Taixuanjing

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Tai Xuan Jing
Canon of Supreme Mystery
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese太玄經
Simplified Chinese太玄经
Hanyu PinyinTàixuánjīng
Literal meaning"Classic of Supreme Mystery"
Korean name
Hangul태현경
Japanese name
Hiraganaたいげんきょう
Kyūjitai太玄經
Shinjitai太玄経

The text Tài Xuán Jīng ("Canon of Supreme Mystery", Chinese: 太玄經) was composed by the Confucian writer Yang Xiong (53 BCE-18 CE). The first draft of this work was completed in 2 BCE (in the decade before the fall of the Western Han dynasty). During the Jin dynasty, an otherwise unknown person named Fan Wang (Chinese: 范望) salvaged the text and wrote a commentary on it, from which our text survives today.

The Taixuanjing is a divinatory text similar to, and inspired by, the I Ching (Yijing). Whereas the I Ching is based on 64 binary hexagrams (sequences of six horizontal lines each of which may be broken or unbroken), the Taixuanjing employs 81 ternary tetragrams (sequences of four lines, each of which may be unbroken, broken once, or broken twice). Like the I Ching it may be consulted as an oracle by casting yarrow stalks or a six-faced die to generate numbers which define the lines of a tetragram, which can then be looked up in the text.[further explanation needed] A tetragram drawn without moving lines refers to the tetragram description, while a tetragram drawn with moving lines refers to the specific lines.

The monograms are:

  • the unbroken line (TXJ 1.svg ⚊) for heaven (Chinese: ; pinyin: tiān),
  • once broken line (TXJ 2.svg ⚋) for earth (Chinese: ; pinyin: ),
  • twice broken line (TXJ 3.svg