Wu Xing

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Classical Elements
v â€¢ d â€¢ e

Greek

  Air  
  Earth  

Hinduism (Tattva) and
Buddhism (MahÄbhÅ«ta)

  Vayu/Pavan (Air/Wind)  
Ap/Jala (Water) Akasha (Aether) Agni/Tejas (Fire)
  Prithvi/Bhumi (Earth)  

Japanese (Godai)

  Air/Wind (風)  
Water (æ°´) Void/Sky/Heaven (空) Fire (ç«)
  Earth (地)  

Tibetan (Bön)

  Air  
  Earth  

Chinese (Wu Xing)

  Fire (ç«)  
Metal (金) Earth (土) Wood (木)
  Water (æ°´)  

Medieval Alchemy


Lemurian

In traditional Chinese philosophy, natural phenomena can be classified into the Wu Xing (Chinese: 五行; pinyin: wǔxíng), or the Five Phases, usually translated as five elements, five movements or five steps.

Note that the five elements are chiefly an ancient mnemonic device for systems with 5 stages; hence the preferred translation of "Phase" over "Element".

The elements are:

metal (Chinese: 金, pinyin: jÄ«n, ) (Though in modern Chinese, "金" mostly means "gold".) wood (Chinese: 木, pinyin: mù) water (Chinese: æ°´, pinyin: shuÇ) fire (Chinese: ç«, pinyin: huÇ’), and earth (Chinese: 土, pinyin: tÇ”, ).

The system of five phases was used for describing interactions and relationships between phenomena. It was employed as a device in many fields of early Chinese thought, including seemingly disparate fields such as geomancy or Feng shui, astrology, traditional Chinese medicine, music, military strategy and martial arts.

Traditional Taijiquan schools relate them to footwork and refer to them as five "steps". The system is still used as a reference in some forms of complementary and alternative medicine and martial arts. Some claim the original foundation of these are the concept of the Five Cardinal Points.

[edit] Cycles

The doctrine of five phases describes two Cycles of Balance, a generating or creation (生, shēng) cycle and an overcoming or destruction (克/剋, kè) cycle of interactions between the phases.

[edit] Generating

The common memory jogs, which help to remind in what order the phases are, are:

Wood feeds Fire; Fire creates Earth (ash); Earth bears Metal; Metal carries Water (as in a bucket or tap); Water nourishes Wood.

Other common words for this cycle include "begets", "engenders" and "mothers." two cycles of balance is yin and yang this generates energy for the elements to take power to good or evil

[edit] Overcoming

Wood parts Earth; Earth absorbs Water; Water quenches Fire; Fire melts Metal; Metal chops Wood.

This cycle might also be called "controls", "restrains" or "fathers".

Interactions of Five Chinese Elements - Cycles of Balance and Cycles of Imbalance

There are also two Cycles of Imbalance, an overacting cycle (cheng) and an insulting cycle (wu).

[edit] Cosmology and feng shui

Main article: Feng Shui

According to Wu Xing theory, the structure of the cosmos mirrors the five elements. Each "element" has a complex series of associations with different aspects of nature, as can be seen in the following table. In the ancient Chinese form of geomancy known as Feng Shui practitioners all based their art and system on the five elements (Wu Xing). All of these elements are represented within the Bagua. Associated with these elements are colors, seasons and shapes; all of which are interacting with each other. [1]

Based on a particular directional energy flow from one element to the next, the interaction can be expansive, destructive, or exhaustive. With proper knowledge of such aspect of energy flow will enable the Feng Shui practitioner to apply certain cures or rearrangement of energy in a way they believe to be beneficial.

Element Wood Fire Earth Metal Water
Heavenly creature Azure Dragon
è’¼é¾ or é’é¾
Vermilion Bird
朱雀
Yellow Dragon or Yellow Qilin
é»ƒé¾ or 黃麟
White Tiger
白虎
Black Tortoise
玄武
Phase New Yang Full Yang Yin/Yang balance New Yin Full Yin
Energy Generative Expansive Stabilizing Contracting Conserving
Season Spring Summer Change of seasons
(Every third month)
Autumn Winter
Development Sprouting Blooming Ripening Withering Dormant

[edit] Bagua

Main article: Bagua (concept)

The elements have also been correlated to the eight trigrams of the I Ching:

Element Metal Earth Wood Wood Water Fire Earth Metal
I Ching Heaven Earth Thunder Wind Water Fire Mountain Lake
Trigrams ☰ ä¹¾ qián ☷ å¤ kÅ«n ☳ 震 zhèn ☴ å·½ xùn ☵ åŽ kÇŽn ☲ 離 lí ☶ 艮 gèn ☱ å…Œ duì

[edit] Chinese medicine

Five Chinese Elements - Diurnal Cycle

The interdependence of organ networks in the body was noted to be a circle of five things, and so mapped by the Chinese doctors onto the five phases. For instance, the Liver (Wood phase) is said to be the "mother" of the heart (Fire phase), and the Kidneys (Water phase) the mother of the Liver. The key observation was things like kidney deficiency affecting the function of the liver. In this case, the "mother" is weak, and cannot support the child. However, the Kidneys control the heart along the Ke cycle, so the Kidneys are said to restrain the heart. Many of these interactions can nowadays be linked to known physiological pathways (such as Kidney pH affecting heart activity).

The key thing to keep in mind with the Chinese medical application of the five elements is that it is only a model, and it is known to have exceptions. However, in general the device seems to be useful for arriving at good clinical results, so they were kept by the critically thinking Chinese medical doctors and researchers since they were first introduced.

The citation order of the Five Phases, i.e., the order in which they are cited in the Bo Hu Tong and other Han dynasty texts, is Metal, Wood, Water, Fire, and Earth. The organs are most effectively treated, according to theory, in the following four-hour periods throughout the day, beginning with the 3 a.m. to 7 a. m. period: Metal organs (see the list below), Earth organs, Fire1 organs, Water organs, Fire2 (the "non-empirical" Pericardium and Triple Burner organs), and Wood organs, which is the reverse of the citation order (plus an extra use of Fire and the non-empirical organs to take care of the sixth four-hour period of the day). These two orders are further related to the sequence of the planets going outward from the sun (Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, or Water, Metal, Fire, Wood, and Earth) by a star diagram similar to the one shown above. [2]

The sequence of the five elements(Traditional Chinese medicine):promotion,inhibition,Cheng (bullying),Wu(insult)

[3]


[edit] Chinese astrology

Main article: Chinese astrology

Chinese astrology is based upon the interaction of the five elements with the twelve signs of the Chinese zodiac, to produce the well-known 60 year cycle of signs.

Element Wood Fire Earth Metal Water
Heavenly Stem Jia 甲
Yi ä¹™
Bing 丙
Ding ä¸
Wu 戊
Ji å·±
Geng 庚
Xin è¾›
Ren 壬
Gui 癸
Birth year ends with 4, 5 6, 7 8, 9 0, 1 2, 3

[edit] Music

Main article: Chinese music

The Yuèlìng chapter (月令篇) of the LÇjì (禮記) and the HuáinánzÇ (æ·®å—å­) make the following correlations:

Element Wood Fire Earth Metal Water
The Chinese Five-note Scale jué è§’ (mi) zhÇ å¾µ (so) gÅng å®® (do) shÄng 商 (re) yÇ” ç¾½ (la)

(Notes:

The Chinese word é’ qÄ«ng, traditionally translated as azure in this context, includes the range in the spectrum from green to blue, with shades down to black.) In modern Western music, various seven note or five note scales (e.g., the major scale) are defined by selecting seven or five frequencies from the set of twelve semi-tones in the Equal tempered tuning. The Chinese "lÇœ" tuning is closest to the ancient Greek tuning of Pythagoras. See Chinese musicology.)

[edit] Martial arts

[edit] Xingyi

Main article: Xingyi

Xingyiquan uses the five elements to metaphorically represent five different states of combat.

Element Fist Chinese Pinyin Description
Wood Crushing 崩 Bēng To collapse, as a building collapsing in on itself.
Fire Pounding 炮 Pào Exploding outward like a cannon while blocking.
Earth Crossing 橫 Héng Crossing across the line of attack while turning over.
Metal Splitting 劈 Pī To split like an axe chopping up and over.
Water Drilling 鑽 ZuÄn Drilling forward horizontally like a geyser.

[edit] See also

[edit] Bibliography

Feng Youlan (Yu-lan Fung), A History of Chinese Philosophy, volume 2, p. 13 Joseph Needham, Science and Civilization in China, volume 2, pp. 262-23 Maciocia, G. 2005, The Foundations of Chinese Medicine, 2nd edn, Elsevier Ltd., London

[edit] References

^ [ http://www.northernshaolinacademy.com/new/docs/FiveElementsChart.xls Chinese Five Elements Chart]Information on the Chinese Five Elements from Northern Shaolin Academy in Microsoft Excel 2003 Format ^ See 5 Xing in Citation Order. ^ promotion inhibition Cheng wu

[edit] External links

Acupuncture Text Book Corrections Corrections to English translation errors in textbooks Five Elements Malaysia I Ching Net Five Element Information Five Element interrelationships, concordances and causative factors. Chinese Zodiac Chart Find your Chinese Zodiac sign based on your date of birth. Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) A model of transition from the traditional elements The sequence of the five elements


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