Tuesday, October 28, 2008

What is Yin & Yang?


(Symbol of Yin Yang)
In Chinese philosophy, the concept of Yin Yang ( Yin  Yang) is used to describe how seemingly opposing forces are bound together, intertwined, and interdependent in the natural world, giving rise to each other in turn. The concept lies at the heart of many branches of classical Chinese science and philosophy, as well as being a primary guideline of traditional Chinese medicine and a central principle of several forms of martial arts and exercise, such as Taijiquan and Gung fu .


Yin-Yang, always has the following characteristics:

Yin Yang are opposing: Yin yang describe opposing qualities in phenomena. For instance, winter is yin to summer's yang over the course of a year, and femininity is yin to masculinity's yang in human relationships. It is impossible to talk about ying or yang without some reference to the opposite.
Yin yang are rooted together: Since yin and yang are created together in a single movement, they are bound together as parts of a mutual whole. A race with only men or only women would disappear in a single generation, but men and women together create a new generations that allow the race they mutually create (and mutually come from) to survive.

Yin yang transform each other: Like an undertow in the ocean, every advance is complemented by a retreat, and every rise transforms into a fall. Thus, a seed will sprout from the earth and grow upwards towards the sky - an intrinsically yang movement. Then when it reaches its full height, it will begin to weaken, and eventually will fall back to the earth in decay - an intrinsically yin movement. Yin always contains the potential for yang, and yang for yin.

Yin-yang are balanced:Yin-yang is a dynamic equilibrium. Because they arise together they are always equal: if one disappears, the other must disappear as well, leaving emptiness. This is rarely immediately apparent, though, because yang elements are clear and obvious while yin elements are hidden and subtle.

1 comment:

KRSDBR said...

Dear Feng... This post was taken word for word from Wikipedia.. without a quotation mark or a reference... This is Plagiarism and is not allowed. Please say it in your own words and add a reference.