An Introduction To The Five Elements: by Richard Bertschinger
An Introduction To The Five Elements: by Richard Bertschinger
An Introduction To The Five Elements: by Richard Bertschinger
2
The earliest reference to this order seems to be around
the 2nd Century BC (Needham: S &C VOl II, p.255).
3
Actually in a sense the King Wen diagram is the story
Figure 2. Fu Xi of life and death, generation and degeneration. Of
course it interests us most. But the fact is that
returning to ‘before-heaven’, returning to before we
were/are born was also the goal of the inner alchemists.
More on this later.
3 © Chinese Medicine Times - Volume 5 Issue 1 - Spring 2010
The order of the trigrams in the after-heaven sequence clearly represented in the turning Yin and Yang symbol
copies the sheng cycle of the wuxing: thunder, wind, (figure 4), as well as in the shifting lines of the gua
fire, earth, wetlands, heaven, water and mountain. It is (trigrams or three line figures).
all much of a muchness.
5
Taken from my translation, with original Chinese
text, of the larger part of the Neijing Zhiyao, by Li
Zhongzi. The Neijing Zhiyao is a Ming primer to the
Huangdi Neijing (cf. The Single Idea in the Mind of the
Yellow Emperor).
5 © Chinese Medicine Times - Volume 5 Issue 1 - Spring 2010
fire
bitter
the eye
South
red
the heart
sickness present in all five zang
the goat
millet
Mars
7
the tone ‘zheng’
sickness as in the vessels
a scorched odour
water
salty
two lower openings
North
black
the kidneys
sickness in the
muscles
the swine
peas and beans
Mercury
6
the tone ‘yu’
sickness as in the vessels
6
a stale odour
6
The True Texts stored in his Golden Casket - Suwen 4 of the Neijing Suwen
6 © Chinese Medicine Times - Volume 5 Issue 1 - Spring 2010
References