The 64 Hexagrams Qian' Kun' Tun' Meng' Xu' Song' Shi' Bi' XiaoXu' Lu' Tai' Fou' TongRen' DaYou' Qian' Yu' Sui' Gu' Lin' Guan' ShiHe' Bi' Bo' Fu' WuWang' DaXu' Yi' DaGuo' Kan' Li' Xian' Heng' Dun' DaZhuang' Jin' MingYi' JiaRen' Kui' Jian' Jie' Sun' Yi' Yang' Hou' Cui' Sheng' Kun' Jing' Ge' Ding' Zhen' Gen' Jian' GuiMei' Feng' Lu' Xun' Dui' Huan' Jie' ZhongFu' XiaoGuo' JiJi' WeiJi' |
I will say over 90% of the books or people will tell you that I-Ching (a.k.a. The Book of Changes, Oracle of Changes) is an ancient chinese text about divanation and fortune telling. Although they are certainly telling you the truth, they have not tell you all the truth. On the other hand, I-Ching is worth to be treated as a subject of serious studies. Instead of learning the superstitious part of it (which most of us are attracted to), we should study it as a great bible of chinese philosophy. Basically, I-Ching centralized on the teaching of parallel/analoguos thinking, self-development strengths, and sharp and thorough analysis of the ever-changing world. It is indeed one of the most scientific approach of the metaphysics studies from the ancient China.
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