Bagua
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Bagua | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Chinese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Chinese | 八卦 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Literal meaning | Eight trigrams | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Vietnamese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Vietnamese alphabet | Bát quái | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Chữ Hán | 八卦 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Korean name | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Hangul | 팔괘 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Hanja | 八卦 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Japanese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Kanji | 八卦 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Hiragana | はっけ | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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The bagua (Chinese: 八卦; pinyin: bāguà; lit. 'eight trigrams') is a set of symbols from China intended to illustrate the nature of reality as being composed of mutually opposing forces reinforcing one another. Bagua is a group of trigrams—composed of three lines, each either "broken" or "unbroken", which represent yin and yang, respectively.[1] Each line having two possible states allows for a total of 23 = 8 trigrams, whose early enumeration and characterization in China has had an effect on the history of Chinese philosophy and cosmology.
The trigrams are related to the divination practice as described within the I Ching and practiced as part of the Shang and Zhou state religion, as well as with the concepts of taiji and the five elements within traditional Chinese metaphysics.[citation needed] The trigrams have correspondences in astronomy, divination, meditation, astrology, geography, geomancy (feng shui), anatomy, decorative arts, the family, martial arts (particularly tai chi and baguazhang), Chinese medicine and elsewhere.[2][3]
The bagua can appear singly or in combination, and is commonly encountered in two different arrangements: the Primordial (先天八卦), "Earlier Heaven",[4] or "Fuxi" bagua (伏羲八卦) and the Manifested (後天八卦), "Later Heaven",[4] or "King Wen" bagua.
In the I Ching, two trigrams are stacked together to create a six-line figure known as a hexagram. There are 64 possible permutations. The 64 hexagrams and their descriptions make up the book. The trigram symbolism can be used to interpret the hexagram figure and text. An example from Hexagram 19 commentary is "The earth above the lake: The image of Approach. Thus the superior man is inexhaustible in his will to teach, and without limits in his tolerance and protection of the people."[5] The trigrams have been used to organize Yijing charts as seen below.
Trigrams
[edit]There are eight possible combinations to render the various trigrams:
Trigram figure | Possible binary value[6] | Possible decimal sequential number[6] | Name | Translation: Wilhelm[7] | Image in nature (pp.l-li) | Phase | Later Heaven's Direction (p. 269)[citation needed] | Later Heaven's Equinox or Solstice[citation needed] | Earlier Heaven's Direction[citation needed] | Earlier Heaven's Equinox or Solstice[citation needed] | Family relationship (p. 274) | Body part (p. 274) | Attribute (p. 273) | Stage/ state (pp.l-li) | Animal (p. 273) | Obtained Images[8] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | ☰ | 111 | 7 | 乾 qián |
the Creative, '(natural) force' | heaven, sky 天 |
metal | northwest | south | Summer Solstice | father | head | strong, persisting | creative | 馬 horse |
三連 three lines | |
2 | ☱ | 110 | 6 | 兌 duì |
the Joyous, 'open (reflection)' | lake, marsh 澤 |
metal | west | Fall Equinox | southeast | third daughter | mouth | pleasure | tranquil (complete devotion) | 羊 sheep, goat |
上缺 flawed above | |
3 | ☲ | 101 | 5 | 離 lí |
the Clinging, 'radiance' | fire, glow 火 |
fire | south | Summer Solstice | east | Spring Equinox | second daughter | eye | light-giving, humane "dependence" | clinging, clarity, adaptable | 雉 pheasant |
中虛 hollow middle |
4 | ☳ | 100 | 4 | 震 zhèn |
the Arousing, 'shake' | thunder 雷 |
wood | east | Spring Equinox | northeast | first son | foot | inciting movement | initiative | 龍 dragon |
仰盂 face-up jar | |
5 | ☴ | 011 | 3 | 巽 xùn |
the Gentle, 'ground' | wind, air 風 |
wood | southeast | southwest | first daughter | thigh | penetrating | gentle entrance | 雞 fowl |
下斷 broken below | ||
6 | ☵ | 010 | 2 | 坎 kǎn |
the Abyssal, 'gorge' | water 水 |
water | north | Winter Solstice | west | Fall Equinox | second son | ear | dangerous | in-motion | 豕 pig |
中滿 full middle |
7 | ☶ | 001 | 1 | 艮 gèn |
Keeping Still, bound | mountain 山 |
earth | northeast | northwest | third son | hand | resting, stand-still | completion | 狗 dog |
覆碗 face-down bowl | ||
8 | ☷ | 000 | 0 | 坤 kūn |
the Receptive, field | ground, earth 地 |
earth | southwest | north | Winter Solstice | mother | belly | devoted, yielding | receptive | 牛 cow |
六斷 six fragments |
Relation to other principles
[edit]The Scripture of Changes 易經 (Yì Jìng) listed two sources for the eight trigrams. Its chapter Xì Cí shàng; 'Great Treatise Beginning' explains the first source thus:[10][11]
Original Text and Transliteration:
易有太極,Yì yǒu tàijí,
是生兩儀,shì shēng liǎngyí,
兩儀生四象,liǎngyí shēng sìxiàng,
四象生八卦。sìxiàng shēng bāguà.
Translation: |
Tài Jí (太極) Great Axis
Taiji is the encapsulation of all the universe, space and time.
It is derived from Wújí 無極 (without axis) the formless, dimensionless, limitless, unbounded, infinite void.
When the formless void began to stir and move, Taiji came into being.
Liǎng Yí (兩儀) Dual Powers
The beginning of the universe begot the twin forces:
- ⚋ yīn (trad. 陰 /Simp. 阴) dark, original, central, passive
- ⚊ yáng (trad. 陽 /Simp. 阳) bright, extreme, furthest, active

Sì Xiàng (四像) Four Aspects
The twin powers produce four aspects named:
- ⚌ great yang 太陽 tàiyáng
- ⚎ lesser yang 少陽 shǎoyáng
- ⚍ lesser yin 少陰 shǎoyīn
- ⚏ great yin 太陰 tàiyīn
The four aspects are the differing levels of energy in world. Primarily they are associated with the solar terms, the two solstices and the two equinoxes. Being aspects they are also associated with the four main compass directions. Each direction is associated with a level of solar energy, and a mythological animal.
- ⚌ great yang 太陽 tàiyáng, Summer Solstice (longest day), South (most sun), Red Phoenix
- ⚎ lesser yang 少陽 shǎoyáng, Spring Equinox (increasing day), East (increasing sun) , Blue Dragon
- ⚍ lesser yin 少陰 shǎoyīn, Fall Equinox (increasing night), West (decreasing sun), White Tiger
- ⚏ great yin 太陰 tàiyīn, Winter Solstice (longest night), North (least sun), Black Tortoise
Bā Guà (八卦) Eight Passages
The four phenomena act through the eight gates (ba gua):
- ☰ Heaven 乾; Qián, warming
- ☳ Thunder 震; Zhèn, storming
- ☵ Water 坎; Kǎn, pooling
- ☶ Mountain 艮; Gèn, Jutting
- ☴ Wind 巽; Xùn, dispersing
- ☲ Fire 離; Lí, dancing
- ☱ Lake 兌; Duì, engulfing
- ☷ Earth 坤; Kūn, resting
Another chapter, 說卦; Shuō Guà; 'Discussing the Trigrams', characterizes the relationship of the trigrams as being:
- 乾; Qián ☰ Heaven, Father
- 坤; Kūn ☷ Earth, Mother
who have three sons:
- 震; Zhèn ☳ Thunder, 1st Son
- 坎; Kǎn, ☵ Water, 2nd Son
- 艮; Gèn ☶ Mountain, 3rd Son
and have three daughters:
- 巽; Xùn ☴ Wind, 1st Daughter
- 離; Lí ☲ Fire, 2nd Daughter
- 兌; Duì ☱ Lake, 3rd Daughter
The son trigrams all have a single ⚊ yáng line in their formation. The Yang trigrams correspond to odd numbers 1,3,5,7.
The daughter trigrams all have a single ⚋ yīn line in their formation. The Yin trigrams correspond to even numbers, 0,2,4,6.
Their ordering is from bottom line, mid line, top line.
Wǔxíng (五行) Five Phases
The trigrams are related to the five phases of the Wu Xing. The phases are: Water, Wood, Fire, Earth and Metal.
The major qualities associated with the 5 phases are:
- Water - Receding
- Fire - Bursting
- Earth - Resting
- Wood - Growing
- Metal - Contracting
These qualities are associated with the seasons.
- Water is associated with mid winter, the time of lowest energy.
- Fire is associated with mid summer, the time of highest energy.
- Earth is the pivot or balanced energy, either given as late summer, or as a brief transitional period between the seasons, where they are neither obviously one quality or the next.
- Wood is associated with the spring time, burst with life and increasing sunshine.
- Metal with the fall, life is slowing down, the days are shortening, and both men and creatures are taking precaution by storing food, and preparing for winter.
Typically the trigram-to-phase correspondences are given as follows:
- The phase of Water 水 only corresponds with the trigram of the Deep 坎; Kǎn.
- The phase of Fire 火 only corresponds with the trigram of Flame 離; Lí.
- The phase of Earth 地 corresponds with the trigrams of Earth 坤; Kūn and Mountain 艮; Gèn.
- The phase of Wood 木 corresponds with the trigrams of Wind 巽; Xùn and Thunder 震; Zhèn.
- The phase of Metal 金 corresponds with the trigrams of Heaven 乾; Qián and Lake 兌; Duì .[12]
Notably, more than just their seasonal correspondence, the elements have interactions with each other and relationships of promoting and subverting other elements, as well as reversals where there is insufficiency in one element, resulting in an unbalanced relationship giving unexpected results where it should normally promote or subvert another element., but gives the opposite effect.
The wuxing and it's promoting/subverting relationship system is also used as a frame work for understanding the relationships in spacial features in feng shui as well as the relationships between the organ systems in traditional Chinese medicine.
Liùshísì Guà (六十四卦) Sixty-Four Hexagrams
Eight trigrams stacked atop another eight trigrams give sixty-four variations of hexagrams, with the dominant quality above, and the secondary quality below. These sixty four hexagrams make up the main body of the Yijing oracle used for divination. The Yijing itself gives a pithy explanation for each hexagram.
The ways can be thought of as eight main expectations, and each variation is an outcome either typical, inverted; promoted, subverted; nurtured, neglected; surprised or disappointed; depending on circumstance. The sixty-four hexagrams give many possibility for how an endeavor may turn out.
Diviners consulting the Yijing oracle use a variety of methods to elicit a response from the oracle, such as throwing yarrow stalks, tossing coins, pulling cards from a deck, or consulting exterior signs, such as examining the shapes of sacrificed animal entrails, examining the cracking patterns of bones tossed into a fire, observing the flight path of startled birds, etc.
Hexagram lookup table
[edit]Fuxi's "Earlier Heaven"
[edit]
Name 卦名 |
Nature 自然 |
Season 季節 |
Personality 性情 |
Family 家族 |
Direction 方位 |
Meaning 意義 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
乾 Qián | 天 Sky, Heaven | Summer | Creative | 父 Father | 南 South | 健 Expansive energy, the sky. For further information, see tiān. |
巽 Xùn | 風 Wind | Summer | Gentle | 長女 Eldest Daughter | 西南 Southwest | 入 Gentle penetration, flexibility. |
坎 Kǎn | 水 Water | Autumn | Deep | 中男 Middle Son | 西 West | 陷 Danger, rapid rivers, the abyss, the moon. |
艮 Gèn | 山 Mountain | Autumn | Still | 少男 Youngest Son | 西北 Northwest | 止 Stillness, immovability. |
坤 Kūn | 地 Earth | Winter | Receptive | 母 Mother | 北 North | 順 Receptive energy, that which yields. For further information, see dì. |
震 Zhèn | 雷 Thunder | Winter | Arousing | 長男 Eldest Son | 東北 Northeast | 動 Excitation, revolution, division. |
離 Lí | 火 Fire | Spring | Clinging | 中女 Middle Daughter | 東 East | 麗 Rapid movement, radiance, the sun. |
兌 Duì | 澤 Lake | Spring | Joyous | 少女 Youngest Daughter | 東南 Southeast | 悅 Joy, satisfaction, stagnation. |
King Wen's "Later Heaven"
[edit]
Name 卦名 |
Nature 自然 |
Season 季節 |
Personality 性情 |
Family 家族 |
Direction 方位 |
Meaning 意義 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
離 Li | 火 Fire | Summer | Clinging | 中女 Middle Daughter | 南 South | 麗 Pulsing motion, radiance, the luminaries. |
坤 Kun | 地 Earth | Summer | Receptive | 母 Mother | 西南 Southwest | 順 Receptive energy, that which yields. |
兌 Dui | 澤 Lake | Autumn | Joyous | 少女 Youngest Daughter | 西 West | 悅 Joy, satisfaction, stagnation. |
乾 Qian | 天 Heaven | Autumn | Creative | 父 Father | 西北 Northwest | 健 Expansive energy, the sky. |
坎 Kan | 水 Water | Winter | Abyssal | 中男 Middle Son | 北 North | 陷 Danger, rapid rivers, the abyss, the moon. |
艮 Gen | 山 Mountain | Winter | Still | 少男 Youngest Son | 東北 Northeast | 止 Stillness, immovability. |
震 Zhen | 雷 Thunder | Spring | Arousing | 長男 Eldest Son | 東 East | 動 Excitation, revolution, division. |
巽 Xun | 風 Wind | Spring | Gentle | 長女 Eldest Daughter | 東南 Southeast | 入 Gentle penetration, flexibility. |
In feng shui
[edit]The bagua is a tool in the majority of feng shui schools. The bagua used in feng shui can appear in two different versions: the Earlier Heaven bagua, used for burial sites, and the Later Heaven bagua, used for residences.
Pre-Natal Bagua
[edit]Primordial bagua is also known as Fuxi bagua or Earlier Heaven bagua. Named after the mythological first emperor of China. In the Preface of Shang Shu by Kong Anguo, he writes that "In ancient times, Fu Xi ruled the whole world. It was he who began to draw Eight Trigrams and to create Scripts in order to substitute the system of tying knots."[13] In traditional Chinese medicine, this sequence is known as the prenatal sequence and is used to understand familial risk for illness or disease, similar to western medicine's understanding of formative medicine and the study of genetics. The Heaven trigram is at the top, the Earth trigram is at the bottom (the South was located at the top in Chinese maps of this period) of the bagua. The Fire trigram is located on the left, while the Water trigram is on the right. Thunder and wind form another pair, being the opposites of each other; the first is on the bottom left next to fire, while the second is next to Heaven on the top right of the bagua. Mountain and Lake form the last pair, with one opposite to the other. The adjustment of the trigrams is symmetrical by forming exact contrary pairs. They symbolize the opposite forces of Yin and Yang and represent a state in which everything is in balance.
Post-Natal Bagua
[edit]The sequence of trigrams in the Later Heaven bagua is attributed to King Wen. It is also known as the postnatal bagua arrangement in traditional Chinese medicine; it is used to understand physical, emotional and environmental patterns that influence health or disease, similarly to western medicine's inquiry into functional medical science.[14] In this arrangement, Water is placed downwards and Fire at the top; Thunder is in the East, while Lake is in the West. Contrary to the Earlier Heaven bagua, the Later Heaven bagua is dynamic; energies and the aspects of each of its trigrams flow towards the following. It is the sequence used by the Luo Pan compass, which is used in feng shui and referred to as the manifest pattern; it analyzes the movement of the qi that practitioners believe affect them.
Western bagua
[edit]The popularity of feng shui increased in the West because of the bagua of the eight aspirations. Each trigram corresponds to an aspect of life that also corresponds to one of the cardinal directions. Applying feng shui using the bagua of the eight aspirations (or bagua map for short) made it possible to simplify feng shui and to use it for the general public. Western bagua focuses more heavily on intention than the traditional forms of feng shui.[15]
Experienced practicers of traditional feng shui disregard Western bagua[16] for its simplicity, since it does not take into account the forms of the landscape, time, or the annual cycles. The bagua of the eight aspirations is divided into two branches: the first, which uses the compass and cardinal directions, and the second, which uses the bagua by using the main door.
Bagua map
[edit]A bagua map is a tool used in Western forms of feng shui to map a room or location and see how the different sections correspond to different aspects in one's life. These sections are believed to relate to every area or aspect of life and are divided into categories such as fame, relationships/marriage, children/creativity, helpful people/travel, career, inner knowledge, family/ancestors/health, and wealth/blessings.
In this system, the map is intended to be used over the land, one's home, office or desk to find areas lacking good chi, and to show where there are spaces that may need rectifying or enhancing in life or the environment.
For example, if the bagua grid is placed over an entire house plan and it shows the toilet, bathroom, laundry, or kitchen in the wealth/blessings area of the map, it would be said that the money coming into that particular environment would disappear very fast.

In Unicode
[edit]The bagua symbols in the Miscellaneous Symbols block of Unicode include the following:
Official Name | Glyph | Unicode # | HTML | Element |
---|---|---|---|---|
Trigram for Heaven | ☰ | U+2630 | ☰ | Metal |
Trigram for Lake | ☱ | U+2631 | ☱ | |
Trigram for Fire | ☲ | U+2632 | ☲ | Fire |
Trigram for Thunder | ☳ | U+2633 | ☳ | Wood |
Trigram for Wind | ☴ | U+2634 | ☴ | |
Trigram for Water | ☵ | U+2635 | ☵ | Water |
Trigram for Mountain | ☶ | U+2636 | ☶ | Earth |
Trigram for Earth | ☷ | U+2637 | ☷ |
The Miscellaneous Symbols block also encodes the constituents ⚊ (yang—U+268A, ⚊) and ⚋ (yin—U+268B, ⚋), as well as the digrams ⚌ (greater yang—U+268C, ⚌), ⚍ (lesser yin—U+268D, ⚍), ⚎ (lesser yang—U+268E, ⚎), and ⚏ (greater yin—U+268F, ⚏).
The hexagrams they form are separately encoded in the Yijing Hexagram Symbols Unicode block.
Modern usage
[edit]In traditional Chinese medicine, including the profession of acupuncture, the Earlier Heaven and Later Heaven arrangements are used to understand the pathogenesis of disease or illness and to select treatment plans specifically related and tailored to a patient's constitution.[17]
The Flag of South Korea has the four cardinal trigrams (qian, kun, kan, li) surrounding the taegeuk, or taijitu. These are specific representations of the movement and harmony of yin and yang. These trigrams were also depicted on the commissioning pennant of the South Korean Navy.
See also
[edit]- Tian gan and Di zhi: the archaic calendar system of East Asia.
- Baguazhen, a military tactical formation based on the bagua.
- Ba Xian, Eight Taoist Immortals
- Ba Mai
- Ba Duan Jin
- Chinese ritual mastery traditions
- Chinese spiritual world concepts
- Fuji (planchette writing)
- Fulu
- Octal
Note
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ The World Book Encyclopedia. Vol. 19. Chicago: Scott Fetzer Company. 2003. p. 36. ISBN 0-7166-0103-6. OCLC 50204221.
- ^ TSUEI, Wei. Roots of Chinese culture and medicine Archived 2012-08-12 at the Wayback Machine Chinese Culture Books Co., 1989.
- ^ ZONG, Xiao-Fan and Liscum, Gary. Chinese Medical Palmistry: Your Health in Your Hand, Blue Poppy Press, 1999.
- ^ a b Wilhelm, Richard (1950). The I Ching or Book of Changes. translated by Cary F. Baynes, foreword by C. G. Jung, preface to 3rd ed. by Hellmut Wilhelm (1967). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 266, 269. ISBN 0-691-09750-X.
- ^ Wilhelm, Richard (1950). I Ching. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. p. 79.. The quote is from the "Image" commentary, which is one of the Ten Wings, part of the Yijing.
- ^ a b "Understanding Bagua sequence" (December 6, 2015) Shanghai Daily. Quote: "According to the authentic rules of binary method, the value conversion is bottom-up. The ID numbers of Mountain (☶, 100) and Thunder (☳, 001) should be reversed, [i.e. Mountain (☶)'s binary value should be 001 while Thunder (☳)'s binary value should be 100] [...] their sequential numbers are 0-Earth, 1-Mountain, 2-Water, 3-Wind, 4-Thunder, 5-Fire, 6-Valley, and 7-Sky."
- ^ Wilhelm, R. & Baynes, C., (1967): "The I Ching or Book of Changes", With foreword by Carl Jung, Introduction, Bollingen Series XIX, Princeton University Press, (1st ed. 1950)
- ^ Zhouyi Jie. Explaining the Zhou's [Book of] Changes. "八卦取象歌" [Song about how the Eight Trigrams Obtained Their Images]. "☰乾三連,☷坤六斷,☳震仰盂,☶艮覆碗,☲離中虛,☵坎中滿,☱兌上缺,☴巽下斷。"
- ^ "Understanding Bagua sequence" (December 6, 2015) Shanghai Daily. Quote: "Leibniz came up with the ID number of each 3-yao gua's based on the position of yao from top down to base. He defined yang yao (whole line) as 1 and yin yao (broken line) as 0. Here are some examples according to Leibniz-Shao Yong approach. Mountain (☶) can be converted to 100. [...]"
- ^ Book of Changes "繫辭上 - Xi Ci I (The Great Treatise) 11.3" with James Legge's translation
- ^ Zhu Xi (2020). The Original Meaning of the Yijing: Commentary on the Scripture of Change. Translated by Joseph A. Adler. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 46.
- ^ Yi Jing "Shuo Gua 10". Translated by James Legge
- ^ Gong, Y., Yan, H., & Ge, Y. (2009). The Accounts of the Origin of Writing from Sumer, Egypt and China — A Comparative Perspective. Wiener Zeitschrift Für Die Kunde Des Morgenlandes, 99, 137–158. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23861987
- ^ Golding, Roisin (2010). The Complete Stems and Branches: Time and Space in Traditional Acupuncture. Churchill Livingstone. ISBN 978-0-7020-2961-5.
- ^ Cisek, Jan. Feng Shui London blog, 2007.
- ^ Moran, Elizabeth and Master Yu, Joseph. The Complete Idiot's Guide to Feng Shui, 3rd Edition, Penguin, 2005.
- ^ Duveen, Joan (2022). Applying Stems and Branches Acupuncture in Clinical Practice. Jessica Kingsley Publishers. ISBN 9781787753716.