Outcome of Pepsi (PEP) buyout of SodaStream (SODA)

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HEXAGRAM 38 – K’uei – Opposition

Above    LI    THE CLINGING, FLAME

Below    TUI    THE JOYOUS, LAKE

This hexagram is composed of the trigram

  • Li above, i.e., flame, which burns upward, and
  • Tui below, i.e., the lake, which seeps downward.

These two movements are in direct contrast.

Furthermore,

  • Li is the second daughter and
  • Tui the youngest daughter, and

although

they live in the same house

they belong, to different men;

hence their wills

  • are not the same
  • but are divergently directed.

THE JUDGMENT

OPPOSITION.

In small matters, good fortune.

When people live in

  • opposition and
  • estrangement

they cannot carry out a great undertaking in common;

their points of view diverge too widely.

In such circumstances

  • one should above all not proceed brusquely,

    for that would only increase the existing opposition;

instead,

  • one should limit oneself to producing gradual effects in small matters.

Here success can still be expected,

because

the situation is such that

the opposition does not preclude all agreement.

In general,

opposition appears as an obstruction, but when

  • it represents polarity within a comprehensive whole,
  • it has also its useful and important functions.

The oppositions of

  • heaven and earth,
  • spirit and nature,
  • man and woman,

when reconciled,

bring about the creation and reproduction of life.

In the world of visible things,

the principle of opposites makes possible

the differentiation by categories

through which order is brought into the world.

THE IMAGE

Above, fire,

below, the lake:

The image of OPPOSITION.

Thus amid all fellowship

The superior man retains his individuality.

The two elements, fire and water,

never mingle

but even when in contact

retain their own natures.

So

  • the cultured man is never led into baseness or vulgarity

    through intercourse or community of interests with persons of another sort;

    regardless of all commingling,

  • he will always preserve his individuality.

THE LINES

0 Nine in the second place means:

One meets his lord in a narrow street.

No blame.

As a result of misunderstandings,

it has become impossible for people who by nature belong together

to meet in the correct way.

This being so,

an accidental meeting under informal circumstances

may serve the purpose,

provided there is an inner affinity between them.

Six in the third place means:

One sees the wagon dragged back,

The oxen halted.

A man’s hair and nose cut off.

  • Not a good beginning,
  • but a good end.

Often it seems to a man as though everything were conspiring against him.

He sees himself

  • checked and hindered in his progress,
  • insulted and
  • dishonored.1

However,

  • he must not let himself be misled; despite this opposition,
  • he must cleave to the man with whom he knows he belongs.

Thus, notwithstanding the bad beginning,

the matter will end well.

Nine in the fourth place means:

Isolated through opposition,

  • One meets a like-minded man With whom
  • one can associate in good faith.

Despite the danger, no blame.

  • If a man finds himself in a company of people from whom

    he is separated by an inner opposition,

    • he becomes isolated.
  • But if in such a situation a man meets someone
    • who fundamentally, by the very law of his being, is kind to him, and
    • whom he can trust completely,
  • he overcomes all the dangers of isolation.
  • His will achieves its aim, and
  • he becomes free of faults.

MOVING HEXAGRAM

HEXAGRAM 22 – Pi – Grace

Above    KEN    KEEPING STILL, MOUNTAIN

Below    Li    THE CLINGING, FIRE

This hexagram shows a fire that

  • breaks out of the secret depths of the earth and, blazing up,
  • illuminates and beautifies the mountain, the heavenly heights.
  • Grace – beauty of form – is necessary in any union

if

  • it is to be
    • well ordered and pleasing
  • rather than
    • disordered and chaotic.

THE JUDGMENT

GRACE has success.

In small matters

It is favorable to undertake something.

Grace brings success.

However,

  • it is not the essential or fundamental thing;
  • it is only the ornament and must therefore be used
    • sparingly and
    • only in little things.
  1. In the lower trigram of fire

    a yielding line

  • comes
    between two strong lines and
  • makes them beautiful,

but

  • the strong lines are the essential content and
  • the weak line is the beautifying form.
  1. In the upper trigram of the mountain,

    the strong line

  • takes the lead, so that here again
  • the strong element must be regarded as the decisive factor.
  1. In nature we see in the sky the strong light of the sun;

    the life of the world depends on it.

    But this strong, essential thing is

  • changed and
  • given pleasing variety by the moon and the stars.
  1. In human affairs,

    aesthetic form comes into being when

    traditions exist that, strong and abiding like mountains, are made pleasing

    by a lucid beauty.

  1. By contemplating the forms existing in the heavens

    we come to understand time and its changing demands.

  2. Through contemplation of the forms existing in human society

    it becomes possible to shape the world. 1

THE IMAGE

Fire at the foot of the mountain: The image of GRACE.

Thus does

  • the superior man proceed When clearing up current affairs.

But

  • he dare not decide controversial issues in this way.
  • The fire, whose light illuminates the mountain and makes it pleasing,
    • does not shine far;

in the same way,

  • beautiful form suffices to brighten and to throw light upon matters of lesser moment,
    • but important questions cannot be decided in this way.

They require greater earnestness.


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