"When talk of revolution has gone the rounds
three times,
One may commit to it."
-- I Ching,
Hexagram 49
The wise and ancient I Ching, one of several Chinese wisdom treatises (such as the Art of War), does not discount religious books like The Bible, Torah, or Koran. Instead, it is philosophical, a meditation on cycles of government and life.
Hexagram 49 describes the stages a government must go through before there is a moment of action when Revolution can bring "supreme success." (So, too, in our personal lives.) For change to be successful, conditions must be right. If change isn't carefully pondered and wisely approached only when the time is right, it can lead to chaos -- like "a bull in a china shop."
Hexagram 49 describes the stages a government must go through before there is a moment of action when Revolution can bring "supreme success." (So, too, in our personal lives.) For change to be successful, conditions must be right. If change isn't carefully pondered and wisely approached only when the time is right, it can lead to chaos -- like "a bull in a china shop."
The Revolution in Cairo's Tahrir Square
exactly four years ago when hundreds of thousands of protesters clashed with
police as they had been since 2011, resulted in Egypt now being a police state
that has imprisoned not only protesters and politicians, but also reporters
from other countries. Similarly, an attempted coup in Turkey resulted in a fierce crackdown, with officials and intellectuals still being arrested.
As the I Ching advises, there is always
conflict in human life, just as in natural seasonal