![]() ![]() In these inscriptions, they were descriptions of the climate, sunlight during the day (yang), and a lack of sunlight at night (yin). The earliest Chinese characters for yin and yang are found on “oracle bones” in the fourteenth century BC. The universe doesn't slip into chaos because the constant, dynamic balance of all things, naturally correct all excesses. Finally, these forces assure the stability of nature, where an excess in one direction naturally corrects itself.We are able to predict parts of the future because we understand the forces involved as the balance between them waxes and wanes over time. These competing forces generate the patterns of change.Any current situation is a temporary balance point, a stasis, representing the competing natural forces of chaos/order, matter/energy, space/time, mind/body, and all the other forces of complementary opposition. Complementary opposition is the fabric that weaves all existence.Three basic themes underlie this concept. ![]() ![]() Since Sun Tzu's system deals specifically with competing and counterbalancing forces, it is easy to see why opposition is so important, but the idea goes deeper than that. He described his concept as "emptiness and fullness." Sun Tzu didn't use the yinyang terminology himself. Historically, the conceptual base for Sun Tzu's The Art of War is the ancient Chinese concept of "yin and yang." We refer to this idea in Sun Tzu's strategy as " complementary opposites" to avoid the many conflicting cultural meanings of yinyang.
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