Qualcomm QCOM under CEO Cristiano Amon

Qualcomm QCOM under CEO Cristiano Amon

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HEXAGRAM 12 – P’i – Standstill (Stagnation)

Above    CH’IEN    THE CREATIVE, HEAVEN

Below    K’UN        THE RECEPTIVE, EARTH

This hexagram is the opposite of the preceding one.

  • Heaven is above, drawing farther and farther away, while
  • the earth below sinks farther into the depths.

The creative powers are not in relation.

It is a time of standstill and decline.

This hexagram is linked with the seventh month (August-September),

when

  • the year has passed its zenith and
  • autumnal decay is setting in.

 

THE JUDGMENT

STANDSTILL.

Evil people do not further

The perseverance of the superior man.

  • The great departs
  • the small approaches.
  • Heaven and earth are out of communion and
  • all things are benumbed.
  • What is above has no relation to what is below, and
  • on earth confusion and disorder prevail.
  • The dark power within,
  • the light power is without.
  • Weakness is within,
  • harshness without.
  • Within are the inferior, and
  • without are the superior.
  • The way of inferior people is in ascent;
  • the way of superior people is on the decline.

But the superior people do not allow themselves to be turned from their principles.

If the possibility of exerting influence is closed to them,

they nevertheless

  • remain faithful to their principles and
  • withdraw into seclusion.

 

THE IMAGE

Heaven and earth do not unite: The image Of STANDSTILL.

Thus

  • the superior man falls back upon his inner worth In order to escape the difficulties.
  • He does not permit himself to be honored with revenue.

When, owing to the influence of inferior men, mutual mistrust prevails in public life,

fruitful activity is rendered impossible,

because the fundaments are wrong.

Therefore

  • the superior man knows what he must do under such circumstances;
  • he does not allow himself to be tempted by dazzling offers to take part in public activities.

This would only expose him to danger, since he cannot assent to the meanness of the others.

He therefore

  • hides his worth and
  • withdraws into seclusion.

 

THE LINES

Six at the beginning means:

When ribbon grass is pulled up, the sod comes with it.

Each according to his kind.

Perseverance brings good fortune and success.

The text is almost the same as that of the first line of the preceding hexagram, but with a contrary meaning.

  • In the latter a man is drawing another along with him on the road to an official career;
  • here a man is drawing another with him into retirement from public life.

This is why the text says here,

  • “Perseverance brings good fortune and success” and
  • not “Undertakings bring good fortune.”

If

  • it becomes impossible to make our influence count,
  • it is only by retirement that we spare ourselves humiliation.

Success in a higher sense can be ours,

because we know how to safeguard the value of our personalities.

Six in the third place means:

They bear shame.

Inferior people who have risen to power illegitimately

do not feel equal to the responsibility they have taken upon themselves.

In their hearts they begin to be ashamed,

although at first they do not show it outwardly.

This marks a turn for the better.

0 Nine in the fifth place means:

Standstill is giving way.

Good fortune for the great man.

  • “What if it should fail,
  • what if it should fall?”

In this way he ties it to a cluster of mulberry shoots.

The time undergoes a change.

The right man, able to restore order, has arrived.

Hence “Good fortune.”

But such periods of transition are the very times in which we must

  • fear and
  • tremble.

Success is assured only through greatest caution,

which asks always,

“What if it should fail?”

When a mulberry bush is cut down,

a number of unusually strong shoots sprout from the roots.

Hence the image of tying something to a cluster of mulberry shoots

is used to symbolize the way of making success certain.

Confucius says about this line:

  • Danger arises when a man feels secure in his position.
  • Destruction threatens when a man seeks to preserve his worldly estate.
  • Confusion develops when a man has put everything in order.

Therefore

the superior man does not forget

  • danger in his security, nor
  • ruin when he is well established, nor
  • confusion when his affairs are in order.

In this way

he

  • gains personal safety and
  • is able to protect the empire.

 

MOVING HEXAGRAM

 

HEXAGRAM 30 – Li – THE CLINGING, FIRE

Above    LI    THE CLINGING, FIRE

Below    LI    THE CLINGING, FIRE

This hexagram is another double sign.

The trigram Li means

  • ¨to cling to something,”
  • “to be conditioned,
  • to depend or rest on something,” and also
  • “brightness”.

A dark line clings to two light lines,

  • one above and
  • one below –

the image of an empty space between two strong lines,

whereby the two strong lines are made bright.

The trigram represents the middle daughter.

The Creative has incorporated the central line of the Receptive, and thus

Li develops.

As an image, it is fire.

Fire

  • has no definite form but
  • clings to the burning object and thus

is bright.

As water pours down from heaven,

so fire flames up from the earth.

  • While K’an means the soul shut within the body,
  • Li stands for nature in its radiance.

 

THE JUDGMENT

THE CLINGING.

Perseverance furthers.

It brings success.

Care of the cow brings good fortune.

What is dark clings

  • to what is light and so
  • enhances the brightness of the latter.

A luminous thing giving out light

must have within itself something that perseveres; otherwise

it will in time burn itself out.

Everything that

gives light

is dependent on something to which it clings,

in order that it may continue to shine.

Thus

  • sun and moon cling to heaven, and
  • grain, grass, and trees cling to the earth.

So too

the twofold clarity of the dedicated man

  • clings to what is right and thereby
  • can shape the world.

Human life on earth is conditioned and unfree, and,

when man

  • recognizes this limitation and
  • makes himself dependent upon the harmonious and beneficent forces of the cosmos,

he achieves success.

The cow is the symbol of extreme docility.

By cultivating in himself an attitude of

  • compliance and
  • voluntary dependence,

man

  • acquires clarity without sharpness and
  • finds his place in the world. 1

 

THE IMAGE

That which is bright rises twice: The image of FIRE.

Thus the great man, by perpetuating this brightness,

Illumines the four quarters of the world.

Each of the two trigrams represents the sun in the course of a day.

The two together represent the repeated movement of the sun,

the function of light with respect to time.

The great man continues the work of nature in the human world.

Through the clarity of his nature

he causes the light

  • to spread farther and farther and
  • to penetrate the nature of man ever more deeply.

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