What Is the I Ching?
Origins & Historical Context · 易經的起源與歷史脈絡
The I Ching (易經, Yìjīng) — the Book of Changes — is humanity's oldest continuously used oracle, a philosophical masterwork that has guided emperors, scholars, and seekers for over three millennia. But what exactly is it? Where did it come from? And how did a divination manual become one of the most profound texts in world literature?
The Three Changes (三易)
The story of the I Ching begins with what ancient texts call the "Three Changes" (三易, Sān Yì) — three distinct divination systems that evolved across China's early dynasties:
連山 Lianshan
"Linked Mountains"
Used during the Xia Dynasty (c. 2070–1600 BCE). Named because its first hexagram was Gen (☶, Mountain). Emphasized stability and rootedness.
Lost to history歸藏 Guicang
"Return to the Hidden"
Used during the Shang Dynasty (c. 1600–1046 BCE). Began with Kun (☷, Earth). Focused on receptivity and the hidden forces of nature.
Lost to history周易 Zhouyi
"Changes of Zhou"
Created during the Zhou Dynasty (c. 1046–256 BCE). Begins with Qian (☰, Heaven). This is the I Ching we know today.
Survives today"掌《三易》之法,一曰《連山》,二曰《歸藏》,三曰《周易》。其經卦皆八,其別皆六十有四。"
— Rites of Zhou (周禮)
"[The diviners] master the methods of the Three Changes: first, Lianshan; second, Guicang; third, Zhouyi. Each has eight trigrams and sixty-four hexagrams."
While Lianshan and Guicang have been lost to time, the Zhou Yi survived — and through centuries of commentary and interpretation, it evolved into the philosophical and divinatory classic we call the I Ching.
The Three Sages (三聖)
According to tradition, the I Ching was shaped by three legendary figures across three eras — a process the Book of Han describes as "人更三聖,世歷三古" ("Three sages across three ages"):
伏羲 Fuxi
Upper Antiquity (上古)Created the Eight Trigrams (先天八卦)
The mythical culture hero who observed the patterns of heaven and earth — the movements of stars, the shapes of animals, the flow of rivers — and distilled them into eight three-line symbols: ☰☷☳☴☵☲☶☱. These became the "genetic code" of the I Ching.
周文王 King Wen of Zhou
Middle Antiquity (中古)Arranged the 64 Hexagrams & Wrote the Judgments (卦辭)
Imprisoned by the tyrant King Zhou of Shang, King Wen (c. 1152–1056 BCE) spent years in captivity contemplating the trigrams. He combined them into 64 six-line hexagrams and composed the cryptic judgment texts that accompany each one. His son, the Duke of Zhou (周公), later added the line statements (爻辭).
孔子 Confucius
Recent Antiquity (近古)Wrote the Ten Wings (十翼) Commentaries
Confucius (551–479 BCE) was said to have studied the I Ching so intensely that he wore out the leather bindings of his copy three times. Tradition credits him (or his school) with composing the Ten Wings (十翼) — ten commentaries that transformed the I Ching from a divination manual into a philosophical text.
Through the work of these three sages, the Zhou Yi (text + hexagrams) and the Yi Zhuan (commentaries) merged into a single work: the I Ching as we know it today.
The Dual Nature of the I Ching
The I Ching occupies a unique position in Chinese culture: it is both a divination tool and a philosophical text.
As Divination (占卜)
Originally, the I Ching was used for oracle consultation. A diviner would cast yarrow stalks (or later, coins) to generate a hexagram and changing lines, then consult the text to interpret the omen.
- Practical guidance for decisions
- Warnings and predictions
- Ritual communication with the cosmos
As Philosophy (哲學)
Over time, scholars began reading the I Ching without divination — studying its images, judgments, and commentaries as a map of cosmic principles and human virtue.
- Meditation on change and constancy
- Ethical and political wisdom
- Foundation of Confucian and Daoist thought
"君子居則觀其象而玩其辭,動則觀其變而玩其占。"
— Xici Zhuan (繫辭傳, Great Commentary)
"The noble person, at rest, contemplates the images and ponders the words; in action, observes the changes and studies the divination."
This dual nature is what makes the I Ching so enduring. It speaks to both the practical need for guidance and the philosophical hunger for meaning.
Three Meanings of "易" (Yi)
The character 易 (yì) — "change" — carries three layers of meaning, each revealing a core principle of the I Ching's philosophy:
變易 Bianyi
Change · Transformation
All things in the universe are in constant flux. Nothing remains static. The seasons turn, dynasties rise and fall, youth becomes age. The I Ching maps these patterns of transformation.
簡易 Jianyi
Simplicity · Elegance
Despite the universe's complexity, its fundamental law is simple: yin and yang. Two forces, endlessly interacting, generate all phenomena. The I Ching distills infinite complexity into 64 archetypal patterns.
不易 Buyi
Constancy · Eternal Principles
Beneath the surface chaos, there are unchanging laws. The Dao (道) — the Way — is eternal. Yin always follows yang; excess always invites correction. These principles never change.
💡 The Paradox: The I Ching teaches that change is the only constant. Everything transforms, yet the pattern of transformation remains eternal. This is the heart of its wisdom.
Recommended Books for Further Study
周易註音版 (Annotated Zhou Yi)
A beginner-friendly edition with pinyin pronunciation and modern Chinese translation. Ideal for first-time readers who want to recite and memorize the classical text.
易經入門 (Introduction to the I Ching)
Comprehensive guide covering foundational knowledge, hexagram-by-hexagram analysis, and commentary on both the main text and the Ten Wings. Perfect for systematic study.
易學史 (History of I Ching Studies)
Scholarly work divided into three sections: History (two schools, six traditions), Numerology (origins of trigrams), and Philosophy (core ideas and values). For serious researchers.