China Naming Network - Weather knowledge - What does the geomantic term "Fan Luo" mean?

What does the geomantic term "Fan Luo" mean?

Feng Shui is a mysterious art with a long history in the Chinese nation. It is also known as Kate art and Qing-nang art, and more academically, it is called Kanyu. Wind is vitality and field energy, while water is flowing and changing. Geomantic omen is the art of observing geography on the spot, which was also called geomantic omen theory in ancient times. This is a philosophy that studies the laws of the environment and the universe. Since man is a part of nature, nature is also a part of man, reaching the realm of "harmony between man and nature". The relatively perfect knowledge of Feng Shui rose in the Warring States Period. The core idea of Feng Shui is the harmony between man and nature, so as to achieve "harmony between man and nature". Early geomantic omen is mainly about the methods and principles of the location, orientation and construction of palaces, houses, villages and cemeteries, and it is a kind of metaphysics to choose suitable places.

There are two definitions of geomantic omen: one refers to edema disease, which is mostly caused by the invasion of wind evil, the loss of qi due to the obstruction of waterways and the retention of water in the body; Secondly, it refers to the natural conditions of residential bases and cemeteries, such as veins, mountains and rivers, etc.

A city, a village, a courtyard, a building, a house, a room ... are all Tai Chi, but at different levels. The layout of residential buildings depends not only on its own Tai Chi, but also on the Tai Chi of building groups. The layout of the building should be based on neat terrain and complete Tai Chi. It is not advisable to lose the position of a part of the building. In the layout of building lots, we should pay great attention to the field effect of Taiji diagram, carefully choose open space, and choose the small garden green space in the building complex in the central lot, and decorate it with architectural sketches. In residential design, a residential building should not be short of corners. Households on residential floors should not be staggered, resulting in a corner missing from each household's plane.