Wuxing (Chinese philosophy)
, translated as Five Moving Ones, Five Circulations, Five Types of Energy, Five Elements, Five Transformations, Five Phases or Five Agents, is a fivefold conceptual scheme used in many traditional Chinese fields of study to explain a wide array of phenomena, including terrestrial and celestial relationships, influences, and [|cycles], that characterise the interactions and relationships within science, medicine, politics, religion and social relationships and education within Chinese culture.
The Five Moving Ones are traditionally associated with the classical planets: Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, and Saturn as depicted in the [|etymological] section below. In ancient Chinese astronomy and astrology, that spread throughout East Asia, was a reflection of the seven-day planetary order of Fire, Water, Wood, Metal, Earth. When in their "heavenly stems" generative cycle as represented in the below cycles section and depicted in the diagram above running consecutively clockwise. When in their overacting destructive arrangement of Wood, Earth, Water, Fire, Metal, natural disasters, calamity, illnesses and disease will ensue.
The wuxing system has been in use since the second or first century BCE during the Han dynasty. It appears in many seemingly disparate fields of early Chinese thought, including music, feng shui, alchemy, astrology, martial arts, military strategy, I Ching divination, religion and traditional medicine, serving as a metaphysics based on cosmic analogy.
Etymology
Wuxing originally referred to the five classical planets, which were with the combination of the Sun and the Moon, conceived as creating the five forces of earthly life. This is why the word is composed of Chinese characters meaning "five" and "moving". "Moving" is shorthand for "planets", since the word for planets in Chinese has been translated as "moving stars". Some of the Mawangdui Silk Texts also connect the wuxing to the wude, the Five Virtues and Five Emotions. Scholars believe that various predecessors to the concept of wuxing were merged into one system of many interpretations in the Han dynasty.Wuxing was first translated into English as "the Five Elements", drawing parallels with the Greek and Indian Vedic static, solid or formative arrangement of the four elements. This translation is still in common use among practitioners of Traditional Chinese medicine, such as in the name of Five Element acupuncture and Japanese meridian therapy. However, this analogy could be misleading as the four elements are concerned with form, substance and quantity, whereas the post-heaven arrangement of the wuxing are "primarily concerned with process, change, and quality". For example, the wuxing element "Wood" is more accurately thought of as the "vital essence" and growth of trees rather than the physical innate substance wood. This led sinologist Nathan Sivin to propose the alternative translation "five phases" in 1987. But "phase" also fails to capture the full meaning of wuxing. In some contexts, the wuxing are indeed associated with physical substances. Historian of Chinese medicine Manfred Porkert proposed the term "Evolutive Phase". Perhaps the most widely accepted translation among modern scholars is the "five agents" or "five transformations".
Cycles
In traditional doctrine, the five phases are connected in two cycles of interactions: a promoting or generative cycle, also known as "mother-son"; and an overacting or destructive cycle, also known as "grandfather-grandson". Each of these cycles can be interpreted and analyzed in a forward or reversed direction. In addition to the aforementioned cycles there is also what is considered an "overacting" or excessively generating version of the destructive cycle.Inter-promoting
The generative cycle is:- Wood feeds Fire as fuel
- Fire produces Earth
- Earth bears Metal
- Metal collects, filters and purifies Water
- Water nourishes Wood
Inter-regulating
- Wood grasps Earth
- Earth contains Water
- Water dampens Fire
- Fire melts Metal
- Metal chops Wood
Overacting
- Wood depletes Earth
- Earth obstructs Water
- Water extinguishes Fire
- Fire melts Metal
- Metal makes Wood rigid to easily snap.
Weakening
- Wood depletes Water
- Water rusts Metal
- Metal impoverishes Earth
- Earth smothers Fire
- Fire burns Wood
Counteracting
- Wood dulls Metal
- Metal de-energizes Fire
- Fire evaporates Water
- Water muddies Earth
- Earth rots Wood
Celestial stem
| Movement | Wood | Fire | Earth | Metal | Water |
| Heavenly Stems | Jia 甲 Yi 乙 | Bing 丙 Ding 丁 | Wu 戊 Ji 己 | Geng 庚 Xin 辛 | Ren 壬 Gui 癸 |
| Year ends with | 4, 5 | 6, 7 | 8, 9 | 0, 1 | 2, 3 |
Ming nayin
In Ziwei divination, nayin further classifies the Five Elements into 60 ming, or life orders, based on the ganzhi. Similar to the astrology zodiac, the ming is used by fortune-tellers to analyse individual personality and destiny.| Order | Ganzhi | Ming | Order | Ganzhi | Ming | Element |
| 1 | Wood Rat 甲子 | Sea metal 海中金 | 31 | Wood Horse 甲午 | Sand metal 沙中金 | Metal |
| 2 | Wood Ox 乙丑 | Sea metal 海中金 | 32 | Wood Goat 乙未 | Sand metal 沙中金 | Metal |
| 3 | Fire Tiger 丙寅 | Furnace fire 爐中火 | 33 | Fire Monkey 丙申 | Forest fire 山下火 | Fire |
| 4 | Fire Rabbit 丁卯 | Furnace fire 爐中火 | 34 | Fire Rooster 丁酉 | Forest fire 山下火 | Fire |
| 5 | Earth Dragon 戊辰 | Forest wood 大林木 | 35 | Earth Dog 戊戌 | Meadow wood 平地木 | Wood |
| 6 | Earth Snake 己巳 | Forest wood 大林木 | 36 | Earth Pig 己亥 | Meadow wood 平地木 | Wood |
| 7 | Metal Horse 庚午 | Road earth 路旁土 | 37 | Metal Rat 庚子 | Adobe earth 壁上土 | Earth |
| 8 | Metal Goat 辛未 | Road earth 路旁土 | 38 | Metal Ox 辛丑 | Adobe earth 壁上土 | Earth |
| 9 | Water Monkey 壬申 | Sword metal 劍鋒金 | 39 | Water Tiger 壬寅 | Foil metal 金箔金 | Metal |
| 10 | Water Rooster 癸酉 | Sword metal 劍鋒金 | 40 | Water Rabbit 癸卯 | Foil metal 金箔金 | Metal |
| 11 | Wood Dog 甲戌 | Volcanic fire 山頭火 | 41 | Wood Dragon 甲辰 | Lamp fire 覆燈火 | Fire |
| 12 | Wood Pig 乙亥 | Volcanic fire 山頭火 | 42 | Wood Snake 乙巳 | Lamp fire 覆燈火 | Fire |
| 13 | Fire Rat 丙子 | Creek water 澗下水 | 43 | Fire Horse 丙午 | Sky water 天河水 | Water |
| 14 | Fire Ox 丁丑 | Creek water 澗下水 | 44 | Fire Goat 丁未 | Sky water 天河水 | Water |
| 15 | Earth Tiger 戊寅 | Fortress earth 城頭土 | 45 | Earth Monkey 戊申 | Stage station earth 大驛土 | Earth |
| 16 | Earth Rabbit 己卯 | Fortress earth 城頭土 | 46 | Earth Rooster 己酉 | Stage station earth 大驛土 | Earth |
| 17 | Metal Dragon 庚辰 | Pewter metal 白镴金 | 47 | Metal Dog 庚戌 | Jewellery metal 釵釧金 | Metal |
| 18 | Metal Snake 辛巳 | Pewter metal 白镴金 | 48 | Metal Pig 辛亥 | Jewellery metal 釵釧金 | Metal |
| 19 | Water Horse 壬午 | Willow wood 楊柳木 | 49 | Water Rat 壬子 | Mulberry wood 桑柘木 | Wood |
| 20 | Water Goat 癸未 | Willow wood 楊柳木 | 50 | Water Ox 癸丑 | Mulberry wood 桑柘木 | Wood |
| 21 | Wood Monkey 甲申 | Stream water 泉中水 | 51 | Wood Tiger 甲寅 | Rapids water 大溪水 | Water |
| 22 | Wood Rooster 乙酉 | Stream water 泉中水 | 52 | Wood Rabbit 乙卯 | Rapids water 大溪水 | Water |
| 23 | Fire Dog 丙戌 | Roof tiles earth 屋上土 | 53 | Fire Dragon 丙辰 | Desert earth 沙中土 | Earth |
| 24 | Fire Pig 丁亥 | Roof tiles earth 屋上土 | 54 | Fire Snake 丁巳 | Desert earth 沙中土 | Earth |
| 25 | Earth Rat 戊子 | Lightning fire 霹靂火 | 55 | Earth Horse 戊午 | Sun fire 天上火 | Fire |
| 26 | Earth Ox 己丑 | Lightning fire 霹靂火 | 56 | Earth Goat 己未 | Sun fire 天上火 | Fire |
| 27 | Metal Tiger 庚寅 | Conifer wood 松柏木 | 57 | Metal Monkey 庚申 | Pomegranate wood 石榴木 | Wood |
| 28 | Metal Rabbit 辛卯 | Conifer wood 松柏木 | 58 | Metal Rooster 辛酉 | Pomegranate wood 石榴木 | Wood |
| 29 | Water Dragon 壬辰 | River water 長流水 | 59 | Water Dog 壬戌 | Ocean water 大海水 | Water |
| 30 | Water Snake 癸巳 | River water 長流水 | 60 | Water Pig 癸亥 | Ocean water 大海水 | Water |
Applications
The wuxing schema is applied to explain phenomena in various fields.Phases of the year
The five phases are around 73 days each and are usually used to describe the transformations of nature rather than their formative states.- Wood/Spring: a period of growth, the expansion of which generates vitality and movement; associated with wind.
- Fire/Summer: a period of fruition and ripening flowering; associated with heat.
- Earth can be seen as a period of stability and stillness transitioning between the other phases or seasons, or, when relating to transformative seasonal periods, it can be seen as late summer. This period is associated with centralisation, leveling and dampness.
- Metal/Autumn: a period of moving inward. It is associated with collection, harvesting, transmuting, contracting, loss and dryness.
- Water/Winter: a period of reclusiveness, stillness, consolidation and coolness.