Canoo GOEV under CEO Tony Aquila
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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.
THE LINES
0 Six in the second place means:
Yellow light.
Supreme good fortune.
Midday has come;
the sun shines with a yellow light.
- Yellow is the color of measure and mean.
-
Yellow light is therefore a symbol of the highest culture and art,
- whose consummate harmony consists in holding to the mean.
- whose consummate harmony consists in holding to the mean.
Nine in the fourth place means:
Its coming is sudden;
It
- flames up,
- dies down,
- is thrown away.
- Clarity of mind has the same relation to life that
- fire has to wood.
Fire
- clings to wood, but also
- consumes it.
Clarity of mind
- is rooted in life but
- can also consume it.
Everything depends upon how the clarity functions.
Here the image used is that of a meteor or a straw fire.
A man who is excitable and restless
- may rise quickly to prominence but
- produces no lasting effects.
Thus matters end badly when
a man
- spends himself too rapidly and
- consumes himself like a meteor.
MOVING HEXAGRAM
HEXAGRAM 26 – Ta Ch’u – The Taming Power of the Great
Above KEN KEEPING STILL, MOUNTAIN
Below CH’IEN THE CREATIVE, HEAVEN
The Creative is tamed by Ken, Keeping Still.
This produces great power,
a situation in contrast to that of the ninth hexagram, Hsiao Ch’u, THE TAMING POWER OF THE SMALL,
in which the Creative is tamed by the Gentle alone.
- There
- one weak line must tame five strong lines, but
- here
- four strong lines are restrained by two weak lines;
-
in addition to a minister,
there is a prince, and
-
the restraining power
therefore is far stronger.
The hexagram has a threefold meaning, expressing different aspects of the concept Holding firm.
-
Heaven within the mountain
gives the idea of holding firm in the sense of holding together;
-
the trigram Ken, which holds the trigram Ch’ien still,
gives the idea of holding firm in the sense of holding back;
-
the third idea is
that of holding firm in the sense of caring for and nourishing.
-
This last is suggested by the fact that
a strong line at the top, which is the ruler of the hexagram,
is honored and tended as a sage.
-
The third of these meanings also
attaches specifically to this strong line at the top,
which represents the sage.
THE JUDGMENT
THE TAMING POWER OF THE GREAT.
Perseverance furthers.
Not eating at home brings good fortune.
It furthers one to cross the great water.
To
- hold firmly to great creative powers and
- store them up, as set forth in this hexagram,
there is need of
a strong, clearheaded man who is honored by the ruler.
- The trigram Ch’ien points to strong creative power;
- Ken indicates firmness and truth.
Both point
- to light and clarity and
- to the daily renewal of character.
Only through such daily self-renewal
can a man continue at the height of his powers.
-
Force of habit helps to keep order in quiet times; but
in periods when there is a great storing up of energy,
- everything depends on the power of the personality.
However, since the worthy are honored,
as in the case of the strong personality entrusted with leadership by the ruler,
it is an advantage
- not to eat at home but rather
- to earn one’s bread by entering upon public office.
Such a man is in harmony with heaven;
therefore even great and difficult undertakings,
such as crossing the great water,
succeed.
THE IMAGE
Heaven within the mountain:
The image of THE TAMING POWER OF THE GREAT.
Thus the superior man acquaints himself with
- many sayings of antiquity And
- many deeds of the past,
In order to strengthen his character thereby.
Heaven within the mountain points to hidden treasures.
In the words and deeds of the past there lies hidden a treasure that men may use to
strengthen and elevate their own characters.
The way to study the past is
-
not to confine oneself to mere knowledge of history
but, through application of this knowledge,
- to give actuality to the past.