Selected Yijing papers
Selected Yijing papers – with very interesting titles. “I Ching, psychology of heart, and Jungian analysis” looks good…
Selected Yijing papers – with very interesting titles. “I Ching, psychology of heart, and Jungian analysis” looks good…
mashica I Ching This may win prizes for ‘most indecipherable I Ching site design’, but if you once find your way in (try the little numbers and arrow over on the right) there is a nice online oracle here, using the translation by Rosemary and Kerson Huang. I asked for… Read more »mashica I Ching
Can’t for the life of me think of anything to say about this one: Of robot art and drawn meditations Quote: “Eva Sutton and Sarah Hart constructed an installation called “Chance Transmission: An I Ching Reading with Two Small Robots.” This performative piece generates and reads a visitor’s I Ching… Read more »What is it about this oracle?
Search results for China from the BM’s online gallery of their collections. Stunning images of neolithic jade – and look down the bottom of the page for links to short articles and collections of images.
Chameleon Book – a new translation of the Zhouyi by Freeman Crouch.
From the downloadable pdf sample (introduction, appendices, five hexagrams), this looks fresh, bright and intelligent. There are very useful suggestions for divination and imagining yourself into the imagery. (Eg ‘you are soil to be worked, you are a mare’ or ‘seeing the self as a kingdom’.)
I Ching Community Discussion Forum: Spiritual hierarchy Last November, Val asked Yi if there was such a thing as spiritual hierarchy. The answer was Hexagram 23 changing to 24. This reading surely emphasises that there are differences, like those between the junzi and the ‘small people’ of the top line,… Read more »ICC: Hexagrams 23 and 24, and spiritual hierarchy
Ancient China – The British Museum I’ve spent far, far too long browsing this. (Yes, I know it’s meant for 9 to 11 year olds.) The maps of ancient China are great (select your dynasty); you can explore the interior of a Zhou tomb (with abundant photos of vessels, weapons… Read more »Ancient China – The British Museum