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  2. Wuxing (Chinese philosophy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wuxing_(Chinese_philosophy)

    Taijitu diagram featuring the wuxing in the center (from the Complete Classics Collection of Ancient China by Chen Menglei). Wuxing originally referred to the five major planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Mercury, Mars, Venus), which were with the combination of the Sun and the Moon, conceived as creating five forces of earthly life.

  3. Chemical elements in East Asian languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_elements_in_East...

    In Chinese, characters for the elements are the last officially created and recognized characters in the Chinese writing system.Unlike characters for unofficial varieties of Chinese (e.g., written Cantonese) or other now-defunct ad hoc characters (e.g., those by the Empress Wu), the names for the elements are official, consistent, and taught (with Mandarin pronunciation) to every Chinese and ...

  4. Fire (wuxing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_(wuxing)

    Cycles of Wu Xing [ edit ] In the regenerative cycle of Wu Xing, wood engenders Fire as "fire is generated by rubbing together two pieces of wood" and it must be fueled by burning wood; Fire begets earth as "fire reduces everything to ashes, which become a part of the earth again".

  5. Metal (wuxing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metal_(wuxing)

    In Chinese philosophy, metal or gold (Chinese: 金; pinyin: jīn), In the Wu Xing, it is the return or the declining stage.In Traditional Chinese Medicine Metal is yang within yin in character, its motion is going inwards and its energy is contracting.

  6. Earth (wuxing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_(wuxing)

    In Chinese philosophy, earth or soil (Chinese: 土; pinyin: tǔ) is one of the five concepts that conform the wuxing.Earth is the balance of both yin and yang in the Wuxing philosophy, as well as the changing or central point of physical matter or a subject. [1]

  7. Bagua - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bagua

    The trigrams are related to the five elements of Wu Xing, which are used by feng shui practitioners and in traditional Chinese medicine. The elements are Water, Wood, Fire, Earth and Metal. The Water and Fire trigrams correspond directly with the Water and Fire elements. The element of Earth corresponds with the trigrams of Earth and Mountain.

  8. Vermilion Bird - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vermilion_Bird

    The Vermilion Bird (Chinese: 朱雀; pinyin: Zhūquè) is one of the Four Symbols of the Chinese constellations.According to Wu Xing, the Taoist five elemental system, it represents the Fire element, the direction south, and the season of summer correspondingly.

  9. Rat (zodiac) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rat_(zodiac)

    Years of the rat are cyclically differentiated by correlation to the Heavenly Stems cycle, resulting in a repeating cycle of five years of the rat (over a sixty-year period), each rat year also being associated with one of the Chinese wu xing, also known as the "five elements", or "phases": the "Five Phases" being Fire (火 huǒ), Water (水 ...