The YOUNG I-GING 太玄經 ORACLE,
Modeled after T'ai Hsüan Ching (canon of Supreme Mystery), you can expect food for thought on how to deal with difficult situations.
Start THE YOUNG I-GING by you
1. ask yourself a question (starting with: why, why, why) and type it in - avoid questions that can only be answered with "yes" or "no".
2. The computer provides the current date and time.
3. You will receive an immediate answer - done! (You can find out more about the two additional numbers below).
Even if you can't do anything with the answer to your question at first, don't dismiss it from the start. Take your time - get some distance and relax while looking at the dreamlike background images - allow every association and try to playfully solve the entanglements of your thoughts.
history:
"The core of the Mysterium, like that of its prototype, the Changes, is made up of line elements. However, the hexagram of the Changes is replaced in the Mysterium by a four-line "tetragram", the components of which are read from top to bottom (i.e. in the opposite order as in the transformations)." Quoted from "THE ELEMENTAL CHANGES", The Ancient Chinese Companion to The I Ching, translated by Michael Nylan, SUNY, New York, 1994.
The tetragrams of the T'ai Hsüan Ching are also made up of an upper and a lower "bigram" (element of two lines) instead of the corresponding two "trigrams" (elements of three lines) in the I Ching. The four lines of the T'ai Hsüan Ching, each with 3 possibilities, result in 3^4 = 81 (instead of the 64 hexagrams in the I Ching) possible tetragrams, to which 9 each, i.e. a total of 729 evaluations were added.
In response to these ratings, you will receive two numbers, a) that of the trigram and b) that of the ratings, and you can use this to read the detailed version from Michael Nylan's correct translation. (Remember that the ratings are read from top to bottom!) I have also included the original texts in Chinese characters on the answer pages, with the title (always the first character) of the tetragrams and the three-part main text at the top and the respective relevant of the nine possible ratings can be found at the bottom.
Method:
a) The letters of the question are transformed into numbers and added according to the alphabetical code (a=1, b=2 etc.). The sum is then converted (according to Shao Yong) to the upper bigram.
b) The month and year together with the day (again according to Shao Yong's algorithms) generate the lower bigram.
c) The numerical values of the lower and the upper bigram are the coordinates for finding the tetragram that contains one of the nine evaluations as an answer, which is finally determined with the numerical value of the transformation of hour and minute freely according to Shao Yong's method.
lyrics:
The basis of this app is the T'ai Hsüan Ching 太玄經 (mystery).
Instead of my own words, I have used proverbs and quotations from all over the world for the interpretation, without exception, the fields of meaning of which either coincide with the key words of the assessments or at least overlap.
However, in order not to deviate too far from the original, I always consulted the competent translation by M.Nylan for comparison, whose historically knowledgeable and sensitive comments I owe much to the understanding of the mystery.
In the end, a relatively independent canon of answers emerged, a mystery wordplay, so to speak, which is reminiscent of both the T'ai Hsüan Ching and the I Ching but imitates its system so stringently that it seems justified to refer to it according to Shao Yong's guidelines . - And Yang Xiong would certainly have turned a blind eye.
For Nicolas
Modeled after T'ai Hsüan Ching (canon of Supreme Mystery), you can expect food for thought on how to deal with difficult situations.
Start THE YOUNG I-GING by you
1. ask yourself a question (starting with: why, why, why) and type it in - avoid questions that can only be answered with "yes" or "no".
2. The computer provides the current date and time.
3. You will receive an immediate answer - done! (You can find out more about the two additional numbers below).
Even if you can't do anything with the answer to your question at first, don't dismiss it from the start. Take your time - get some distance and relax while looking at the dreamlike background images - allow every association and try to playfully solve the entanglements of your thoughts.
history:
"The core of the Mysterium, like that of its prototype, the Changes, is made up of line elements. However, the hexagram of the Changes is replaced in the Mysterium by a four-line "tetragram", the components of which are read from top to bottom (i.e. in the opposite order as in the transformations)." Quoted from "THE ELEMENTAL CHANGES", The Ancient Chinese Companion to The I Ching, translated by Michael Nylan, SUNY, New York, 1994.
The tetragrams of the T'ai Hsüan Ching are also made up of an upper and a lower "bigram" (element of two lines) instead of the corresponding two "trigrams" (elements of three lines) in the I Ching. The four lines of the T'ai Hsüan Ching, each with 3 possibilities, result in 3^4 = 81 (instead of the 64 hexagrams in the I Ching) possible tetragrams, to which 9 each, i.e. a total of 729 evaluations were added.
In response to these ratings, you will receive two numbers, a) that of the trigram and b) that of the ratings, and you can use this to read the detailed version from Michael Nylan's correct translation. (Remember that the ratings are read from top to bottom!) I have also included the original texts in Chinese characters on the answer pages, with the title (always the first character) of the tetragrams and the three-part main text at the top and the respective relevant of the nine possible ratings can be found at the bottom.
Method:
a) The letters of the question are transformed into numbers and added according to the alphabetical code (a=1, b=2 etc.). The sum is then converted (according to Shao Yong) to the upper bigram.
b) The month and year together with the day (again according to Shao Yong's algorithms) generate the lower bigram.
c) The numerical values of the lower and the upper bigram are the coordinates for finding the tetragram that contains one of the nine evaluations as an answer, which is finally determined with the numerical value of the transformation of hour and minute freely according to Shao Yong's method.
lyrics:
The basis of this app is the T'ai Hsüan Ching 太玄經 (mystery).
Instead of my own words, I have used proverbs and quotations from all over the world for the interpretation, without exception, the fields of meaning of which either coincide with the key words of the assessments or at least overlap.
However, in order not to deviate too far from the original, I always consulted the competent translation by M.Nylan for comparison, whose historically knowledgeable and sensitive comments I owe much to the understanding of the mystery.
In the end, a relatively independent canon of answers emerged, a mystery wordplay, so to speak, which is reminiscent of both the T'ai Hsüan Ching and the I Ching but imitates its system so stringently that it seems justified to refer to it according to Shao Yong's guidelines . - And Yang Xiong would certainly have turned a blind eye.
For Nicolas
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