I also want to know》》A collection of famous sayings in the Book of Changes
"Zhouyi" is the "Book of Changes", one of the "Three Changes of Changes" (the "Three Changes of Changes" was compiled by Liu Xiang in the early Han Dynasty) Still extant, its whereabouts are unknown after the Han Dynasty), it is one of the traditional classics. According to legend, it was written by Jichang, King Wen of Zhou Dynasty, and its content includes two parts: "Jing" and "Zhuan". The "Jing" mainly consists of sixty-four hexagrams and three hundred and eighty-four lines. Each hexagram and line has its own explanation (hexagram words and line words), which are used for testing purposes. "The Book of Changes" did not put forward the concepts of Yin and Yang and Tai Chi. The book that talks about Yin and Yang and Tai Chi is the "Book of Changes" influenced by Taoism and Yin and Yang schools. "Zhuan" contains seven kinds of texts explaining hexagrams and line speeches and ten articles, collectively called "Ten Wings", which are said to have been written by Confucius.
In the Spring and Autumn Period, official schools began to gradually evolve into private schools. The study of Yi followed each other and developed gradually. With the rise of hundreds of schools of thought, the study of Yi diverged accordingly. Since Confucius praised the Book of Changes, "The Book of Changes" has been regarded as the holy book of Confucianism, the first of the Six Classics, and outside the Confucian school. "There are two Yi schools that developed in parallel with the Confucian Yi school: one is the Yi Shu Yi that the old forces still exist; the other is Laozi's Taoist Yi school. Therefore, since Confucius praised the Yi school, the Chinese Yi school began to be divided into three branches."
The "General Catalog of Sikuquanshu" divides the origin and changes of the history of Yixue into "two schools and six sects". The two sects are the Xiangshu sect and the Yili sect; there are six sects, one is the test sect, the second is the Yuxiang sect, the third is the creation sect, the fourth is the Lao Zhuang sect, the fifth is the Confucian sect, and the sixth is the Shishi sect.
"The Book of Changes" is the theoretical root of natural philosophy and humanistic practice in traditional Chinese thought and culture. It is the crystallization of the thoughts and wisdom of the ancient Han nation and is known as the "source of the great road." The content is extremely rich and has had an extremely profound impact on China's economy, culture and other fields for thousands of years.
The "Book of Changes" is the first of the group of classics and is a book of teachings.
When "Hanshu·Yiwenzhi" describes the writing process of "The Book of Changes", it is said that "people update three saints, and world history has three ancients". The three sages are Fuxi, King Wen and Confucius.
There are many great scholars who deny that Confucius wrote the Book of Changes, such as Ouyang Xiu and Gong Zizhen. After careful research, contemporary scholar Qian Xuantong believes that "Confucius did not delete or compose the 'Six Classics'." Lu Xun asserted in "Outline of the History of Chinese Literature": "It is difficult to pinpoint who the author is, and the attribution to a single saint is also based on speculation. " said." Confucian scholars in the Qing Dynasty almost unanimously believed that "there could be no classics before Confucius", while Kang Youwei believed that "all the 'Six Classics' were written by Confucius".
According to modern academic research, it is generally believed that the "Book of Changes" (64 hexagrams and hexagrams and lines) was written by Zhou people in the early Zhou Dynasty, the heavy hexagrams were written by King Wen, and the hexagrams and lines were written by the Duke of Zhou.