Showing posts with label traditional. Show all posts
Showing posts with label traditional. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 May 2016

Yarrow stalks

Yarrow stalks have been used in China for divination since ancient times. There are reference of yarrow stalks divinations being used  to get a "second opinion" on important matters for which divination with cracks in tortoise shells were already be perfomed.

Unfortunately, the method that was used in such ancient times has been lost. The procedure we use today is a reconstruction dating back the 12th century CE and is described in the commentaries that form the Ten Wings.

This method is quite laborious and requires some dexterity (to hold the yarrow stalks) and focus (to properly count them). Its complexity is both its strong and weak point: some find it too bothersome while others consider the time required to be well spent as they can meditate on the question.

The process starts with 50 yarrow stalks of which one is put aside and no longer used.
To get a line one has to proceed as follows:
  1. Split the 49 stalks in two groups;
  2. Take one stalk from the left group and put it aside;
  3. Count the left group by four until you have four or less stalks left in the group;
  4. Put the (one to four) remaining stalk together with the one you took on step 2;
  5. Count the right group by four until you have four or less stalks left in the group;
  6. Put the (one to four) remaining stalk together with the ones you got from step 2 and 5;
  7. If you remained with nine stalks, mark 2, if you remained with five stalks mark 3;
  8. Put the stalks you counted all together (they should be 40 or 44), split them in two groups and repeat steps 2-6;
  9. If you remained with eight stalks, mark 2, if you remained with four stalks mark 3;
  10. Put the stalks you counted all together, (they should be 32, 36 or 40) split them in two groups and repeat steps 2-6;
  11. If you remained with eight stalks, mark 2, if you remained with four stalks mark 3;
  12.  Sum up the three numbers you got, the sum should be either 6, 7, 8 or 9, and draw the line according the following table.
    6 7 8 9
Repeat the entire procuder other five times drawing the lines from the bottom to the top to get the hexagram.

An alternative method of counting is to ignore steps 7, 9 and 11 and group all the stalks you get in a single heap. After you have performed the split three times, you divide the stalks in the heap (which will contain eather 24, 28, 32 or 36 stalks) by four to directly get the number of the resulting line: 6, 7, 8, 9.

Actually this can be simplified further to avoid counting both groups. After step 3:
  • if you get four stalks, pick four stalks from the other group and count 2 
  • if you get three stalks, pick one stalks from the other group and count 3 
  • if you get two stalks, pick two stalks from the other group and count 3 
  • if you get one stalks, pick three stalks from the other group and count 3  
since you have to end up with either nine or five stalks (counting the first one you set aside).

After step 8 (and 10):
  • if you get four stalks pick three stalks from the other group and count 2 
  • if you get three stalks pick four stalks from the other group and count 2 
  • if you get one stalks pick two stalks from the other group and count 3 
  • if you get two stalks pick one stalks from the other group and count 3
since you have to end up with either eight or four stalks (counting the first one you set aside).

Searching on YouTube will provide you with a great deal of video example on how to use the Yarrow stalks to get hexagram lines.

Probabilities

The probabilities for this method are usually considered to be:

Prob(6) = 1/16
Prob(8) = 7/16
Prob(7) = 5/16
Prob(9) = 3/16
Prob(yin) = Prob(yang) = 1/2

on the basis of the following reasoning:
  • On the first subdivision, 49 stalks, we can get 2 with a probability of  1/4 and 3 with a probability of  3/4
  • On the second and third subdivision, we can get 2 with a probability of  2/4 and 3 with a probability of   2/4
  • Hence the probabilties for each possible outcome are:
    Prob(2+2+2)= 1/4 * 1/2 * 1/2 = 1/16
    Prob(2+2+3)= 1/4 * 1/2 * 1/2 = 1/16
    Prob(2+3+2)= 1/4 * 1/2 * 1/2 = 1/16
    Prob(3+2+2)= 3/4 * 1/2 * 1/2 = 3/16
    Prob(2+3+3)= 1/4 * 1/2 * 1/2 = 1/16
    Prob(3+2+3)= 3/4 * 1/2 * 1/2 = 3/16
    Prob(3+3+2)= 3/4 * 1/2 * 1/2 = 3/16
    Prob(3+3+3)= 3/4 * 1/2 * 1/2 = 3/16
  • Summing up the probabilities for each possible result, we get:
    Prob(6) = Prob(2+2+2)= 1/16
    Prob(8) = Prob(2+3+3) + Prob(3+3+2) + Prob(3+2+3)= 1/16 + 3/16 + 3/16= 7/16
    Prob(7) = Prob(2+2+3) + Prob(2+3+2) + Prob(3+2+2)= 1/16 + 1/16 + 3/16= 5/16
    Prob(9) = Prob(3+3+3)= 3/16

Unfortunately, the analysis above is not accurate as it assumes that, for each subdivision, the four possible outcames are all equiprobable, which is not the case.

Expecially for the first step:If we assumed all the possible split of 49 stalks to be equiprobable, the chance to get a 2 would be 11/47, meaning that getting a 6 as final outcome would have a probability of  1,28% which is much lower than 1/16 (6.25%).

However, how "random" would you consider a split where one group would contain just one stalk? Not much, I guess.

In fact, the closer the 49 stalks are split in the middle, the closer the chance of getting 2 approximates 1/4 (and hence the probability of getting 6 get closer to  1/16).

This is true for the second and third subdivision as well, but the effect is not very relevant and the probability to get 2 or 3 are really 1/2 . 

This leads to the interesting conclusion that we cannot tell the exact probability distribution of the yarrow stalks method:

With the yarrow stalks method, the probability of getting 6, 7, 8, and 9 is, respectively, 1/16, 5/16, 7/16 and 3/16 as much as the heaps of stalks are split very close to the middle of the heap.
The actual probabilities depend on the way each split is done and varies, even if only slightly, at each cast.


Monday, 2 May 2016

Three coins
This is probably the better known and most commonly used method to get a response from the I Ching.
Chinese coins of the type also used for Feng Shui (as the ones in the picture) may help in getting the right mood but it is not essential: any coin will do. Ideally they should be identical but, again, this is not relevant. What is important is that you can distinguish the two sides of each coin.
To cast an hexagram you will proceed as follows:
  1. Assign 2 to one side of each coin and 3 to the other one.
  2. Throw the three coins, sum the face values and draw the resulting line according the following table:
    6 7 8 9
  3. Repeat step 2 other five times drawing the resulting lines from the bottom to the top of the hexagram.
There is no rule for when one of the coins falls off the table, or it is impossible to determine which side the coin fell (e.g. because it ended up under a piece of furniture). It's up to you to decide what to do in those cases.

This method is known to exist at least since the 7th century CE [1] or even a couple of centuries before [2]; it was popular during the T'ang dinasty. It's very easy and uses common objects that are easy to carry, no wonder it is still in so widespread use today.

Some criticized the usage of coins on the basis that the "true" method is the one using 50 yarrow stalks. Actually, this argument does not hold much as the original yarrows stalks method, which were in use around the year 200BC, is lost and what we have today is a reconstruction that dates around the year 1200CE [2].
Saying that using yarrow stalks (the way we know how to use them) is "truer" than using the coins has no much historical basis.

Others point out that since the assignment of the values to the faces is completely arbitrary, you could get the opposite hexagram instead of the "right" one. Personally I'm not so much worried about being "right" but I feel a little bit uneasy about the arbitrariety of the aassignement of values to faces. Actually this was one of the main reason for starting my search for an alternative casting methods that I felt more comfortable with.

If you prefer using chinese coins, as the ones in the picture, the side with four ideograms is usually considered 3. You can easily buy them online for a rather cheap price.

Probabilities

If we just consider the face that each coin can show after each throw, there are eight possible outcome:
2+2+2 = 6
2+2+3 = 7
2+3+2 = 7
3+2+2 = 7
2+3+3 = 8
3+2+3 = 8
3+3+2 = 8
3+3+3 = 9
Meaning that:
Prob(6) = Prob(9) = 1/8 = 12.5%
Prob(8) = Prob(7) = 3/8 = 37.5%
Prob(yin) = Prob(yang) = 1/2

This implies that the probability for a line to be a moving line is 1/4 , exatly as for the yarrow stalks method but getting a moving yin line will be as frequent as getting a moving yang line.

References

[1] Lars Bo Christensen, I Ching - The Original Core of the Book of Changes, 2015, http://zhouyi.dk/
[2] Shih Chuan Chen, How to form a hexagram and consult the I Ching, in Journal of the American Oriental Society, 92.2 (1975), http://www.biroco.com/yijing/Shih-chuan_Chen.pdf
[3] How to consult the Yijing, http://www.biroco.com/yijing/basics.htm

Coins image: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ichingcoins.JPG