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2005

Ritsema and Sabbadini: The Original I Ching Oracle

The Original I Ching Oracle is Ritsema’s revised version of the Eranos Yijing, first published in 1994 with Stephen Karcher, as ‘I Ching, the Classic Chinese Oracle of Change, the First Complete Translation with Concordance.’ I owe a huge amount to that book: it first gave me license to absorb the words, internalise a reading, without being told what it meant or what to do. Without that initial freedom, I doubt I would ever have been drawn to the Yi at all. So I really have Ritsema and Karcher to thank for this website and my work.

Hexagram 32 and Laozi

I first learned from Nina Correa of Your Dao De Jing that in the first lines of the Daodejing –

‘The dao that can be told of is not the constant dao,
The name that can be named is not the constant name’

– the word ‘constant’ in the Mawangdui version is heng – the name of Hexagram 32.

Coming soon…

I’ve been lucky enough to meet up with Dr Margaret Pearson, and she has very kindly promised to be the ‘guest speaker’ at our next webinar. As you’ll know if you came to the last one with Stephen Karcher, this means we get to ask her questions! The subject is ‘Women and the I Ching’, and there is some discussion going on at the I Ching Community about potential questions to ask. (Or you’re very welcome to add your suggestions as ‘comments’ to this post.)

Seeing the great person

In the first place, seeing an great person means finding a role model or guide. Find someone who can advise, ideally someone who’s been there and done that. Or go to the person who has more influence, make an important connection with someone who can make a difference. Richard Rutt suggests that in Zhou times it could mean ‘taking counsel, preparing for battle, parleying with enemy leaders, or consulting high soothsayers.’