Chapter 26: Loss and Theft
Overall Paraphrased Meaning
This chapter explores the hexagram patterns related to the loss of property and theft. People often resort to theft due to hunger and cold, while personal negligence can also lead to loss. The gain or loss is determined by the Wealth Line in the hexagram: if the Wealth Line is empty by itself or transforms into emptiness, the item may not need to be pursued; if it aligns with the day or month and is strong, the item might not be lost and can be found.
- Inner Trigram of the Original Palace: The lost item may be within the household.
- Outer Trigram of Other Palaces: It may have been lost to neighbors or nearby areas.
- Corresponding Yao Positions: The first line represents wells, the second line represents stoves, the third line represents bedrooms, the fifth and fourth lines refer to roads, doors, and windows, and the sixth line represents roofs, beams, or attics.
Five Elements Positioning:
- 🔥 Fire Yao: The item is near a stove or fireplace.
- 🌊 Water Yao: Near water or inside containers.
- 🌳 Wood Yao: In firewood piles or wooden objects.
- ⛰ Earth Yao: Buried in soil or near corners.
- 🔗 Metal Yao: Near brick, stone, or metal objects.
If the Wealth Line enters the tomb, it indicates the item is deeply hidden and difficult to find. If it remains still and aligns with the Self Line, the item is likely still present. If it aligns with the Ghost Tomb Yao, it may be near graves. If restrained by the Day Branch, it could be covered or concealed.
- If the Offspring Line transforms into Wealth: Check rodent holes or pet nests.
- If Virtue is seen in the You (West) direction: Pay attention to areas near chicken coops.
Judging Theft:
- If the Ghost Yao is empty and the Self Yao moves: The loss is due to personal negligence.
- If Wealth is hidden under the Other Line: It may have been lent out and not returned.
- If the Ghost Yao is strong: The theft was committed by a professional thief.
- If the Official Ghost aligns with Teng Snake in the Qian Palace: A tall, thin man from the northwest.
- If the Official Ghost aligns with White Tiger in the Xun Palace: An overweight woman from the southeast.
Tips for Capture:
- If the Ghost Yao overcomes the Self Line: Capturing the thief may lead to injury.
- If the Offspring Line holds the Self Line: The thief is not a significant threat.
- If the Ghost Yao enters the tomb: The thief is difficult to apprehend.
- If the Day Branch restrains the thief's Yao: Someone is harboring the thief.
- If a moving Yao overcomes the Ghost Yao: Someone may provide clues.
Special Scenarios:
- If Wealth is hidden under the Offspring Line: The lost item is in a temple or Taoist monastery.
- If Wealth is hidden under the Parent Line: It was forgotten in clothing chests or bookshelves.
- If the hexagram lacks an Official Ghost: Check the hidden Yao positions.
- For lost boats, vehicles, or clothing: Avoid a moving Wealth Yao.
- For lost poultry, livestock, or pets: Avoid a moving Parent Yao.
🧠 In-Depth Understanding
Core Concepts 💡
Through a two-dimensional analysis of the state of the Wealth Yao (empty/strong, moving/still, hidden) and the characteristics of the Official Ghost Yao (Five Elements, direction, overcoming/restraining), a model is constructed for locating lost items and tracking thieves. This integrates the environmental attributes of the Five Elements with human behavioral psychology.
Modern Interpretation 🌟
- Surveillance Alternative: Traditional directional inferences can correspond to modern surveillance area checks.
- Psychological Profiling: Descriptions of thief characteristics resemble criminal psychological profiling (e.g., "yin female, yang male" refers to gender and physique).
- Property Registration: "Wealth hidden under the Other Line, restrained by the Self Line" suggests checking lending records or rental contracts.
Practical Value ⚡
- Priority for Searching Lost Items:
- First, check locations corresponding to the Wealth Yao's Five Elements (e.g., Metal Yao: check metal storage areas).
- Next, examine Yao positions (first line: basement/well covers; sixth line: attic/ceiling).
- Theft Prevention Suggestions:
- Those with Ghost Yao overcoming the Self Line should enhance security (e.g., install alarms).
- Day Branch restraining the thief's Yao suggests being wary of熟人作案 (acquaintance theft).
Philosophical Reflection 🤔
The ancients systematized "loss and theft" events through hexagrams, reflecting a relational environmental thinking—no loss is an isolated event but the result of the interaction of four dimensions: people, objects, space, and time. This aligns with modern theories of criminal geography.
📚 Related Knowledge
Associated Concepts:
- The "Loss and Theft" chapter in Plum Blossom Numerology.
- The rules for judging theft in The Orthodox Divination.
Further Reading:
- I Ching: Hexagram Xie, Ninth Two: "Catching three foxes in the field, obtaining a yellow arrow"—an omen for recovering lost items.
- Sima Guang's discussion on the philosophy of ownership in Hidden Void: Chapter on Lost Items.
Modern Research:
- Analysis of Theft Crime Psychology and Environmental Correlations by the Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences (2020).
- Research on the Coupling Between Zhouyi Directionology and Modern Spatial Positioning by National Taiwan University.
(Note: The original text does not include specific Eight Characters examples, so component tags have not been inserted.)