I Ching: Difference between revisions

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*[http://www.theosophical.org/component/content/article/42-quest-magazine/2155-the-power-of-great-and-small# The Power of Great and Small] by Stephen Karcher
*[http://www.theosophical.org/component/content/article/42-quest-magazine/2155-the-power-of-great-and-small# The Power of Great and Small] by Stephen Karcher
*[http://www.theosophical.org/publications/quest-magazine/1564# How Ancient China Came to America: The I Ching as Bible] by Dana Wilde
*[http://www.theosophical.org/publications/quest-magazine/1564# How Ancient China Came to America: The I Ching as Bible] by Dana Wilde
*[http://www.theosophical.org/publications/quest-magazine/2154# The Passion of Yin and Yang] by Monte J. Zerger


===Video===
===Video===

Revision as of 17:55, 30 January 2013

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The I Ching (Wade-Giles) or "Yì Jīng" (pinyin), also known as the Classic of Changes, Book of Changes or Zhouyi, is one of the oldest of the Chinese classic texts. The book contains a divination system, but during the Warring States Period, the text was re-interpreted as a system of cosmology and philosophy that subsequently became intrinsic to Chinese culture. It centered on the ideas of the dynamic balance of opposites, the evolution of events as a process, and acceptance of the inevitability of change.

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