I Ching, the Oracle: A Practical Guide to the Book of Changes: An updated translation annotated with cultural & historical references, Benebell Wen s (Holistic Tarot and The Tao of Craft) historic new translation of
According to Guzmán, the central inspiration for The Man Who Should Be Dead is hexagram 18 (Ku: decay) of the I Ching. The hexagram has a double message. Firstly, that something has been spoiled, and, secondly, that what has been spoiled needs to be worked on.
“The earlier the better,” says the record producer and author of the forthcoming book “The Creative Act: A Way of Being.” “The stories are engaging and they train readers to look deeply into all they see. A great primer for awareness practice.”
The I Ching has served for thousands of years as a philosophical taxonomy of the universe, a guide to an ethical life, a manual for rulers, and an oracle of one’s personal future and the future of the state. It was an organizing principle or authoritative proof for literary and arts criticism, cartography, medicine, and many of the sciences, and it generated endless Confucian,