Founder of geomantic omen
Rationalism is one of the two schools of geomantic omen based on mathematics.
The origin of rational style can be traced back to the Duke of Zhou, and then to the prevailing Yin and Yang scholars in the Spring and Autumn Period. In Jin Dynasty, scholar Guo Pu had put forward the content of rational style. In Song Dynasty, Li Style was formally established, mainly in Fujian area, also known as "Fujian School".
Guo Pu (276-324), a native of wenxi county, Hedong County (now wenxi county, Shaanxi Province), the son of Jianping, the satrap of Guoyuan, was a famous litterateur, exegetist and geomantic scholar in Jin Dynasty. He was good at ancient Chinese prose, foreign language, fine astronomy, calendar calculation, divination and poetry. Guo Pu was the most famous alchemist in the Jin Dynasty. He not only inherited the Yi-ology from his family, but also inherited the skills and mathematics of Taoism. It is said that he is good at predicting prophets and many strange alchemies. At the end of the Western Jin Dynasty, Xuancheng satrap Ewing joined the army. Jin Yuan Emperor worshipped Zuo Lang and co-wrote the history of Jin with * * *. Later, he joined the army and became a clerk in Wang Dun. Unfortunately, he was killed and posthumously awarded as the prefect of Hongnong. Song Huizong was named Wen Xibo, and Yuan Shundi was named Ling Yinghou.
As an orthodox Orthodox Christian, Guo Pu is good at prose, especially poems about immortals. "Poetry" said that it "began to change its element style, so it was called the first in ZTE", and "Wen Xin Diao Long" also said: "Jing Chunxian wrote Jun Gao." He wrote notes for Erya, Dialect, Classic of Mountains and Seas, Biography of Mu, Buried Classic, etc., which spread all over the world. There were a series of Guo Hongnong's collections in the Ming Dynasty.
fortune-teller
Formerly known as Fenggang Lai, Wen Jun, Buyizi, also known as Lai Buyi, also known as "Prophet Mountain Man", a native of Fengshangang, dingnan county, Jiangxi. Born in Song Huizong (A.D.11—1126). Lai Buyi, a former Buddhist, was framed by the treacherous court official Qin Gui and has been in exile for a long time. Lai Buyi has traveled almost all over the motherland. With his superb geomantic theory and technology, he helped the poor and resisted the strong, leaving many myths and legends, and his reputation as a "geomantic master" spread like wildfire. Hongkong, Guangzhou, Yingde (Buxinjing Village, Dawan Town) and other cities are all near Lai Buyi.
Legend has it that Wu Qing Xu was taken away by the white ape, the messenger of Nandi, as soon as it was drafted. More than one hundred years later, it was passed on to Liu Bowen, and Liu Bowen helped Zhu Yuanzhang to achieve imperial industry. It is said that the ancestral grave of Dr. Sun Yat-sen is also in Lai Buyi. Later, Lai Buyi, who saw through the world of mortals, lived in seclusion in the mountains and kept company with green hills and white clouds, but disappeared. Lai Buyi is regarded as one of the four founders of Kanyu in southern Jiangxi.
Buyi Temple in Lai Buyi's hometown is listed as a key cultural relic protection unit and a tourist attraction, and Hong Kong compatriots come to pay their respects in an endless stream. Handed down from ancient times, there are "urging officials" and the like. Lai Buyi, a Hong Kong drama released on 1983, is a costume drama.
In the Song Dynasty, Feng Shui masters Wang He and Chen Tuan formally established a rational formula, paid attention to the use of compass orientation, and drew lessons from the theory of situation school, and introduced Zhouyi theory and astrology theory on the basis of situation school, forming their own unique theoretical system.
Conclusion There are four founders of Feng Shui School: Yang (helping the poor), Zeng (), Lai (Buyi) and Liao (Jinjing). Lai Buyi and Guo Pu, the founders of Li style, provided most books and theories for the development of Feng Shui. Is a veritable master of Feng Shui.