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Re: You got game?- IChing or Cha-Ching?



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Can I reopen my case?  I want to add the evidence below and then rest my case again.  :-)  





 ---- you wrote: 
> The ancient Chinese who authored the famous book, the I Ching (the Book
> of Changes) are characterized as a people whose mindset differed
> significantly from the western scientific mind. All elements present
> (whether seen or unseen, known or unknown) in a given moment are a part
> of that moment, and come together by reason of what Carl Jung (who wrote
> the introduction to the Wilhelm/Baynes translation of the I Ching)
> termed 'synchronicity.' CAUSAL relationships were of little interest to
> this Chinese mind. They thought instead in terms of what kinds of things
> 'liked' to happen together. They found it far more significant that
> thunder and lightning 'liked' to happen together, than that lightning
> CAUSED thunder. Starting from this point, the book explains different
> types of change,the laws they believe to govern change, and sets forth a
> set of bedrock fundamental forces at work in the universe. Then it goes
> on to show how these fundamental forces combine in a limited number of
> ways.
>  To those interested in an interesting and possibly useful exposition of
> the principles and dynamics of change, and non-causal correlation, etc.,
> I would suggest the Wilhelm/Baynes translation of this classic.
> 
> Regards,
> Monte
>