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yin and yang
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{{Short description|Philosophical concept of dualism in ancient Chinese philosophy}}{{Redirect|Yin yang|other uses|Yin yang (disambiguation)}}{{More citations needed|date=June 2023}}{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2024}}







factoids
yin.2}}| gr = inyang| j = jam1 joeng4| y = yām yèuhngj1j4}}| poj = im-iông| tl = im-iôngyim1-yong2}}| mc = ‘im-yang| oc-b92 = *Ê”rjum ljang| oc-bs = *q(r)um langいんようおんみょう}}in’yōonmyō}}| tp = yin-yáng| bpmf = ㄧㄣ ㄧㄤˊインヨウオンミョウ}}in’youonmyou}}}}{{Taoism}}{{Chinese folk religion}}Yin and yang ({{IPAc-en|lang|j|ɪ|n}}, {{IPAc-en|j|æ|Å‹}}), also yinyangWEB, Stefon, Matt, 7 May 2021, yinyang,www.britannica.com/topic/yinyang, 3 May 2023, Encyclopedia Britannica, en, WEB, Wang, Robin R., Yinyang (Yin-yang),iep.utm.edu/yinyang/, 3 May 2023, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, en-US, or yin-yang,WEB, Shan, Jun, 3 February 2020, What Do Yin and Yang Represent?,www.thoughtco.com/yin-and-yang-629214, 3 May 2023, ThoughtCo, en, is a concept that originated in Chinese philosophy, describing an opposite but interconnected, self-perpetuating cycle. Yin and yang can be thought of as complementary (rather than opposing) forces that interact to form a dynamic system in which the whole is greater than the assembled parts.BOOK, Georges Ohsawa, Georges Ohsawa, 1976,books.google.com/books?id=oQqDZnm43mkC, The Unique Principle, 978-0-918860-17-0, Google Books, The technology of yin and yang is the foundation of critical and deductive reasoning for effective differential diagnosis of disease and illnesses within Confucian influenced traditional Chinese medicine.BOOK, Ching, Nigel, The art and practice of diagnosis in Chinese medicine, Halpin, Jeremy, 2017, Singing Dragon, 978-0-85701-267-8, London Philadelphia, BOOK, Traditional Chinese medicine: theory and principles, 2016, De Gruyter, 978-3-11-041766-1, Hu, Dongpei, Berlin Boston, BOOK, Seem, Dr. Mark, Acupuncture Energetics A Workbook for Diagnostics and Treatment, Inner Traditions/Bear, 1991, 978-0-89281-435-0, BOOK, Acupuncture Therapeutics, Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2011, 978-0-85701-018-6, 23,
In Chinese cosmology, the universe creates itself out of a primary chaos of material energy, organized into the cycles of yin and yang and formed into objects and lives. ‘Yin’ is retractive, passive and receptive while ‘yang’ is active, repelling and expansive; in principle, this dichotomy in some form, is seen in all things—patterns of change and difference, such as seasonal cycles, evolution of the landscape over days, weeks, and eons (with the original meaning of the words being the north-facing shade and the south-facing brightness of a hill), gender (female and male), as well as the formation of the character of individuals and the grand arc of sociopolitical history in disorder and order.BOOK, Religions in the Modern World: Traditions and Transformations, Feuchtwang, Stephan, Routledge, 2016, 978-0-415-85881-6, New York, 150, Taiji is a Chinese cosmological term for the “Supreme Ultimate” state of undifferentiated absolute and infinite potential, the oneness before duality, from which yin and yang originate. It can be contrasted with the older wuji ({{zhi|t=無極|l=without pole}}). In the cosmology pertaining to yin and yang, the material energy which this universe was created from is known as qi. It is believed that the organization of qi in this cosmology of yin and yang has formed many things.Feuchtwang, Sephan. “Chinese Religions.” Religions in the Modern World: Traditions and Transformations, Third ed., Routledge, 2016, pp. 150–151. Included among these forms are humans. Many natural dualities (such as light and dark, fire and water, expanding and contracting) are thought of as physical manifestations of the duality symbolized by yin and yang. This duality, as an unity of opposites, lies at the origins of many branches of classical Chinese science and philosophy, as well as being a primary guideline of traditional Chinese medicine,BOOK, Porkert, The Theoretical Foundations of Chinese Medicine, MIT Press, 1974, 0-262-16058-7, registration,archive.org/details/theoreticalfound00pork, and a central principle of different forms of Chinese martial arts and exercise, such as baguazhang, tai chi, and qigong, as well as appearing in the pages of the I Ching.The notion of duality can be found in many areas, such as Communities of Practice. The term “dualistic-monism” or dialectical monism has been coined in an attempt to express this fruitful paradox of simultaneous unity and duality. According to this philosophy, everything has both yin and yang aspects (for instance, shadow cannot exist without light). Either of the two major aspects may manifest more strongly in a particular object, depending on the criterion of the observation. The yin and yang symbol (or taijitu) shows a balance between two opposites with a portion of the opposite element in each section.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}In Taoist metaphysics, distinctions between good and bad, along with other dichotomous moral judgments, are perceptual, not real; so, the duality of yin and yang is an indivisible whole. In the ethics of Confucianism on the other hand, most notably in the philosophy of Dong Zhongshu ({{circa}} 2nd century BC), a moral dimension is attached to the idea of yin and yang.BOOK, Taylor Latener, Rodney Leon, The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Confucianism, 2, Rosen Publishing Group, 2005, 869, New York, 978-0-8239-4079-0,
The Ahom philosophy of duality of the individual self han and pu is quite similar to yin and yang of Taoism.THESIS, Gogoi, Shrutashwinee, 2011, Tai ahom religion a philosophical study, 10603/116167, PhD,shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/handle/10603/116167, vii, The tradition was originated in Yunnan, China and followed by some Ahom, descendants of Dai ethnic Minority.THESIS, Gogoi, Shrutashwinee, 2011, Tai ahom religion a philosophical study, 10603/116167, PhD,shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/handle/10603/116167, 203,

Linguistic aspects

The Chinese terms {{zhi|t=陰|p=yīn|l=dark side}} and {{zhi|t=陽|p=yáng|l=light side}} have a rich history in the language, their etymologies and evolution analyzable through lenses of orthography, phonology, and meanings.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}

Characters

File:Yin yang (Chinese characters).svg|thumb|upright=0.7|{{zhi|p=YÄ«nyáng}} in seal scriptseal scriptThe Chinese characters and are both considered to be phono-semantic compounds, with semantic component ’mound’, ‘hill’, a graphical variant of —with the phonetic components {{zhi|t=今|p=jÄ«n}} (and the added semantic component {{zhi|t=云|p=yún|l=cloud}}) and {{zhi|t=昜|p=yáng}}. In the latter, {{zhi|t=昜|p=yáng|l=bright}} features {{zhi|t=æ—¥|l=the Sun}} + {{zhi|t=示}} + {{zhi|t=彡|l=sunbeam}}.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}

Pronunciations and etymologies

The Standard Chinese pronunciation of {{zhi|t=é™°}} is usually the level first tone as {{zhi|p=yÄ«n}} with the meaning {{zhi|l=shady’, ‘cloudy}}, or sometimes with the falling fourth tone as {{zhi|p=yìn}} with the distinct meaning {{zhi|l=to shelter’, ‘shade}}. {{zhi|c=陽|l=sunny}} is always pronounced with the rising second tone as {{zhi|p=yáng}}.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}Sinologists and historical linguists have reconstructed Middle Chinese pronunciations from data in the (7th century CE) Qieyun rhyme dictionary and later rhyme tables, which was subsequently used to reconstruct Old Chinese phonology from rhymes in the (11th–7th centuries BCE) Shijing and phonological components of Chinese characters. Reconstructions of Old Chinese have illuminated the etymology of modern Chinese words.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}Compare these Middle Chinese and Old Chinese{{efn|With an asterisk, to denote unattested forms.}} reconstructions of {{zhi|p=yÄ«n|t=é™°}} and {{zhi|p=yáng|t=陽}}:
  • {{transliteration|ltc|Ë‘iÉ™m}}
< {{transliteration|och|*ˑiəm}} and {{transliteration|ltc|iang}} < {{transliteration|och|*diang}} (Bernhard Karlgren)Bernhard Karlgren, Grammata Serica Recensa, Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, 1957, 173, 188.
    • {{transliteration|ltc|Ê”jÉ™m}} and {{transliteration|och|raÅ‹}} (Li Fang-Kuei)Li, Fang-Kuei, “Studies on Archaic Chinese”, translated by Gilbert L. Mattos, Monumenta Serica 31, 1974:219–287.
  • {{transliteration|ltc|Ê”(r)jum}} and {{transliteration|och|ljang}} (William H. Baxter)William H. Baxter, A Handbook of Old Chinese Phonology, Mouton de Gruyter ,1992.
  • {{transliteration|ltc|Ê”jÉ™m}} < {{transliteration|och|ʔəm}} and {{transliteration|ltc|jiaÅ‹}} < {{transliteration|och|laÅ‹}} (Axel Schuessler)Schuessler, Axel, ABC Etymological Dictionary of Old Chinese, University of Hawaii Press, 2007, 558, 572.
  • {{transliteration|ltc|im}} < {{transliteration|och|qrum}} and {{transliteration|ltc|yang}} < {{transliteration|och|laÅ‹}} (William H. Baxter and Laurent Sagart)Baxter & Sagart (2014), pp. 326–378.
Schuessler gives probable Sino-Tibetan etymologies for both Chinese words.{{transliteration|ltc|yin}} < {{transliteration|och|*ʔəm}} compares with Burmese {{transliteration|my|Ê”umC}} ‘overcast’, ‘cloudy’, Adi {{transliteration|adi|muk-jum}} ‘shade’, and Lepcha {{transliteration|lep|so’yÇ”m}} ‘shade’; it is probably cognate with Chinese {{transliteration|zh|àn}} < {{transliteration|och|*ʔə̂mÊ”}} {{zhi|c=黯|l=dim’, ‘gloomy’}} and {{transliteration|zh|qÄ«n}} < {{transliteration|och|*khÉ™m}} {{zhi|t=衾|l=blanket}}.{{transliteration|ltc|yang}} < {{transliteration|och|*laÅ‹}} compares with Lepcha a-lóŋ ‘reflecting light’, Burmese laÅ‹B ‘be bright’ and É™-laÅ‹B ‘light’; and is perhaps cognate with Chinese {{transliteration|zh|chāng}} < {{transliteration|och|*k-hlaÅ‹}} {{zhi|c=昌|l=prosperous’, ‘bright}} (compare areal words like Tai plaÅ‹A1 ‘bright’ & Proto-Viet-Muong hlaÅ‹B). To this word-family, Unger (Hao-ku, 1986:34) also includes {{zhi|c=炳|p=bǐng}} < {{transliteration|och|*pl(j)aÅ‹Ê”}} ‘bright’; however Schuessler reconstructs {{zhi|c=炳|p=bǐng}}’s Old Chinese pronunciation as {{transliteration|och|*braÅ‹Ê”}} and includes it in an Austroasiatic word family, besides {{zhi|c=亮|p=liàng}} < {{transliteration|och|*raÅ‹h}} {{zhi|c=爽|p=shuÇŽng}} < {{transliteration|och|*sraÅ‹Ê”}} ‘twilight of dawn’; {{transliteration|zh|míng}} < {{transliteration|och|*mraÅ‹}} ‘bright’, ‘become light’, ‘enlighten’; owing to “the different OC initial consonant which seems to have no recognizable OC morphological function”.Schuessler, Axel, ABC Etymological Dictionary of Old Chinese, University of Hawaii Press, 2007. pp. 168, 180, 558.

Meanings

Yin and yang are semantically complex words.John DeFrancis’s ABC Chinese-English Comprehensive Dictionary gives the following translation equivalents.John DeFrancis, ed., ABC Chinese-English Comprehensive Dictionary, University of Hawaii Press, 2003, 1147, 1108.Yin {{zhi|c=é™°}} or {{zhi|c=阴}} — Noun: â‘  [philosophy] female/passive/negative principle in nature, â‘¡ Surname; Bound morpheme: â‘  the moon, â‘¡ shaded orientation, â‘¢ covert; concealed; hidden, â‘£ vagina, ⑤ penis, â‘¥ of the netherworld, ⑦ negative, ⑧ north side of a hill, ⑨ south bank of a river, â‘© reverse side of a stele, ⑪ in intaglio; Stative verb: â‘  overcast, â‘¡ sinister; treacherousYang {{zhi|c=陽}} or {{zhi|c=阳}} — Bound morpheme: â‘  [Chinese philosophy] male/active/positive principle in nature, â‘¡ the sun, â‘¢ male genitals, â‘£ in relief, ⑤ open; overt, â‘¥ belonging to this world, ⑦ [linguistics] masculine, ⑧ south side of a hill, ⑨ north bank of a riverThe compound yinyang means “yin and yang; opposites; ancient Chinese astronomy; occult arts; astrologer; geomancer; etc.“The sinologist Rolf Stein etymologically translates Chinese yin “shady side (of a mountain)” and yang “sunny side (of a mountain)” with the uncommon English geographic terms (wikt:ubac|ubac) “shady side of a mountain” and (wikt:adret|adret) “sunny side of a mountain” (which are of French origin).Rolf Stein (2010), Rolf Stein’s Tibetica Antiqua: With Additional Materials, Brill, p. 63.

Toponymy

{{Unreferenced section|date=June 2023}}Many Chinese place names or toponyms contain the word yang “sunny side” and a few contain yin “shady side”. In China, as elsewhere in the Northern Hemisphere, sunlight comes predominantly from the south, and thus the south face of a mountain or the north bank of a river will receive more direct sunlight than the opposite side.Yang refers to the “south side of a hill” in Hengyang , which is south of Mount Heng in Hunan province, and to the “north bank of a river” in Luoyang , which is located north of the Luo River in Henan.Similarly, yin refers to “north side of a hill” in Huayin , which is north of Mount Hua in Shaanxi province.In Japan, the characters are used in western Honshu to delineate the north-side San’in region from the south-side San’yō region , separated by the ChÅ«goku Mountains .

Loanwords

English (wikt:yin|yin), (wikt:yang|yang), and (wikt:yin-yang|yin-yang) are familiar loanwords of Chinese origin.The Oxford English Dictionary defines:yin (jɪn) Also Yin, Yn. [Chinese yÄ«n shade, feminine; the moon.]a. In Chinese philosophy, the feminine or negative principle (characterized by dark, wetness, cold, passivity, disintegration, etc.) of the two opposing cosmic forces into which creative energy divides and whose fusion in physical matter brings the phenomenal world into being. Also attrib. or as adj., and transf. Cf. yang.b. Comb., as yin-yang, the combination or fusion of the two cosmic forces; freq. attrib., esp. as yin-yang symbol, a circle divided by an S-shaped line into a dark and a light segment, representing respectively yin and yang, each containing a ‘seed’ of the other. yang (jæŋ) Also Yang. [Chinese yáng yang, sun, positive, male genitals.]a. In Chinese philosophy, the masculine or positive principle (characterized by light, warmth, dryness, activity, etc.) of the two opposing cosmic forces into which creative energy divides and whose fusion in physical matter brings the phenomenal world into being. Also attrib. or as adj. Cf. yin.b. Comb.: yang-yin = yin-yang s.v. yin b.For the earliest recorded “yin and yang” usages, the OED cites 1671 for yin and yang,Arnoldus Montanus, Atlas Chinensis: Being a relation of remarkable passages in two embassies from the East-India Company of the United Provinces to the Vice-Roy Singlamong, General Taising Lipovi, and Konchi, Emperor, Thomas Johnson, tr. by J. Ogilby, 1671, 549: “The Chineses by these Strokes ‥ declare ‥ how much each Form or Sign receives from the two fore-mention’d Beginnings of Yn or Yang.” 1850 for yin-yang,William Jones Boone, “Defense of an Essay on the proper renderings of the words Elohim and θεός into the Chinese Language,” Chinese Repository XIX, 1850, 375: “... when in the Yih King (or Book of Diagrams) we read of the Great Extreme, it means that the Great Extreme is in the midst of the active-passive primordial substance (Yin-yáng); and that it is not exterior to, or separate from the Yin-yáng.” and 1959 for yang-yin.Carl Jung, “Aion: Researches into the Phenomenology of the Self”, in The Collected Works of C. G. Jung, tr. by R. F. C. Hull, Volume 9, Part 2, p. 58” “[The vision of “Ascension of Isaiah”] might easily be a description of a genuine yang-yin relationship, a picture that comes closer to the actual truth than the privatio boni. Moreover, it does not damage monotheism in any way, since it unites the opposites just and yang and yin are united in Tao (which the Jesuits quite logically translated as “God“).“In English, yang-yin (like ying-yang) occasionally occurs as a mistake or typographical error for the Chinese loanword yin-yang— yet they are not equivalents. Chinese does have some yangyin collocations, such as (lit. “foreign silver“) “silver coin/dollar”, but not even the most comprehensive dictionaries (e.g., the Hanyu Da Cidian) enter yangyin *. While yang and yin can occur together in context,For instance, the Huainanzi says” “Now, the lumber is not so important as the forest; the forest is not so important as the rain; the rain is not so important as yin and yang; yin and yang are not so important as harmony; and harmony is not so important as the Way. (12, ; tr. Major et al. 2010, 442). yangyin is not synonymous with yinyang. The linguistic term “irreversible binomial” refers to a collocation of two words A–B that cannot be idiomatically reversed as B–A, for example, English cat and mouse (not *mouse and cat) and friend or foe (not *foe or friend).Roger T. Ames, ”Yin and Yang”, in Encyclopedia of Chinese Philosophy, ed. by Antonio S. Cua, Routledge, 2002, 847.Similarly, the usual pattern among Chinese binomial compounds is for positive A and negative B, where the A word is dominant or privileged over B. For example, tiandi “heaven and earth” and nannü “men and women”. Yinyang meaning “dark and light; female and male; moon and sun”, is an exception. Scholars have proposed various explanations for why yinyang violates this pattern, including “linguistic convenience” (it is easier to say yinyang than yangyin), the idea that “proto-Chinese society was matriarchal”, or perhaps, since yinyang first became prominent during the late Warring States period, this term was “purposely directed at challenging persistent cultural assumptions”.

History

Joseph Needham discusses yin and yang together with Five Elements as part of the School of Naturalists. He says that it would be proper to begin with yin and yang before Five Elements because the former: “lay, as it were, at a deeper level in Nature, and were the most ultimate principles of which the ancient Chinese could conceive. But it so happens that we know a good deal more about the historical origin of the Five-Element theory than about that of the yin and the yang, and it will therefore be more convenient to deal with it first.“He then discusses Zou Yan (; 305–240 BC) who is most associated with these theories. Although yin and yang are not mentioned in any of the surviving documents of Zou Yan, his school was known as the Yin Yang Jia (Yin and Yang School). Needham concludes “There can be very little doubt that the philosophical use of the terms began about the beginning of the 4th century, and that the passages in older texts which mention this use are interpolations made later than that time.“Needham, Joseph; Science and Civilization in China Vol.2: History of Scientific Thought; Cambridge University Press; 1956

Nature

Yin and yang are a concept that originated in ancient Chinese philosophy that describes how opposite or contrary forces may create each other by their comparison and are to be seen as actually complementary, interconnected, and interdependent in the natural world, and how they may give rise to each other as they interrelate to one another.WEB, The hidden meanings of yin and yang – John Bellaimey,www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezmR9Attpyc,ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211028/ezmR9Attpyc, 28 October 2021, 2 August 2013, TED-Ed, {{cbignore}}BOOK, Xu, Guang, Chinese Herbal Medicine, Vermillion, 1996, 978-0-09-180944-7, 41, In Daoist philosophy, dark and light, yin and yang, arrive in the Tao Te Ching at chapter 42.WEB, Muller, Charles, Daode Jing,www.acmuller.net/con-dao/daodejing.html#div-43, 9 March 2018, It becomes sensible from an initial (wikt: quiescence|quiescence) or emptiness (wuji, sometimes symbolized by an empty circle), and continues moving until (wikt: quiescence|quiescence) is reached again. For instance, dropping a stone in a calm pool of water will simultaneously raise waves and lower troughs between them, and this alternation of high and low points in the water will radiate outward until the movement dissipates and the pool is calm once more.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}Yin and yang thus are always opposite and equal qualities and create and control each other. Whenever one quality reaches its peak, it will naturally begin to transform into the opposite quality: for example, grain that reaches its full height in summer (fully yang) will produce seeds and die back in winter (fully yin) in an endless cycle.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}It is impossible to talk about yin or yang without some reference to the opposite, traditionally it is said that Yin and Yang are known by the comparison of each other, since yin and yang are bound together as parts of a mutual whole (for example, there cannot be the bottom of the foot without the top). A way to illustrate this idea is{{citation needed|date=June 2012}} to postulate the notion of a race with only women or only men; this race would disappear in a single generation. Yet, women and men together create new generations that allow the race they mutually create (and mutually come from) to survive. The interaction of the two gives birth to things, like manhood.Robin R. Wang ENCYCLOPEDIA,www.iep.utm.edu/yinyang/, Yinyang (Yin-yang), Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 9 March 2018, Yin and yang transform each other: like an undertow in the ocean, every advance is complemented by a retreat, and every rise transforms into a fall. Thus, a seed will sprout from the earth and grow upwards towards the sky{{mdash}}an intrinsically yang movement. Then, when it reaches its full potential height, it will fall. The growth of the top seeks light, while roots grow in darkness.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}The cycles of the seasons and of plants that progresses or entropies depending on the season. In summer it seeks to procure healthier leaves, whittling (entropy) of the plant is in autumn, the degrown plants (destruction) is in winter, growth (creating) of the plant or tree during spring. Where it’s gaining or progressing, fully progressed occurs during summer, summer seeks stability as it seeks to keep (progress) the leaves and branches that are healthy, growth and progress reaching its end point of a cycle. Creation as part of yang, and destruction as part of yin, progress on one side (yang) and entropy on the other side (yin), is represented in the cycles.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}

Modern usage

Yin is the black side, and yang is the white side. Other color arrangements have included the white of yang being replaced by red.BOOK, The World Book Encyclopedia, Scott Fetzer Company, 2003, 0-7166-0103-6, 19, Chicago, 36, 50204221, The taijitu is sometimes accompanied by other shapes,BOOK, Carrasco, David, Merriam-Webster’s Encyclopedia of World Religions, Warmind, Morten, Hawley, John Stratton, Reynolds, Frank, Giarardot, Norman, Neusner, Jacob, Pelikan, Jaroslav, Campo, Juan, Penner, Hans, Merriam-Webster, Wendy Doniger, 1999, 978-0-87779-044-0, United States, 495, en, David Carrasco, Frank Reynolds (academic), Jacob Neusner, Jaroslav Pelikan, such as bagua. The relationship between yin and yang is often described in terms of sunlight playing over a mountain and a valley. Yin (literally the ‘shady place’ or ‘north slope’) is the dark area occluded by the mountain’s bulk, while yang (literally the “sunny place’ or “south slope“) is the brightly lit portion. As the sun moves across the sky, yin and yang gradually trade places with each other, revealing what was obscured and obscuring what was revealed.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}In turn, the concepts are also applied to the human body. In traditional Chinese medicine, one’s health is directly related to the balance between yin and yang qualities within them.Li CL. A brief outline of Chinese medical history with particular reference to acupuncture. Perspect Biol Med. 1974 Autumn;18(1):132–143. If yin and yang become unbalanced, one of the qualities is considered deficient or has vacuity.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}I Ching“>

I Ching

(File:BatQuaiDo.svg|thumb|upright|Symbol surrounded by trigrams)In the I Ching, originally a divination manual of the Western Zhou period (c. 1000–750 BC) based on Chinese Astronomy,The text of the I Ching has its origins in a Western Zhou divination text called the Changes of Zhou ( Zhōu yì). Various modern scholars suggest dates ranging between the 10th and 4th centuries BC for the assembly of the text in approximately its current form. Nylan, Michael (2001), The Five Confucian Classics (2001), p. 228. yin and yang are represented by broken and solid lines: yin is broken ({{large|âš‹}}) and yang is solid ({{large|⚊}}). These are then combined into trigrams, which are more yang (e.g. {{large|☱}}) or more yin (e.g. {{large|☵}}) depending on the number of broken and solid lines (e.g., {{large|☰}} is fully yang, while {{large|☷}} is fully yin), and trigrams are combined into hexagrams (e.g. {{large|ä·•}} and {{large|ä·Ÿ}}). The relative positions and numbers of yin and yang lines within the trigrams determines the meaning of a trigram, and in hexagrams the upper trigram is considered yang with respect to the lower trigram, yin, which allows for complex depictions of interrelations.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}Taijitu“>

Taijitu

File:Yin and Yang symbol.svg|thumb|The taijitutaijituThe principle of yin and yang is represented by the Taijitu (literally “Diagram of the Supreme Ultimate“). The term is commonly used to mean the simple “divided circle” form, but may refer to any of several schematic diagrams representing these principles, such as the swastika, common to Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism. Similar symbols have also appeared in other cultures, such as in Celtic art and Roman shield markings.Giovanni Monastra: “The “Yin–Yang” among the Insignia of the Roman Empire? {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110925054740www.estovest.net/tradizione/yinyang_en.html |date=2011-09-25 }},” “Sophia,” Vol. 6, No. 2 (2000)WEB,www.ne.jp/asahi/luke/ueda-sarson/MagisterPeditum.html, Late Roman Shield Patterns – Magister Peditum, www.ne.jp, Helmut Nickel: “The Dragon and the Pearl,” Metropolitan Museum Journal, Vol. 26 (1991), p. 146, fn. 5In this symbol the two teardrops swirl to represent the conversion of yin to yang and yang to yin. This is seen when a ball is thrown into the air with a yang velocity then converts to a yin velocity to fall back to earth. The two teardrops are opposite in direction to each other to show that as one increases the other decreases. The dot of the opposite field in the tear drop shows that there is always yin within yang and always yang within yin.BOOK, Hughes, Kevin, Introduction to the Theory of Yin-Yang, Independent, 2020, 979-8-6678-6786-9, {{page needed|date=October 2022}}

Tai chi

Tai chi, a form of martial art, is often described as the principles of yin and yang applied to the human body and an animal body. Wu Jianquan, a famous Chinese martial arts teacher, described tai chi (Taijiquan) as follows:{{blockquote|Various people have offered different explanations for the name Taijiquan. Some have said: – ‘In terms of self-cultivation, one must train from a state of movement towards a state of stillness. Taiji comes about through the balance of yin and yang. In terms of the art of attack and defense then, in the context of the changes of full and empty, one is constantly internally latent, to not outwardly expressive, as if the yin and yang of Taiji have not yet divided apart.’ Others say: ‘Every movement of Taijiquan is based on circles, just like the shape of a Taijitu. Therefore, it is called Taijiquan.|Wu Jianquan|The International Magazine of T{{Wg-apos}}ai Chi Ch{{Wg-apos}}üanJOURNAL, Woolidge, Doug, The International Magazine of T{{Wg-apos, ai Chi Ch{{Wg-apos}}üan |volume= 21|issue= 3|journal=T{{okina}}ai Chi|publisher=Wayfarer Publications|date=June 1997|issn=0730-1049}}}}

See also

{{Div col|colwidth=15em}} {{Div col end}}

Notes

{{notelist}}

References

Footnotes

{{Reflist|30em}}

Works cited

  • BOOK, William H., Baxter, Laurent, Sagart, Old Chinese: A New Reconstruction, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2014, 978-0-19-994537-5,

External links

{{Commons category|Taijitu|Yin Yang}}{{Wiktionary|yin|yang|yin-yang}} {{Authority control}}{{Chinese philosophy}}{{Taoism footer}}{{Traditional Chinese medicine}}

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