The Oracle of Changes

易經 · The Book of Changes

Ask a real
question.
Cast the change.

The I Ching is not a fortune-teller. It is a mirror with sixty-four faces — a three-thousand-year-old method for thinking clearly about a moment you cannot yet see whole. Name your situation, throw the lines, and read where it is already turning.

Sit with the question for a breath before you cast. The answer is in how you read it.

The lines are still

Each line is thrown from the ground up. Solid lines are yang, open lines are yin; a line marked in cinnabar is changing — already becoming its opposite, and pointing to the hexagram your situation is moving toward.

八卦 · Bagua

The eight trigrams

Every hexagram is two trigrams stacked — a lower force and an upper one. There are only eight, and each has been translated a dozen ways. Move through them, and turn each card to compare how Wilhelm, Legge, Huang and the older traditions render the same three lines.

六十四卦 · Complete

All sixty-four hexagrams

The full sequence, in the traditional King Wen order. Each is one trigram set upon another, with the classical title and a working note. Search by name, number, or theme.

How to read it

A method, not a magic trick

The I Ching — the Yi Jing, or Book of Changes — is one of the oldest books in continuous use on Earth. Confucius is said to have wished for fifty more years to study it; Leibniz read the hexagrams as binary; Jung used them to talk about synchronicity. What survives the mysticism is a genuinely useful instrument: a structured way to slow down and look at a situation from an angle you would not have chosen yourself.

A reading works in three moves. First, the primary hexagram — the shape of the situation right now, read as an upper trigram acting on a lower one. Second, the changing lines — the places where the pattern is unstable and already turning. Third, the relating hexagram — where those changes are carrying you, if nothing intervenes. The skill is not in the casting. It is in reading the figure honestly against a question you actually care about.

Ask something concrete and open — not “will this happen,” but “what am I not seeing about this.” Cast once. Read the primary hexagram first and let it land before you look at where it leads. The oracle is a prompt for your own judgment, sharpened by a frame older than almost everything else you will read today.

Index of the sixty-four hexagrams

1 The Creative 乾; 2 The Receptive 坤; 3 Difficulty at the Beginning 屯; 4 Youthful Folly 蒙; 5 Waiting 需; 6 Conflict 訟; 7 The Army 師; 8 Holding Together 比; 9 Small Taming 小畜; 10 Treading 履; 11 Peace 泰; 12 Standstill 否; 13 Fellowship 同人; 14 Great Possession 大有; 15 Modesty 謙; 16 Enthusiasm 豫; 17 Following 隨; 18 Work on the Decayed 蠱; 19 Approach 臨; 20 Contemplation 觀; 21 Biting Through 噬嗑; 22 Grace 賁; 23 Splitting Apart 剝; 24 Return 復; 25 Innocence 無妄; 26 Great Taming 大畜; 27 Nourishment 頤; 28 Great Preponderance 大過; 29 The Abysmal 坎; 30 The Clinging 離; 31 Influence 咸; 32 Duration 恆; 33 Retreat 遯; 34 Great Power 大壯; 35 Progress 晉; 36 Darkening of the Light 明夷; 37 The Family 家人; 38 Opposition 睽; 39 Obstruction 蹇; 40 Deliverance 解; 41 Decrease 損; 42 Increase 益; 43 Breakthrough 夬; 44 Coming to Meet 姤; 45 Gathering Together 萃; 46 Pushing Upward 升; 47 Oppression 困; 48 The Well 井; 49 Revolution 革; 50 The Cauldron 鼎; 51 The Arousing 震; 52 Keeping Still 艮; 53 Development 漸; 54 The Marrying Maiden 歸妹; 55 Abundance 豐; 56 The Wanderer 旅; 57 The Gentle 巽; 58 The Joyous 兌; 59 Dispersion 渙; 60 Limitation 節; 61 Inner Truth 中孚; 62 Small Preponderance 小過; 63 After Completion 既濟; 64 Before Completion 未濟.