Outcome of change in name from Shell Royal Dutch RDS A to Shell Plc

Outcome of change in name from Shell Royal Dutch RDS A to Shell Plc

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Hexagram 11 – T’ai – Peace

Above    K’UN        THE RECEPTIVE, EARTH

Below    CH’IEN    THE CREATIVE, HEAVEN

  • The Receptive, which moves downward, stands above;
  • the Creative, which moves upward, is below.

Hence their influences meet and are in harmony,

so that all living things bloom and prosper.

This hexagram belongs to the first month (February-March), at which time

the forces of nature prepare the new spring.

 

THE JUDGMENT

PEACE.

  • The small departs,
  • The great approaches.

Good fortune.

Success.

This hexagram denotes a time in nature when heaven seems to be on earth.

Heaven has placed itself beneath the earth, and so their powers unite in deep harmony.

Then peace and blessing descend upon all living things.

In the world of man it is a time of social harmony;

  • those in high places show favor to the lowly, and
  • the lowly and inferior in their turn are well disposed toward the highly placed.

There is an end to all feuds.

  • Inside, at the center, in the key position, is the light principle;
  • the dark principle is outside.

Thus

  • the light has a powerful influence, while
  • the dark is submissive.

In this way each receives its due.

  • When
    • the good elements of society occupy a central position and are in control,
    • the evil elements come under their influence and change for the better.
  • When
    • the spirit of heaven rules in man,
    • his animal nature also
      • comes under its influence and
      • takes its appropriate place.

The individual lines

  • enter the hexagram from below and
  • leave it again at the top.

Here

  • the small, weak, and evil elements are about to take their departure, while
  • the great, strong, and good elements are moving up.

This brings good fortune and success.

 

THE IMAGE

Heaven and earth unite: the image Of PEACE.

Thus the ruler

  • Divides and
  • completes

the course of heaven and earth;

He

  • furthers and regulates the gifts of heaven and earth, And so
  • aids the people.

Heaven and earth are in contact and combine their influences,

producing a time of universal flowering and prosperity.

This stream of energy must be regulated by the ruler of men.

It is done by a process of division.

Thus men

  • divide the uniform flow of time into the seasons, according to the succession of natural phenomena, and
  • mark off infinite space by the points of the compass.

In this way

nature in its overwhelming profusion of phenomena is

  • bounded and
  • controlled.

On the other hand,

nature must be furthered in her productiveness.

This is done by adjusting the products to

  • the right time and
  • the right place,

which increases the natural yield.

This controlling and furthering activity of man in his relation to nature

is the work on nature that rewards him.

 

THE LINES

 

Nine in the third place means:

  • No plain not followed by a slope.
  • No going not followed by a return.
  • He who remains persevering in danger Is without blame.
  • Do not complain about this truth;

Enjoy the good fortune you still possess.

Everything on earth is subject to change.

Prosperity is followed by decline: this is the eternal law on earth.

Evil can indeed be held in check but not permanently abolished.

It always returns.

This conviction might induce melancholy, but it should not;

it ought only to keep us from falling into illusion when good fortune comes to us.

If we continue mindful of the danger, we remain persevering and make no mistakes.

  • As long as a man’s inner nature remains stronger and richer than anything offered by external fortune,
  • as long as he remains inwardly superior to fate,

fortune will not desert him.

 

0 Six in the fifth place means:

The sovereign I

Gives his daughter in marriage.

This brings

blessing And

supreme good fortune.

The sovereign I is T’ang the Completer.

By his decree the imperial princesses,

although higher in rank than their husbands,

had to obey them like all other all wives.

Here too we are shown a truly modest union of high and low that brings happiness and blessings.

 

 

MOVING HEXAGRAM

 

 

HEXAGRAM 60 – Chieh – Limitation

Above    K’AN    THE ABYSMAL, WATER

Below    TUI    THE JOYOUS, LAKE

  • A lake occupies a limited space.

When more water comes into it,

  • it overflows.

Therefore

limits must be set for the water.

The image shows

  • water below and
  • water above,
  • with the firmament between them as a limit.

The Chinese word for limitation really

denotes the joints that divide a bamboo stalk.

  • In relation to ordinary life
    • it means the thrift that sets fixed limits upon expenditures.
  • In relation to the moral sphere
    • it means the fixed limits that the superior man sets upon his actions –

      the limits of loyalty and disinterestedness.

 

THE JUDGMENT

LIMITATION.

Success.

Galling limitation must not be persevered in.

  • Limitations are troublesome,

but

  • they are effective.

If

  • we live economically in normal times,
  • we are prepared for times of want.

To be sparing saves us from humiliation.

Limitations are also indispensable in the regulation of world conditions.

In nature there are fixed limits for

  • summer and winter,
  • day and night, and

these limits give the year its meaning.

In the same way,

economy,

by setting fixed limits upon expenditures,

acts to

  • preserve property and
  • prevent injury to the people.

But in limitation

we must observe due measure.

  • If a man should seek to impose galling limitations upon his own nature,
    • it would be injurious.

And

  • if he should go too far in imposing limitations on others,
    • they would rebel.

Therefore

it is necessary to set limits even upon limitations

 

THE IMAGE

Water over lake: the image of LIMITATION.

Thus

the superior man

  • Creates number and measure, And
  • examines the nature of virtue and correct conduct.
  • A lake is something limited.
  • Water is inexhaustible.

A lake

  • can contain only a definite amount of the infinite quantity of water;
  • this is its peculiarity.

In human life too

the individual achieves significance through

  • discrimination and
  • the setting of limits.

Therefore

what concerns us here is

the problem of clearly defining these discriminations,

which are, so to speak,

  • the backbone of morality.
  • Unlimited possibilities are not suited to man;
  • if
  • they existed,
  • his life would only dissolve in the boundless.

To become strong,

a man’s life needs the limitations

  • ordained by duty and
  • voluntarily accepted.

The individual attains significance as a free spirit only

  • by surrounding himself with these limitations and
  • by determining for himself what his duty is.

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