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An Introduction to the Zhou yi (Book of Changes)
Contributor(s): Dajun, Liu (Author), Wenzhi, Zhang (Translator)
ISBN: 1630516872     ISBN-13: 9781630516871
Publisher: Chiron Publications
OUR PRICE:   $30.40  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: February 2019
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Body, Mind & Spirit | I Ching
- Psychology | Movements - Jungian
- History | Asia - China
Dewey: 299.512
LCCN: 2019004778
Physical Information: 0.83" H x 6" W x 9" (1.21 lbs) 374 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - Chinese
- Topical - New Age
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

The I Ching (a. k. a. Yi jing, the Book of Changes, Zhou Changes) is one of the oldest texts in world history, and it is often considered the "first in the Confucian classics." To this date, it continues to be an important source of understanding traditional Chinese thought and society. To help readers fully appreciate this archaic classical work, the author of this book comprehensively considers the explanations of the characters of zhou and yi from all traditional perspectives, and then introduces the relationship between Confucius (551-479 BCE) and the later Yi zhuan (Commentaries on the Changes), which elevated the Zhou yi from a divination manual to a classic of wisdom literature. The connections between the sixty-four hexagrams introduced in the book can help define the import of the different hexagrams. As the foundation of the Zhou yi, the traditional study of images and numbers plays a major role in the book. The Zhou yi originally was a divination manual, and this book also offers the author's special perspectives on this topic. The first part of this book also sketches a scholarly outline of the history of Changes scholarship and further explores image-numerological approaches to the Zhou yi employed by Zhou yi experts of past dynasties.

The second part of this book is made up of some of the author's prefaces and speeches, which exhibit his views on the relationship between the Yi jing and Chinese oracular culture, on the influence of the Zhou Changes upon Confucianism and contemporary life, and on the latest archeological discoveries concerning Changes scholarship.

The Chinese version of this book was published in 1985, which immediately aroused attention from both researchers and amateurs, and continues to be a best seller even now. To date, its Chinese version has become essential reading for both researchers and amateurs and has been reprinted over ten times; its circulation has amounted to over 100,000 copies sold in China.


Contributor Bio(s): Dajun, Liu: - As the President of Chinese Learned Society of Zhou yi and the Director of the Center for Zhouyi & Ancient Chinese Philosophy at Shandong University, Professor Liu Dajun 刘大钧 is also a Counselor for the Counselors Office of the State Council of China and the editor-in-chief of the academic journal of Zhouyi Studies (Zhouyi yanjiu 周易研究). Now he is the author of over a dozen books. He organized the first international conference on the Zhou yi to be held in mainland China in 1987, which lifted off the "Zhou yi Fever" in mainland China. Hence Professor Liu became a household name and legendary figure across the country. Professor Chung-ying Cheng frequently praises him, saying that Professor Liu had established many milestones in the history of the Zhou yi studies.Wenzhi, Zhang: - An associate professor and deputy director at the Center for Zhouyi & Ancient Chinese Philosophy of Shandong University, Zhang Weizhi now is also the director of the Editorial Board of Zhouyi Studies (English Version). The author of four books related to the Zhou yi (Book of Changes), he received his B. A. in English Language and Literature in 1990, and received his PhD in Chinese philosophy in 2010. Focusing on the studies of image-numerology of the Zhou yi, he was selected and invited to be a 2007-08 academic year visiting scholar at Harvard-Yenching Institute and a 2012-13 visiting fellow in Erlangen-Nuremberg University, Germany.