KLA Corp KLAC under CEO Richard Wallace (11/2022)

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Hexagram 46 – Sheng – Pushing Upward
Above K’UN THE RECEPTIVE, EARTH
Below SUN THE GENTLE, WIND, WOOD
- The lower trigram, Sun, represents wood, and
- the upper, K’un, means the earth.
Linked with this is the idea that wood in the earth grows upward.
In contrast to the meaning of Chin, PROGRESS (35),
this pushing upward is associated with effort,
just as a plant needs energy for pushing upward through the earth.
That is why this hexagram, although it is connected with success, is associated with effort of the will.
- In PROGRESS the emphasis is on expansion;
-
PUSHING UPWARD indicates rather a vertical ascent – direct rise
- from obscurity and lowliness
- to power and influence.
- from obscurity and lowliness
THE JUDGMENT
PUSHING UPWARD
has supreme success.
One must see the great man.
Fear not.
Departure toward the south
Brings good fortune.
The pushing upward of the good elements
- encounters no obstruction and
- is therefore accompanied by great success.
The pushing upward is made possible
- not by violence
- but by modesty and adaptability.
Since the individual is borne along by the propitiousness of the time,
he advances.
He must go to see authoritative people.
He need not be afraid to do this, because success is assured.
But
he must set to work, for activity (this is the meaning of “the south”) brings good fortune.
THE IMAGE
Within the earth, wood grows: The image of PUSHING UPWARD.
Thus the superior man of devoted character
Heaps up small things
In order to achieve something high and great.
-
Adapting itself to obstacles and bending around them,
wood in the earth grows upward without haste and without rest.
Thus too
-
the superior man
- is devoted in character and
- never pauses in his progress.
- is devoted in character and
THE LINES
Nine in the third place means:
One pushes upward into an empty city,
All obstructions that generally block progress fall away here.
Things proceed with remarkable ease.
Unhesitatingly one follows this road, in order to profit by one’s success.
Seen from without, everything seems to be in the best of order.
However, no promise of good fortune is added.
It is a question how long such unobstructed success can last.
But it is wise not to yield to such misgivings,
because they only inhibit one’s power.
Instead,
the point is to profit by the propitiousness of the time.
Six in the fifth place means:
Perseverance brings good fortune.
One pushes upward by steps.
When a man is advancing farther and farther,
- it is important for him not to become intoxicated by success.
Precisely when he experiences great success it is necessary
- to remain sober and
- not to try to skip any stages;
- he must go on slowly, step by step, as though hesitant.
Only such calm, steady progress, overleaping nothing, leads to the goal.
Six at the top means:
Pushing upward in darkness.
It furthers one to be unremittingly persevering.
- He who pushes upward blindly deludes himself.
- He knows only advance, not retreat.
But this means exhaustion.
In such a case it is important to be constantly mindful that
one
- must be conscientious and consistent and
- must remain so.
Only thus does
one
- become free of blind impulse, which is always harmful.
MOVING HEXAGRAM
HEXAGRAM 59 – Huan – Dispersion (Dissolution)
Above SUN THE GENTLE, WIND
Below K’AN THE ABYSMAL, WATER
Wind blowing over water
disperses it,
dissolving it into
- foam and
- mist.
This suggests that when a man’s vital energy is dammed up within him
(indicated as a danger by the attribute of the lower trigram),
gentleness serves to
- break up and
- dissolve
the blockage.
THE JUDGMENT
Dispersion,
Success.
The king approaches his temple.
It furthers one to cross the great water.
Perseverance furthers.
The text of this hexagram resembles that of Ts’ui, GATHERING TOGETHER (45).
In the latter,
the subject is the bringing together of elements that have been separated,
as water collects in lakes upon the earth.
Here
the subject is the dispersing and dissolving of divisive egotism.
DISPERSION shows the way, so to speak, that leads to gathering together.
This explains the similarity of the two texts.
Religious forces are needed to overcome the egotism that divides men.
- The common celebration of the great
- sacrificial feasts and
- sacred rites,
which gave expression simultaneously to the
- interrelation and
-
social articulation of
- family and
- state,
- family and
was the means employed by the great rulers to unite men.
- The sacred music and
- the splendor of the ceremonies
aroused a strong tide of emotion
- that was shared by all hearts in unison, and
- that awakened a consciousness of the common origin of all creatures.
In this way
- disunity was overcome and
- rigidity dissolved.
A further means to the same end is
- cooperation in great general undertakings that
set a high goal for the will of the people;
in the common concentration on this goal,
all barriers dissolve,
just as,
- when a boat is crossing a great stream,
- all hands must unite in a joint task.
But only a man
- who is himself free of all selfish ulterior considerations, and
- who perseveres in justice and steadfastness,
is capable of so dissolving the hardness of egotism.
THE IMAGE
The wind drives over the water: The image of DISPERSION.
Thus
the kings of old
- sacrificed to the Lord And
- built temples.
In the autumn and winter,
water begins to freeze into ice.
When
the warm breezes of spring come,
- the rigidity is dissolved, and
- the elements that have been dispersed in ice floes are reunited.
It is the same with the minds of the people.
Through
- hardness and
- selfishness
the heart grows rigid, and
this rigidity leads to separation from all others.
- Egotism and
- Cupidity
isolate men.
Therefore
the hearts of men
- must be seized by a devout emotion.
They
- must be shaken by a religious awe in face of eternity –
- stirred with an intuition of the One Creator of all living beings, and
- united through the strong feeling of fellowship experienced in the ritual of divine worship.