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What is the I Ching?
(yee jing)
The I Ching, also known in the West as The Book
of Change, may be the oldest book in the world.
Originating thousands of years ago among the
courtly shaman-diviners of ancient China, it
springs out of the unconditioned consciousness
of primeval humanity. Here are truly fundamental
perceptions of reality, distilled into inter-related
images of physical and spiritual reality. The
images are associated with numbers, and the numbers
may be derived from certain technical manipulations
that enable a skilled psychic reader to use the
book as an oracle. In fact, the book has been
used and abused for fortune telling from its
earliest days. It had itself evolved out of a
still more ancient divining tool known as the
Tortoise Oracle, which wisdom it incorporated.
In Chinese, "ching" means book. "I" means
change, or changes. Thus the name may be translated
as The Book of Changes. But "I" means
not only change. Strangely enough, it also means
permanence, or the unchangeable. The Book of
Changes views all of the changes that we and
the world go through as an unfolding of the immutable
laws and principles of existence. By explaining
our present situation in terms of the natural
laws that have given rise to it, we can know
where we are headed and what the future is likely
to be.
The I ching views the universe as a natural
and well-coordinated system in which the process
of change never ceases. It presents human nature
and destiny as based on principle and order.
Study of the I ching thus makes it possible for
us to orient individual human activities and
situations within the larger context of harmonious
interactions between people, nature, and the
cosmos.
The I ching is a practical guide through the
perplexities and insecurities of daily life.
It roots our actions, experiences and expressions
in the fundamental ground of existence. It's
beautiful commentaries help to give us the moral
strength we need to fulfill our ideals. The loveliness
of its images provide endless joys of meditation,
study and contemplation.
The heart of the book is in its images. There
are sixty-four in all, and the psychic reader
must be familiar with the particular meaning
of each one, as well as the ways in which one
image relates to, and may change into, another
image in the course of time. Age-old traditions
describing the images through the medium of imaginative
verse help the intuitive and psychic personality
to disclose the underlying themes. And, in addition,
a great number of philosophers have written commentaries
about the images in the I Ching. The legendary
contributions of Confucius, or Kung-fu-tse, from
about 500bc are the most celebrated, but there
have been many others of comparable scope and
quality. The images have been interpreted from
the point of view of many of the world's religions,
including Christianity, and they have been related
to secular concerns in translations like the
one that has guided the affairs of present-day
Japan's pre-eminent corporate leader, Matsushita.
Indeed, the I Ching may be consulted for a psychic
reading on virtually any subject or concern.
All things in Heaven and Earth are dreamt of
in this philosophy, Horatio.
Source: http://www.wholarts.com
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