Applied Materials, Inc. AMAT under CEO Michael R. Splinter

Applied Materials, Inc. AMAT under CEO Michael R. Splinter

 

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THE HEXAGRAM

 

 

 

HEXAGRAM 64 – Wei Chi – Before Completion

 

 

Above    Li            THE CLINGING, FLAME

Below    K’AN      THE ABYSMAL, WATER

 

 

This hexagram indicates a time when the transition from disorder to order is not yet completed.  The change is indeed prepared for, since all the lines in the upper trigram are in relation to those in the lower (1).  However, they are not yet in their places.  While the preceding hexagram offers an analogy to autumn, which forms the transition from summer to winter, this hexagram presents a parallel to spring, which leads out of winter’s stagnation into the fruitful time of summer.  With this hopeful outlook the Book of Changes comes to its close.

 

 

THE JUDGMENT

 

BEFORE COMPLETION. 

Success.

But if the little fox, after nearly completing the crossing,

Gets his tail in the water,

There is nothing that would further.

 

The conditions are difficult.  The task is great and full of responsibility.  It is nothing less than that of leading the world out of confusion back to order.  But it is a task that promises success, because there is a goal that can unite the forces now tending in different directions.  At first, however, one must move warily, like an old fox walking over ice.  The caution of a fox walking over ice is proverbial in China.  His ears are constantly alert to the cracking of the ice, as he carefully and circumspectly searches out the safest spots.  A young fox who as yet has not acquired this caution goes ahead boldly, and it may happen that he falls in and gets his tail wet when he is almost across the water.  Then of course his effort has been all in vain.  Accordingly, in times "before completion," deliberation and caution are the prerequisites of success.

 

 

THE IMAGE

 

Fire over water: The image of the condition before transition. 

Thus the superior man is careful

In the differentiation of things,

So that each finds its place.

 

When fire, which by nature flames upward, is above, and water, which flows downward, is below, their effects take opposite directions and remain unrelated.  If we wish to achieve an effect, we must first investigate the nature of the forces in question and ascertain their proper place.  If we can bring these forces to bear in the right place, they will have the desired effect, and completion will be achieved.  But in order to handle external forces properly, we must above all arrive at the correct standpoint ourselves, for only from this vantage can we work correctly.

 

 

 

THE LINES

 

 

Six in the third place means: 

Before completion, attack brings misfortune.

It furthers one to cross the great water.

 

The time of transition has arrived, but one lacks the strength to complete the transition.  If one should attempt to force it, disaster would result, because collapse would then be unavoidable.  What is to be done?  A new situation must be created; one must engage the energies of able helpers and in this fellowship take the decisive step – cross the great water.  Then completion will become possible.

 

 

NOTE.  The hexagram AFTER COMPLETION represents a gradual transition from a time of ascent past a peak of culture to a time of standstill.  The hexagram BEFORE COMPLETION represents a transition from chaos to order.  This hexagram comes at the end of the Book of Changes.  It points to the fact that every end contains a new beginning.  Thus it gives hope to men.  The Book of Changes is a book of the future.

 

 

 

 

THE MOVING HEXAGRAM

 

 

 

HEXAGRAM 50 – Ting – The Caldron

 

 

Above    LI            THE CLINGING, FIRE

Below    SUN       THE GENTLE, WIND, WOOD

 

 

The six lines construct the image of Ting, THE CALDRON; at the bottom are the legs, over them the belly, then come the ears (handles), and at the top the carrying rings.  At the same time, the image suggests the idea of nourishment.  The Ting, cast of bronze, was the vessel that held the cooked viands in the temple of the ancestors and at banquets.  The head of the family served the food from the Ting into the bowls of the guests.1 THE WELL (48) likewise has the secondary meaning of giving nourishment, but rather more in relation to the people.  The Ting, as a utensil pertaining to a refined civilization, suggests the fostering and nourishing of able men, which redounded to the benefit of the state. (2)

 

This hexagram and THE WELL are the only two in the Book of Changes that represent concrete, man-made objects.  Yet here too the thought has its abstract connotation.  Sun, below, is wood and wind; Li, above, is flame.  Thus together they stand for the flame kindled by wood and wind, which likewise suggests the idea of preparing food.

 

 

THE JUDGMENT

 

THE CALDRON. 

Supreme good fortune.

Success.

 

While THE WELL relates to the social foundation of our life, and this foundation is likened to the water that serves to nourish growing wood, the present hexagram refers to the cultural superstructure of society.  Here it is the wood that serves as nourishment for the flame, the spirit.  All that is visible must grow beyond itself, extend into the realm of the invisible.  Thereby it receives its true consecration and clarity and takes firm root in the cosmic order.

 

Here we see civilization as it reaches its culmination in religion.  The Ting serves in offering sacrifice to God.  The highest earthly values must be sacrificed to the divine.  But the truly divine does not manifest itself apart from man.  The supreme revelation of God appears in prophets and holy men.  To venerate them is true veneration of God.  The will of God, as revealed through them, should be accepted in humility; this brings inner enlightenment and true understanding of the world, and this leads to great good fortune and success.

 

 

THE IMAGE

 

Fire over wood: The image of THE CALDRON.

Thus the superior man consolidates his fate

By making his position correct.

 

The fate of fire depends on wood; as long as there is wood below, the fire burns above.  It is the same in human life; there is in man likewise a fate that lends power to his life.  And if he succeeds in assigning the right place to life and to fate, thus bringing the two into harmony, he puts his fate on a firm footing.  These words contain hints about the fostering of life as handed on by oral tradition in the secret teachings of Chinese yoga,

 

 

 

Applied Materials, Inc.

3050 Bowers Avenue

PO Box 58039

Santa Clara, CA 95054-3299

United States – Map

Phone:             408-727-5555     

Fax: 408-748-9943

Website: http://www.appliedmaterials.com

 

Details  

Index Membership:          N/A

Sector:  Technology

Industry:              Semiconductor Equipment & Materials

Full Time Employees:       13,045

Mr. Michael R. Splinter , 60, Chairman, Chief Exec. Officer and Pres            

 

 

Business Summary         

Applied Materials, Inc. provides nanomanufacturing technology solutions for the semiconductor, flat panel display, solar, and related industries worldwide. Its Silicon segment provides a range of manufacturing equipment used to fabricate semiconductor chips or integrated circuits. It offers systems that perform primary processes used in chip fabrication, including atomic layer deposition, chemical vapor deposition, physical vapor deposition, etch, rapid thermal processing, chemical mechanical planarization, and wafer metrology and inspection, as well as systems that etch, measure, and inspect circuit patterns on masks used in the photolithography process. The company’s Applied Global Services segment offers products and services designed to improve the performance and productivity, and reduce the environmental impact of the fab operations of semiconductor, LCD, and solar photovoltaics manufacturers. Its Display segment provides equipment to fabricate thin film transistor LCDs for televisions, computer displays, and other consumer-oriented electronic applications. The company’s Energy and Environmental Solutions segment offers manufacturing solutions for the generation and conservation of energy. It also provides manufacturing solutions for wafer-based crystalline silicon, and glass-based thin film applications to enable customers to increase the conversion efficiency and yields of solar PV devices. In addition, this segment offers roll-to-roll vacuum Web coating systems for deposition of a range of films on flexible substrates for functional, aesthetic, or optical properties, as well as large-area deposition equipment for the production of low-emissivity and solar control architectural glass. The company serves manufacturers of semiconductor wafers and chips, flat panel liquid crystal displays, solar photovoltaic cells and modules, and other electronic devices. Applied Materials, Inc. was founded in 1967 and is headquartered in Santa Clara, California.

 

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