The Ten Wings (十翼shí yì) is a collection of commentaries (傳zhuan) to the classical Chinese Book of Changes (易經Yì jīng) traditionally ascribed to Confucius, though they were likely composed by later scholars.[1] These writings represent the earliest known interpretations of the Zhouyi, the Bronze Age divination manual underlying the Book of Changes(易經 Yì jīng). By offering philosophical and moral insights, the Ten Wings transformed the text from a practical guide for divination into a profound treatise on metaphysics, ethics, and cosmology.[1]
The Ten Wings consist of the following commentaries on the Book of Changes (易經Yì jīng):
彖傳Tuan zhuan, or Commentary on the Judgment, the 1st 彖上傳
Tuan zhuan, the 2nd 彖下傳
象傳Xiang zhuan, "Overall Image", the 1st 象上傳 (sometimes called Great Xiang 大象)
Xiang, the 2nd 象下傳 (aka Lesser Xiang or Little Images小象)
繫辭傳Xici zhuan, the Commentary on the Appended Phrases, the 1st 繫辭上傳
Xici zhuan, the 2nd 繫辭下傳 (the two Xi Ci are also called the Great Commentary大傳, to emphasize their importance)
文言傳Wenyan zhuan, Commentary on the Words
序卦傳Xugua zhuan, the Sequence of the Hexagrams
說卦傳Shuogua zhuan, the Explanation of the Trigrams
雜卦傳Zagua zhuan, the Assorted or Miscellaneous Hexagrams
Doubts concerning Confucius' authorship of the Wings were expressed by Ouyang Xiu (1007-1072) and Sima Guang (1019-1086) during the Northern Song dynasty. They were further consolidated by Yao Jiheng [zh] (1647-1715) and Kang Youwei (1858-1927) of the Qing dynasty. The 20th-century sinologists provide argumentation for rejection of the traditional creed.[2]
References
^ abRedmond, Geoffrey; Hon, Tze-ki (2014-10-01), Redmond, Geoffrey; Hon, Tze-Ki (eds.), "The Ten Wings", Teaching the I Ching (Book of Changes), Oxford University Press, p. 0, ISBN978-0-19-976681-9, retrieved 2024-12-04
^Rutt, Richard (1996). The Book of Changes (Zhouyi). London: Routledge. pp. 41–43. ISBN0-7007-1491-X.
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