Regulus Posted June 20, 2022 (edited) - Edited October 22, 2022 by Regulus Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Harmen Posted June 26, 2022 --> Going back to the source: the manuscripts of Richard Wilhelm (1) – æ˜“å¸ (yjcn.nl) Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Regulus Posted June 28, 2022 (edited) - Edited October 22, 2022 by Regulus Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
terry Posted August 1, 2022 aloha,    I have seen the bigrams described as old yang and young yang, old yin and young yin. The idea is that each line is always changing into its opposite. The real world is one of change and our symbol oriented mentality wants to discern objects. Objects as such do not exist, everything is a rapidly melting ice cube. Or rapidly freezing. Now water, now ice, soft and hard alternate but are one.    So young yin is the change in stuff from recently broken old yang. Old yin is young yin changing but still recognizably yin. Young yang is old yin recently coalesced. Old yang is about to break from excess rigidity.    The bigrams represent the states of change of each line, each place, in the hexagram.  terry Share this post Link to post Share on other sites