lunar Calculator and Astronomical Calculator
Chapter 9: Time, Change and Becoming

the King Wen Sequence
(read from left to right, top to bottom)

“The earliest arrangement of the hexagrams of the I Ching is the King Wen sequence. It was this sequence that was chosen to be studied as a possible basis for a new model of the relationship of time to the ingression and conservation of novelty. In studying the kinds of order in the King Wen sequence of the I Ching a number of remarkable discoveries were made. It is well known that hexagrams in the King Wen sequence occur in pairs. The second member of each pair is obtained by inverting the first. In any sequence of the sixty-four hexagrams their are eight hexagrams that remain unchanged when inverted. In the King Wen sequence, these eight hexagrams are paired with hexagrams in which each line of the first hexagram has become its opposite (yang (—) changed to yin (- -) and vice versa)”

“No known basis exists for determining why pairs are arranged as they are or why one member of a pair precedes another.

First Order Transitions in the King Wen Sequence
“First order of difference refers to how many lines change as one moves through the King Wen sequence from one hexagram to the next. the first order of difference will always be an integer between one and six.”

“1. Order among the thirty-two pairs was determined by a wish to absolutely exclude transition situations with a value of five.
2. order among the thirty-two pairs was secondarily determined by a similar wish to absolutely exclude transition situations with a value of one. (53-54 & 61-62)
3. A three to one ratio of even to odd transitions was maintained.”

Franklin’s Magic Square
the sum of each column and row is 260 - equivalent to the number of days in human gestation, and the 260-Day Calendar.

Franklin’s Magic Square

16 50 9 55 11 53 14 52 = 260
1 63 8 58 6 60 3 61 = 260
64 2 57 7 59 5 62 4 = 260
59 15 56 10 54 12 51 13 = 260
48 18 41 23 43 21 46 20 = 260
33 31 40 26 38 28 35 29 = 260
32 34 25 29 27 37 30 36 = 260
17 47 24 42 22 44 19 45 = 260
= 260 = 260 = 260 = 260 = 260 = 260 = 260 = 260  

Linear and Radial Symmetry in Light and Dark

5 November 2006

Part 2: Playing with the I-Ching

Part 1 - 2 lines, 4 images, 8 trigrams, 64 hexagrams

Setting aside the richness of imagery used in the Book of Changes, for oracular reasons as well as contemplation, the simple binary structure yields many symmetrical arrangements.

The linear binary sequence of the hexagrams assigns a value of 0 to the yielding line (- -) and a value of 1 to the firm line (—), counting from the bottom line upwards. This sequence is represented in the table of hexagrams in Part 1.

In terms of the radial arrangements of the hexagrams and trigrams, the simplest associations, with respect to the calendar:
*the yielding (- -) represents darkness, descending, North, Winter.
*the firm line (—) represents light, ascending, South, Summer.

Radial Symmetry in the I-Ching

Fu-Hsi’s Primal Arrangement of the 8 trigrams according to the time of year.

equivalence to:

the equivocation of 12 of the 64 hexagrams to the Lunations of a regular year.

64 Hexagrams

King Wen’s arrangement of the 64 Hexagrams


Here’s a radial I-Ching image from the Tortuga 13-Moon Calendar site.

The Change in the Book of Changes

The I-Ching or Book of Changes, refers ultimately to the process of the change of state from the idea represented in one hexagram to that of another. Traditionally, yarrow stalks have been used, although 3 coins proves more practical.

Toss the 3 coins, pennies or what-have-you, six times in succession. The result of the toss determines the line in constructing the hexagram from the bottom up. The results are translated most simply as follows:

Heads = H = yin (- -) = 2
Tails =T = Yang (—) = 3

T - T - T = Yang (—) = 9
T - T - H = yin (- -) = 8
H - H - T = Yang (—) = 7
H - H - H = yin (- -) = 6

The difference being that lines with the value of 6 and 9 change to their opposites, and lines with the value of 7 and 8 remain the same. Thus the six coin tosses determine an initial hexagram, and that into which it changes, and somewhere in between is the change, which is ours to consider.

This corresponds with the notion that the Primal Powers, the Ascending Dragon of Light and the Descending Dragon of Darkness. The I-Ching represents the dynamic between different polar forces, and the ebb and flow of their relationship, as visible in the play between the source of light, such as the Sun, and that which reflects it, such as the Earth, Moon, and Planets.


the tao, as simple as 1, 2, 4

3 November 2006

Part 1: 2 lines, 4 images, 8 trigrams, 64 hexagrams

Part 0: the tao, i-ching and time

from “the I-Ching or the Book of Changes.”

Book 2 Chapter XI

5. Therefore there is in the Changes the Great and Primal Beginning. This generates the two primary forces. The two primary forces generate the four images. The four images generate the eight trigrams.

“The Great Primal Beginning, t’ai chi, plays an important role in later Chinese natural philosophy. Originally chi is the ridgepole - a simple line symbolizing the positing of oneness (—). This positing of oneness implies also a positing of duality, an above and a below. The conditioning element is further designated as an undivided line, while the conditioned element is represented by means of a divided line (- -). These are the two polar primary forces later designated as yang, the bright principal, and yin, the dark. Then, through doubling, there arise four images.”

“These correspond with the four seasons of the year. Through addition of another line, there arise the eight trigrams.”

K’un North the Receptive Earth

Chen Northeast the Arousing Thunder

Li East the Clinging Fire

Tui Southeast the Joyous Lake

Ch’ien South the Creative Heaven
Sun Southwest the Gentle Wind
K’an West the Abysmal Water
Ken Northwest KeepingStill Mountain

When one trigram is placed above another, this creates the 64 hexagrams of the I-Ching

Part 2: linear and radial symmetry in light and dark


The tao, the Dark Power and the Light Power

2 November 2006

Part 0 - tao, i-ching and time

Excerpts from the “I Ching or the Book of Changes” by Wilhelm/Baynes
Book II - Chapter V

Tao in Its Relation to the Light Power and to the Dark Power

1. That which lets now the dark, now the light appear is tao.

The light and the dark are the two primal powers, designated hitherto in the text as firm and yielding, or as day and night.

Firm (—) and yielding (- -) are the terms applied to the lines of the Book of Changes, while light and dark designate the two primal powers of nature.

The terms yin, the dark, and yang, the light, denote respectively the shadowed and the light side of a mountain or a river. Yang represents the south side of the mountain, because this side receives the sunlight, but it connotes the north side of the river, because the light of the river is reflected to that side. The reverse is true as regards yin. These terms are gradually extended to include the two polar forces of the universe. It may be that these designations, which emphasize the cycle of change more than change itself, led also to the representation in circular form of the Primal Beginning, [t'ai chi t'u], the symbol that was later to play such an important part in Chinese thought.


[t'ai chi t'u]

2. As continuer, it is good. As completer, it is the essence.

The primal powers never come to a standstill; the cycle of becoming continues uninterruptedly. The reason is that between the two primal powers there arises again and again a state of tension, a potential that keeps the powers in motion and causes them to unite, whereby they are constantly regenerated. Tao brings this about without ever becoming manifest. The power of tao to maintain the world by constant renewal of a state of tension between the polar forces, is designated as good. (cf. Lao-tse, chap. 8)

As the power that completes things, the power that lends them their individuality and gives them a center around which they organize, tao is called the essence, that with which things are endowed at their origin.

6. As begetter of all begetting, it is called change.

The dark begets the light and the light begets the dark in ceaseless alternation, but that which begets this alternation, that to which all life owes its existence, is tao with its law of change.

7. As that which completes the primal images, it is called the Creative; as that which imitates them, it is called the Receptive.

This is based on the view expressed likewise in the Tao te Ching, namely, that underlying reality there is a world of archetypes, and reproductions of these make up the real things in the material world. The world of archetypes is heaven, the world of reproductions is the earth: there energy, here matter; there the Creative, here the Receptive. but it is the same tao that is active both in the Creative and in the Receptive.

8. In that it serves for exploring the laws of number and thus for knowing the future, it is called revelation. In that it serves to infuse an organic coherence into the changes, it is called the work.

The future likewise develops in accordance with the fixed laws, according to calculable numbers. if these numbers are known, future events can be calculated with perfect certainty. This is the thought on which the Book of Changes is based. This world of the immutable is the daemonic world, in which there is no free choice, in which everything is fixed. it is the world of yin. But in addition to this rigid world of number, there are living trends. Things develop, consolidate in a given direction, grow rigid, then decline; a change sets in, coherence is established once more, and the world is one again. The secret of tao in this world of the mutable, the world of light - the realm of yang - is to keep the changes in motion in such a manner that no stasis occurs and an unbroken coherence is maintained. He who succeeds in endowing his work with this regenerative power crates something organic, and the thing so created is enduring.

9. That aspect of it which cannot be fathomed in terms of the light and the dark is called spirit.

In their alternation and reciprocal effect, the two fundamental forces serve to explain all the phenomena in the world. Nonetheless, there remains something that cannot be explained in terms of the interaction of these forces, a final why. This ultimate meaning of tao is the spirit, the divine, the unfathomable in it, that which must be revered in silence.

Part 1: the tao,  as simple as 1, 2, 4.


I-Ching, the Great 8 & 12 lunar months

2 November 2006

Hexagrams, Spokes of the Wheel of the Year and 12 Lunations.

According to the “I-Ching or Book of Changes” by Wilhelm/Baynes:

There are 2 arrangements of the 8 trigrams according to the 8 Points of the Year
North at the bottom, equivalent to the Winter Solstice, Midnight, and the New Moon.

Sequence of Earlier Heaven or Primal Arrangement

Sequence of the Later Heaven or Inner World Arrangement

12 of the 64 hexagrams of the I-Ching have been assigned to the 12 Lunar Months. The months begin with the New Moon, so the dates on Solar portion of the Calendar vary.

Uncertain which, if any, hexagram is assigned to the 13th intercalary month.

Image Hexagram Lunation Gregorian Equivalent
11 - Tui - Peace

1st

Feb - Mar
34 - Ta Chuang - Power of the Great

2nd

Mar - Apr
43 - Kuai - Breakthrough

3rd

Apr - May
1 - Chien - the Creative

4th

May - Jun
44 - Kou - Coming to Meet

5th

Jun - Jul
33 - Tun - Retreat

6th

Jul - Aug
12 - P’i - Standstill

7th

Aug - Sep
20 - Kuan - Contemplation

8th

Sep - Oct
23 - Po - Splitting Apart

9th

Oct - Nov
2 - K’un - the Receptive

10th

Nov - Dec
24 - Fu - Return

11th

Dec - Jan
19 - Lin - Approach

12th

Jan - Feb

Tao & Time

31 October 2006

Taijitsu, yin-Yang, dark-light, winter-summer, night-day

How the symbol of the Tao can be derived with an eight foot stick (approximate) and enough patience to last a year. From the Chinese Fortune Calendar site.

“By observing the cycle of the Sun, we can use a pole, post at right angles to the ground and record the lengths of the shadow about every 15 days for a year. The shortest shadow is found on the day of Summer Solstice in China. The longest shadow is found on the day of Winter Solstice. The day of Winter Solstice has the least sunshine in the year. After Winter Solstice, the day will gain more sunshine each day till Summer Solstice. We can say Yang begins right after Winter Solstice and Yin begins right after Summer Solstice in the northern hemisphere.”

“After recording 24 shadow lines, we move the lines into the diagram of six concentric circles with 24 sectors beginning from Winter Solstice to Summer Solstice. The length of each line will subtract the portion of the length of Summer Solstice shadow line because we want to give Summer Solstice maximum Yang.”


I-Ching Hexagram 63

28 October 2006

I-Ching Hexagram 63 - Chi Chi - After Completion


the trigram above - K’AN - the Abysmal, Water
the trigram below - Li - the Clinging, Fire

from the Wilhelm-Baynes translation of “the I Ching or the Book of Changes”

This hexagram is the evolution of T’ai, PEACE (11). The transition from confusion to order is completed, and everything is in its proper place even in particulars. The strong lines are in the strong places, the weak lines in the weak places. This is a very favorable outlook, yet it gives reason for though. For it is just when perfect equilibrium has been reached that any movement may cause order to revert to disorder. The one strong line that has moved to the top, thus effecting complete order in details, is followed by the other lines, each moving according to its nature, and thus suddenly there arises again the hexagram P’i, STANDSTILL (12).

Hence the present hexagram indicates the conditions of a time of climax, which necessitate the utmost caution.

THE JUDGMENT

AFTER COMPLETION. Success in small matters.
Perseverance furthers.
At the beginning good fortune,
At the end disorder.

The transition from the old to the new time is already accomplished. In principle, everything stands systematized, and it is only in regard to details that success is still to be achieved. In respect to this, however, we must be careful to maintain the right attitude. Everything proceeds as if of its own accord, and this can all to easily tempt us to relax and let things take their course without troubling over details. Such indifference is the root of all evil. Symptoms of decay are bound to be the result. Here we have the rule indicating the usual course of history. But this rule is not an inescapable law. He who understands it is in position to avoid its effects by dint of unremitting perseverance and caution.

THE IMAGE

Water over fire: the image of the condition
In AFTER COMPLETION.
Thus the superior man
Takes thought of misfortune
And arms himself against it in advance.

When water in a kettle hangs over fire, the two elements stand in relation and thus generate energy (cf. the production of steam). But the resulting tension demands caution. If the water boils over, the fire is extinguished and its energy is lost. If the heat is too great, the water evaporates into the air. These elements here brought into relation and thus generating energy are by nature hostile to each other. Only the most extreme caution can prevent damage. In life too there are junctures when all forces are in balance and work in harmony, so that everything seems to be in the best of order. In such times only the sage recognizes the moments that bode danger and knows how to banish it by means of timely precautions.

THE LINES

Nine at the beginning means:
He brakes his wheels.
he gets his tail in the water.
No blame.

In times following a great transition, everything is pressing forward, striving in the direction of development and progress. But this pressing forward at the beginning is not good; it overshoots the mark and lads with certainty to loss and collapse. therefore a man of strong character does not allow himself to be infected by the general intoxication but checks his course in time. He may indeed not remain altogether untouched by the disastrous consequences of the general pressure, but he is hit only from behind like a fox that, having crossed the water, at the last minute gets its tail wet. He will not suffer any real harm, because his behavior has been correct.

Six in the second place means:
The woman loses the curtain of her carriage.
Do not run after it;
On the seventh day you will get it.

When a woman drove out in her carriage, she had a curtain that hid her from the glances of the curious. It was regarded as a breach of propriety to drive on if this curtain was lost. Applied to public life, this means that a man who wants to achieve something is not receiving that confidence of the authorities which he needs, so to speak, for his personal protection. Especially in times “after completion” it may happen that those who have come to power grow arrogant and conceited and no longer trouble themselves about fostering new talent.

This as a rule results in office seeking. If a man’s superiors withhold their trust from him, he will seek ways and means of getting it and of drawing attention to himself. We are warned against such an unworthy procedure: “Do not seek it.” Do not throw yourself away on the world, but wait tranquilly and develop your personal worth by your own efforts. times change. When the six stages of the hexagram have passed, the new era dawns. That which is a man’s own cannot be permanently lost. It comes to him of its own accord. He need only be able to wait.

Nine in the third place means:
The Illustrious Ancestor
Disciplines the Devil’s Country.
After three years he conquers it.
Inferior people must not be employed.

“Illustrious Ancestor” is the dynastic title of the Emperor Wu Ting of the Yin dynasty. After putting his realm in order what a strong hand, he waged long colonial wars for the subjection of the Huns who occupied the northern borderland with constant threat of incursion.

The situation described is as follows. After times of completion, when a new power has arisen and everything within the country has been set in order, a period of colonial expansion almost inevitably follows. Then as a rule long-drawn-out struggles must be reckoned with. For this reason, a correct colonial policy is especially important. The territory won at such bitter cost must not be regarded as an almshouse for people who in one way or another have made themselves impossible at home, but who are thought to be quite good enough for the colonies. such a policy ruins at the outset any chance of success. This holds true in small as well as in large matters, because it is not only rising states that carry on a colonial policy; the urge to expand, with its accompanying dangers, is part and parcel of every ambitious undertaking.

Six in the fourth place means:
The finest clothes turn to rags.
Be careful all day long.

In a time of lowering culture, an occasional convulsion is bound to occur, uncovering a hidden evil within society and at first causing a great sensation. But since the situation is favorable on the whole, such evils can easily be glossed over and concealed from the public. Then everything is forgotten and peace apparently reigns complacently once more. However, to the thoughtful man such occurrences are grave omens that he does not neglect. This is the only way o f averting evil consequences.

Nine in the fifth place means:
The neighbor in the east who slaughters an ox
Does not attain as much real happiness
As the neighbor in the west
WIth his small offering.

Religious attitudes are likewise influenced by the spiritual atmosphere prevailing in times after completion. In divine worship the simple old forms are replaced by an ever more elaborate ritual and an ever greater outward display. but inner seriousness is lacking in this show of magnificence; human caprice takes the place of conscientious obedience to the divine will. However, while man sees what is before his eyes, God looks into his heart. Therefore a simple sacrifice offered with real piety holds a greater blessing than an impressive service without warmth.

Six at the top means.
He gets his head in the water. Danger.

Here in conclusion another warning is added. After crossing a stream, a man’s head can get into the water only if he is so imprudent as to turn back. As long as he goes forward and does not look back, he escapes this danger. But there is a fascination in standing still and looking back on a peril overcome. However, such vain self-admiration brings misfortune. It leads only to danger, and unless one finally resolves to go forward without pausing, one falls a victim to this danger.


I-Ching Hexagram 2

28 October 2006

I-Ching Hexagram 2 - K’un - the Receptive

the trigram above - K’UN - the Receptive
the trigram below - K’UN - the Receptive

from the Wilhelm-Baynes translation of “the I Ching or the Book of Changes”

This hexagram is made up of broken lines only. The broken line represents the dark, yielding, receptive primal power of yin. The attribute of the hexagram is devotion; its image is the earth. It is the perfect complement of THE CREATIVE - the complement, not the opposite, for the Receptive does not combat the Creative but completes it. It represents nature in contrast to spirit, earth in contrast to heaven, space as against time, the female-maternal as against the male-paternal. However, as applied to human affairs, the principle of this complementary relationship is found not only in the relation between man and woman, but also in that between prince and minister and between father and son. Indeed, even in the individual this duality appears in the coexistence of the spiritual world and the world of the senses.

But strictly speaking there is no real dualism here, because there is a clearly defined hierarchic relationship between the two principles. In itself of course the Receptive is just as important as the Creative, but the attribute of devotion defines the place occupied by this primal power in relation to the Creative. For he Receptive must be activated and led by the Creative; then it is productive of good. Only when it abandons this position and tries to stand as an equal side by side wit the Creative, does it become evil. The result then is opposition to and struggle against the Creative, which is productive of evil to both.

THE JUDGMENT

THE RECEPTIVE brings about sublime success,
Furthering through the perseverance of a mare.
If the superior man undertakes something and tries to lead,
he goes astray;
But if he follows, he finds guidance.
It is favorable to find friends in the west and south,
To forego friends in the east and north.
Quiet perseverance brings good fortune.

The four fundamental aspects of the Creative - “sublime success, furthering through perseverance” - are also attributed to the Receptive. Here, however, the perseverance is more closely defined: it is that of a mare. The Receptive connotes spatial reality in contrast to the spiritual potentiality of the Creative. The potential becomes real and the spiritual becomes spatial through a specifically qualifying definition. Thus the qualification, “of a mare,” is here added to the idea of perseverance. the horse belongs to earth just as the dragon belongs to heaven. Its tireless roaming over the plains is taken as a symbol of the vast expanse of the earth. This is the symbol chosen because the mare combines the strength and swiftness of the horse with the gentleness and devotion of the cow.

Only because nature in its myriad forms corresponds with the myriad impulses of the Creative can it make these impulses real. Nature’s richness lies in its power to nourish all living things; its greatness lies in its power to give them beauty and splendor. Thus it prospers all that lives. It is the Creative that begets things, but they are brought to birth by the Receptive. Applied to human affairs, therefore, what the hexagram indicates is action in conformity with the situation. The person in question is not in an independent position, but is acting as an assistant. This means that he must achieve something. it is not his task to try to lead - that would only make him lose his way - but to let himself be led. If he knows how to meet fate with an attitude of acceptance, he is sure to find the right guidance. The superior man lets himself be guided; he does not go ahead blindly, but learns from the situation what is demanded of him and then follows this intimation from fate.

Since there is something to be accomplished, we need friends and helpers in the hour of toil and effort, once the ideas to be realized are firmly set. the time of toil and effort is indicated by the west and the south, for west and south symbolize the place where the Receptive works for the Creative, as nature does in summer and autumn. If in that situation one does not mobilize all one’s powers, the work to be accomplished will not be done Hence to find friends there means to find guidance. but in addition to the time and toil and effort, there is also a time for planning, and for this we need solitude. The east symbolizes the place where a man receives orders from his master, and the north the place where he reports on what he has done. At that item he must be alone and objective. in this sacred hour he must do without companions, so that the purity of the moment may no be spoiled by factional hates and favoritism.

THE IMAGE

The earths’ condition is receptive devotion.
Thus the superior man who has breadth of character
Carries the outer world.

Just as there is only one heaven, so too there is only one earth. In hexagram of heaven the doubling of the trigram implies duration in time, but in the hexagram of earth the doubling connotes the solidity and extension in space by virtue of which the earth is able to carry and preserve all things that live and move upon it. The earth in its devotion carries all things, good and evil, without exception. In the same way the superior man gives to his character breadth, purity, and sustaining power, so that he is able both to support and to bear with people and things.

THE LINES

Six at the beginning means:
When there is hoarfrost underfoot,
Solid ice is not far off.

Just as the light-giving power represents life, so the dark power, the shadowy, represents death. When the first hoarfrost comes in the autumn, the power of darkness and cold is just at its beginning. After these first warnings, signs of death will gradually multiply, until, in obedience to immutable laws, stark winter with its ice here.

In life it is the same. After certain scarcely noticeable signs of decay have appeared, they go on increasing until final dissolution comes. But in life precautions can be taken by heeding the first signs of decay and checking them in time.

Six in the second place means:
Straight, square, great.
WIthout purpose,
Yet nothing remains unfurthered.

The symbol of heaven is the circle, and that of earth is the square. Thus squareness is a primary quality of the earth. On the other hand, movement in a straight line, as well as magnitude, is a primary quality of the Creative. But all square things have their origin in a straight line and in turn from solid bodies. In mathematics, when we discriminate between lines, planes and solids, we find that rectangular planes result from straight lines, and cubic magnitudes from rectangular planes. The Receptive accommodates itself to the qualities of the Creative and makes them its own. Thus a square develops out of a straight line and a cube out of a square. this is compliance with the laws of the Creative; nothing is taken away, nothing added. Therefore the Receptive has no need of a special purpose of its own, nor of any effort; yet everything turns out as it should.

Nature creates all beings without erring: this is its straightness. It is calm and still: this is its foursquareness. It tolerates all creatures equally: this is its greatness. Therefore it attains what is right for all without artifice or special intentions. Man achieves the height of wisdom when all that he does is as self-evident as what nature does.

Six in the third place means:
Hidden lines.
One is able to remain persevering.
If by chance you are in the service of a king,
Seek not works, but bring to completion.

If a man is free of vanity he is able to conceal his abilities and keep them from attracting attention too soon; thus he can mature undisturbed. If conditions demand it, he can also enter public life, but that too he does with restraint The wise man gladly leaves fame to others. he does not seek to have credited to himself things that stand accomplished, but hopes to release active forces; that is, he completes his works in such a manner that they may bear fruit for the future.

Six in the fourth place means:
A tied-up sack. No blame, no praise.

The dark element opens when it moves and closes when at rest. The strictest reticence is indicated here. The time is dangerous, because any degree of prominence leads either to the enmity of irresistible antagonists if one challenges them or to misconceived recognition if one is complaisant. therefore a man ought to maintain reserve, be it in solitude or in the turmoil of the world, for there too he can hide himself so well that no one knows him.

Six in the fifth place means:
A yellow lower garment brings supreme good fortune.

Yellow is the color of the earth and of the middle: it is the symbol of that which is reliable and genuine. The lower garment is inconspicuously decorated - the symbol of aristocratic reserve. When anyone is called upon to work in a prominent but not independent position, true success depends on the utmost discretion. A man’s genuineness and refinement should not reveal themselves directly; they should express themselves only indirectly as an effect from within.

Six at the top means:
Dragons fight in the meadow.
Their blood is black and yellow.

In the top place the dark element should yield to the light. If it attempts to maintain a position to which it is not entitled and to rule instead of serving, it draws down upon itself the anger of the strong. A struggle ensues in which it is overthrown, with injury, however, to both sides. The dragon, symbol of heaven, comes to fight the false dragon that symbolizes the inflation of the earth principle. midnight blue is the color of heaven; yellow is the color of the earth. Therefore, when black and yellow blood flow, it is a sign that in the unnatural contest both primal powers suffer injury.

When all the lines are sixes, it means:
Lasting perseverance furthers.

When nothing but sixes appear, the hexagram of THE RECEPTIVE changes into the hexagram THE CREATIVE. By holding fast to what is right, it gains the power of enduring. There is indeed no advance, but neither is there retrogression.