Yin is characterized as slow, soft, yielding, diffuse, cold, wet, dark, and passive; and is associated with water, winter, north, earth, the moon, femininity, and nighttime.
Yang, by contrast, is fast, hard, solid, focused, hot, dry, bright, and active; and is associated with fire, sky, summer, the sun, masculinity and daytime.
Duality is found in many belief systems, but yin and yang are parts of a Oneness that is also equated with the Tao. The term "dualistic-monism" or dialectical monism has been coined in an attempt to express this fruitful paradox of simultaneous unity/duality. Yin and yang can be thought of as complementary (rather than opposing) forces that interact to form a dynamic system in which the whole is greater than the assembled parts. Everything has both yin and yang aspects. Either of the two major aspects may manifest more strongly in a particular object, depending on the criterion of the observation. This constant balanced interplay of yin and yang is known as "Taiji". The concept of Taiji is first found in written sources in works of Zou Yan (305 – 240 BC) who was an ancient Chinese philosopher best known as the representative thinker of the Yin and Yang School (or School of Naturalists) during the Hundred Schools of Thought era in Chinese philosophy..
Taiji is graphically represented by the symbol known as "Taijitu" or "Taiji tu" meaning Taiji symbol, which is more commonly known simply as Yin - Yang symbol:
Yin is the black side with the white dot in it, and yang is the white side with the black dot in it.
The oldest preserved drawing of this symbol in China appears in the works of the Song era philosopher Zhou Dunyi (1017–1073 AD), author of the "Taijitu shuo" (Explanation of the Diagram of the Taiji), which became the cornerstone of Neo-Confucianist cosmology. His brief text synthesized aspects of Chinese Buddhism and Taoism with metaphysical discussions in the Yijing.
What is the origin of this symbol?
In a work entitled "A Geomedical Approach to Chinese Medicine: The Origin of the Yin-Yang Symbol" which was published in 2012 by Stefan Jaeger, we can read that:
The Yin-Yang symbol is tightly connected with the annual cycle of the earth around the sun,and the four seasons resulting from it. Using the gnomon , a pole stuck in the ground the ancient Chinese were able to record precisely the position and the length of the sun’s shadow throughout the solar year.
This enabled them to precisely determine the length of the year, which they found to be about 365.25 days. Furthermore, they divided the circle of the year into segments, including the vernal equinox,autumnal equinox, summer solstice, and winter solstice. In addition, they used concentric circles around the pole, helping them to record the length of the sun’s shadow every day. As a result, they measured the shortest shadow during the summer solstice, and measured the longest shadow during the winter solstice. After connecting the measured points and dimming the part that reaches from summer solstice to winter solstice (Yin), they arrived at a chart like this one:
The resemblance between this chart and the modern Taichi-tu or Yin-Yang symbol is striking. This diagram provides visual evidence that the original Yin-Yang symbol describes the change of a pole’s shadow length during a year. This corresponds well with the meaning of "Taiji" in Chinese which is "Great pole"...
Now this is an amazing explanation for the origin of Taiji. Except that there is one problem with it. The above Taiji like shadow diagram shows the shadow change at the 70° latitude north. Latitude represents the angle from the equator. Now this is the globe with some of the latitudes marked on it.
The Yin-Yang symbol is tightly connected with the annual cycle of the earth around the sun,and the four seasons resulting from it. Using the gnomon , a pole stuck in the ground the ancient Chinese were able to record precisely the position and the length of the sun’s shadow throughout the solar year.
This enabled them to precisely determine the length of the year, which they found to be about 365.25 days. Furthermore, they divided the circle of the year into segments, including the vernal equinox,autumnal equinox, summer solstice, and winter solstice. In addition, they used concentric circles around the pole, helping them to record the length of the sun’s shadow every day. As a result, they measured the shortest shadow during the summer solstice, and measured the longest shadow during the winter solstice. After connecting the measured points and dimming the part that reaches from summer solstice to winter solstice (Yin), they arrived at a chart like this one:
The resemblance between this chart and the modern Taichi-tu or Yin-Yang symbol is striking. This diagram provides visual evidence that the original Yin-Yang symbol describes the change of a pole’s shadow length during a year. This corresponds well with the meaning of "Taiji" in Chinese which is "Great pole"...
Now this is an amazing explanation for the origin of Taiji. Except that there is one problem with it. The above Taiji like shadow diagram shows the shadow change at the 70° latitude north. Latitude represents the angle from the equator. Now this is the globe with some of the latitudes marked on it.
The Arctic Circle lies at the latitude 66° 33´.
So the only way Ancient Chinese astronomers could have gotten the Taiji like shadow diagram would have been if they had their gnomon stuck into the ground somewhere in northern Siberia. Which is highly unlikely to have happened. If they had their gnomon stuck into the ground anywhere in China, the resulting shadow diagram would have looked something like this:
So the only way Ancient Chinese astronomers could have gotten the Taiji like shadow diagram would have been if they had their gnomon stuck into the ground somewhere in northern Siberia. Which is highly unlikely to have happened. If they had their gnomon stuck into the ground anywhere in China, the resulting shadow diagram would have looked something like this:
I mean you can see the resemblance to the Taiji symbol but it is definitely far away from this, shadow diagram at the 70° latitude:
Anyway the thing is, the article is right in one thing:
The Yin-Yang symbol is tightly connected with the annual cycle of the earth around the sun, and constantly changing daily amount of light and darkness and the effect this change has on Earth's temperature.
In astronomy, axial tilt, also known as obliquity, is the angle between an object's rotational axis and its orbital axis, or, equivalently, the angle between its equatorial plane and orbital plane. Earth currently has an axial tilt of about 23.4°.
Earth's axis remains tilted in the same direction with reference to the background stars throughout a year (regardless of where it is in its orbit). This means that one pole (and the associated hemisphere of Earth) will be directed away from the Sun at one side of the orbit, and half an orbit later (half a year later) this pole will be directed towards the Sun. This is the cause of the lengthening of the day from winter solstice to summer solstice and the shortening of the day from summer solstice to winter solstice.
Now you would think that the earth's temperature would also increase from winter solstice to summer solstice and decrease from summer solstice to winter solstice. But this is not the case.
This is Sun's sunlight cross. It marks the transitional points on the sunlight cycle in the northern hemisphere:
1. Winter solstice - the shortest day and the longest night
2. Spring equinox - the equal day and night
3. Summer solstice - the longest day and shortest night
4. Autumn equinox - the equal day and night
This is Earth's, climate, vegetation cross as recorded in Celtic and Serbian calendar. It marks the transitional points of the climatic, vegetative cycle in the northern hemisphere:
Celtic calendar:
1. Imbolc- the beginning of the spring
2. Bealtaine - the beginning of the summer
3. Lughnasa - the beginning of the autumn
4. Samhain - the beginning of the winter
Serbian calendar:
1. St Sava - the beginning of the spring
2. St George - the beginning of the summer
3. St Ilija - the beginning of the autumn
4. St Mitar - the beginning of the winter
As you can see the sun cross and earth cross are out of sync. The earth cross is rotated forward by 45 degrees and the earth circle cardinal points fall right in between the sun circle cardinal points. This is because the earth climatic, vegetative cycle lags behind the solar cycle.
The Sun cross transitions into the Earth cross. This transition is governed by the slow accumulation and release of the heat which is transferred from the Sun to the Earth through sunlight...
This is the never ending wheel of life...
And then two days ago while I was having a discussion about Celtic calendar, I had people say to me:
"How can 1st of February, Imbolc, be the first day of spring? I have foot and a half of snow on the ground all around me and its freezing. This makes no sense..."
I replied that the first day of spring is the first day of spring, not because it is warm, but because it can't get any colder. The 1st of February, actually the 4th of February, the real Imbolc, the mid point between the Winter Solstice and the Spring Equinox, is the coldest part of the year on the northern hemisphere. This is due to the way the Sun - Earth system works. So even though on the day of the Winter Solstice the days start getting longer, they continue to get colder. Until the 4th of February, the mid point between the Winter Solstice and the Spring Equinox. From that day on, the Earth starts getting warmer.
It is exactly the same on the opposite side of the year. The first day of autumn is the first day of autumn, not because it is cool, but because it can't get any hotter. The 1st of August, actually the 2nd of August, the real Lughnasadh, the mid point between the Summer Solstice and the Autumn Equinox, is the hottest part of the year on the northern hemisphere. This is again due to the way the Sun - Earth system works. So even though on the day of the Sumer Solstice the days start getting shorter, they continue to get wormer. Until the 2nd of August, the mid point between the Summer Solstice and the Autumn Equinox. From that day on, the Earth starts getting cooler.
As I was writing this, something clicked. What I just wrote sounded very familiar. Very very familiar.
And then something clicked.
The Yin - Yang diagram.
The summer solstice, the beginning of the shortening of the day, is the black dot in the middle of the white part of the diagram. It is the seed of darkness in the middle of the whitest (lightest, brightest) part of the year. But even though the days start shortening, the weather gets wormer until the mid point between the summer solstice and autumn equinox. Lughnasadh, the beginning of the autumn and the time of maximum heat...
This endless cyclical change of the duration of the day and night is what is seen as the endless cyclical interplay between the light (Yang) and darkness (Yin) which heats (Yang) and cools (Yin) the Earth and creates seasons and makes life possible.
This endless cyclical change is possible because of endless cyclical interplay between Father Sky (Sun) and Mother Earth which is at the core of the old European belief system.
In Serbian tradition the Father Sky and Mother Earth are known as:
Father Sky:
Dajbog - giving god
Djed - grandfather, male ancestor
Triglav - three headed male god. He consisted of Jarilo (sun as a young man), Vid (sun as an adult, husband), Perun (sun as an old man, grandfather).
His characteristics were light, heat, dryness. He dominated the white (light, bright) part of the year and was most powerful in the middle of this period, at the end of the summer and the beginning of autumn which is the hottest and driest period of the year.
Mother Earth:
Dajbaba - giving goddess
Baba - grandmother, female ancestor
Troglava - three headed female goddess. She consisted of Vesna (earth as young girl), Mokoš (earth as an adult woman, wife), Morana (earth as an old woman, witch).
Her characteristics were darkness, cold, wetness. She dominated the dark part of the year and was most powerful in the middle of this period, at the end of the winter and the beginning of spring which is the coldest and wettest part of the year.
At their maximum power, both Father Sky (Sun) and Mother Earth are destructive. The Father Sky (Sun) on his own would turn the world int a dead hot dry desert (pure Yang). The Mother Earth on her own would turn the world into a dead cold wet desert (pure Yin).
It is the eternal dynamic interplay (Taiji) between the Sky (Sun) - (light, heat, dryness) Yang and the Earth - (darkness, cold, wetness) Yin, the intercourse between the Father Sky (Sun) and Mother Earth, which makes life possible. And this interplay is perfectly depicted by the Taijitu or Yin - Yang diagram.
But is this all just a coincidence? I don't know, but I know that the Yin - Yang (darkness - light) symbol perfectly depicts only one process that I know of: This endless cyclical change of the duration of the day and night which causes endless cyclical change of the heating (Yang) and cooling (Yin) of the Earth. I don't really know any other system which behaves in the way described by the Yin - Yang symbol. Do you? If you do please let me know what that process is.
But is this all just a coincidence? I don't know, but I know that the Yin - Yang (darkness - light) symbol perfectly depicts only one process that I know of: This endless cyclical change of the duration of the day and night which causes endless cyclical change of the heating (Yang) and cooling (Yin) of the Earth. I don't really know any other system which behaves in the way described by the Yin - Yang symbol. Do you? If you do please let me know what that process is.
Very interesting right?
Well here is something even more interesting. These are two granary "shrines" from Old European Cucuteni–Trypillia culture which thrived between 5200 BC and 3500 BC in Eastern Europe covering the region from the Carpathian Mountains to the Dniester and Dnieper regions, centred on modern-day Moldova and covering substantial parts of western Ukraine and northeastern Romania.
Well here is something even more interesting. These are two granary "shrines" from Old European Cucuteni–Trypillia culture which thrived between 5200 BC and 3500 BC in Eastern Europe covering the region from the Carpathian Mountains to the Dniester and Dnieper regions, centred on modern-day Moldova and covering substantial parts of western Ukraine and northeastern Romania.
And this is the decoration engraved on the wall of one of these granary "shrines":
Or maybe this is just a similar looking symbol which has nothing really to do with Yin - Yang symbol?
Cucuteni-trypilla type pottery were found in yangshao, 1st neolithic culture in
ReplyDeleteChina. In banpo site of yangshao culture, the dead person buried in crouched position of west eurasian culture. You can find it in wiki. Moreover, the western burial types were also found at the end of korean peninshula, which happened 7,000y ago. There were so many interactions between east and west after pottery migration from altai, I think. Johen.
Thank you very much for this info. Very important.
Deletemillet agriculture present in the Cucuteni–Trypillia culture. The cultivation of common millet as the earliest dry crop in East Asia has been attributed to its resistance to drought, and this has been suggested to have aided its spread. Asian varieties of millet made their way from China to the Black Sea region of Europe by 5000 BCE. It is more logical to think the other away around, we have yet to locate the supra-cultural interaction zone in central asia, the midway between ancient near and far eastern civilizations, wheat cultivation and old europe civilization's pottery techniques came out of the middle east
DeleteInteresting theory. We also have the Notitia Dignitatum a 15th century document ( copy of a copy of an older manuscript) depicting shields of German soldiers serving in the Roman army of the 4th or 5th century. The Germanic tribes were evidently aware of this symbol. Making it the oldest Yin and Yang depiction in Western Europe. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Notitia_Dignitatum.
ReplyDeleteAnother theory that sprung into my mind about the Yin and Yang origin; we know that European DNA and American natives DNA are stronger related than Europeans vs Asian peoples. Suppose a culture of tundra hunters existed spreading the length between Doggerland all the way to the Bering Strait crossing. And suppose this culture developed the Sunwheel (also found among some USA native tribes) and Yin and Yang symbol. This culture in time could spread downwards to Old Europe also among the Indo-European tribes and East Asia peoples rather than a east - west spread in later times.
Finally the historian Christopher I. Beckwith proposes a theory that Taoism is in origin Buddhist a very early form of it at least. And thus a Indo-European based philosophy with its Indo-European based symbols and rituals accompanying it. Perhaps another possible introduction of the Yin and Yang symbol into East Asia.
I would argue there is said culture of tundra hunters. The Inuit found in Northern Canada have long maintained that the circumpolar arctic is their home, not just within the borders of North America and I have seen claims made by them that they are related to the Indigenous Siberian peoples. It is interesting to note on this point that they share many cultural similarities with the earlier Mongolians such as nomadic lifestyle, hairstyles and beliefs in spirituality of hair (although this is common throughout the globe) and throat singing. Just a thought.
DeleteOff the topic, but related to IE. Recently I found that okunevo people had alphabet, which would be connected to bramhi alphabet in ancient india. So I post several blog and archaeology section in eupedia, but no response. You can see their inscription, if you search in google by "okunevo inscription".
ReplyDeleteThis okunevo people are archaeologically, anthropologically, genetically related with america indian, who is intermediate between caucasoid and mongolid since maltaboy.their petroglyph were found in near swat valley and china. Problem is bronze china and hindu culture is exetremely similar to maya. K c chang thought that chinese and mexican have common ancestor, but they do not. So many indian bloggers search for the similarity.
In china shang dynasty, karashuk type sword, mongol horse, west asia type chariot was found. At that time no horse was in china. Related to yin yang, the zhu dynasty has andronovo culture.
So can you check the okunevo inscription to check whether it is similar to the bramhi alphabet?
Johen
The Altai mountains are too far south apparently http://latitudelongitude.org/mn/altai/
ReplyDeletebut during the last Glacial period, emergent Beringia blocked cold arctic currents into the Pacific, allowing
1. Melano-Andaman people to boat along the coasts to Central America, as genetic and morphologic evidence has indicated.
2. People to live further north in climate conditions similar to areas much further south today. So people may have been living in north Siberia without too much bad weather, hunting bison, mammoths etc. Though trees were stunted, bone & horn-antler toolwork advanced. The 'pole' may have been the male drill pole, an advanced form of the ancient fire bow-drill, that fit into a female socket and spun and counterspun. The Yin-Yang Taijitu white and black tones may have indicated a back and forth motion?
Also, in Aztec, the fire drill's male pole is "tletl", which I suspect is cognate to "djed"/grandfather.
ReplyDelete-
Father Sky:
Dajbog - giving god
Djed - grandfather, male ancestor
Triglav - three headed male god. He consisted of Jarilo (sun as a young man), Vid (sun as an adult, husband), Perun (sun as an old man, grandfather).
His characteristics were light, heat, dryness.
As to tletl, in Polish there is a verb tlic with c pronounced as ch, which phonetically is close to t, oh and it means 'to smoulder', le/li/la is a very old core word referring to fire/flame.
ReplyDeleteOh and off-topic, Ive recently stumbled upon a very intriguing correlation. In 15th century there was a Husite military leader called Jan Zizka. He commanded troops even after losing his eyesight as he made decisions based on the descriptions of his helper. There is a legend saying that he ordered his men to... make a battle drum out of his skin after his death. Apparently the drum was later captured by the defenders during a siege of Klodzko and stored there until 18th century when it got stolen by prussians. Whats intriguing about this is that there is a god called Chors - pronounced like horse - god of blood, moon, oaths, also described as skinned Svarog. Apparently, he also made a battle drum out of his skin!!! So did 15th century Czechs believe their commander was an incarnation/emanation of Chors?
https://youtu.be/FJB7gbjiJKw
ReplyDeleteInteresantan pogled,vredi pogledati!
Veliki pozdrav.
the diagram is a fertility symbol, showing two snakes mating; the white and black dots are their eyes; it was later given other meanings
ReplyDeletethere are also other fertility symbols common between east and west; the compass and right angle of the masons represented round heaven square earth, compass/right angle are however separately held by Fuxi and Nuwa in China; in Israel the symbol became the double triangle, or six corner star; the swastika was 4 entangled snakes; it was the emblem of tibetans
In Germanic cultures the sun is female & the moon male.
ReplyDeleteSky is male.
Earth is female - but 'ground' is male.