China Naming Network - Fortune telling knowledge - What does the fortune teller mean when he says that I have all the elements of Jin Mu?
What does the fortune teller mean when he says that I have all the elements of Jin Mu?
It's not hard to understand. In China's traditional thought, it pays attention to "worshipping China" or "the mean". In other words, it is impossible for a thing to be in an extreme state to prevent it from "flourishing and declining". When a thing is in an extreme state, it must be because there is an overwhelming advantage in the internal contradictions of things. This determines that this thing will develop to an extreme situation and eventually decline. For example, the Taiji diagram shows the state when the relationship between Yin and Yang is completely balanced. According to the theory of five elements, a thing in Jin Mu is composed of five factors: fire, water and soil, which are indispensable, while in Jin Mu, the five factors of fire, water and soil are neither so good nor so bad. Therefore, these five factors should be neither dominant nor inferior, and they are a balanced relationship. The so-called complete balance has two meanings. First, the five elements inside a thing should be balanced. Second, a thing should be in balance with the five elements of its environment. If it is unbalanced for some reason, it must be remedied according to the five elements of this thing to make it balanced. To give a practical example, there was a great man who was banished from the earth when he became famous in his early years. The five elements flourished and lacked water. Then it was named "Zedong" and the word "Runzhi". Because the east of Ze is the sea and the earth dragon is raised by seawater, the five elements are balanced. This named example embodies the idea of balance of five elements and is also an example of practical application. That's about it.