
HOME
|
Feng shui
Feng shui (pronounced "fung shway") is the ancient Chinese practice of placement and arrangement of space to achieve harmony with the environment. The literal translation is "wind and water".
Feng shui is not a decorating style. Rather, it is a discipline whose guidelines are compatible with many different decorating styles.
The source of the term is purported to come from the poem "The winds are wild/The sun is warm/The water is clear/The trees are lush".[1]
Feng shui is a discrete Chinese belief system involving a mix of geographical, religious, philosophical, mathematical, aesthetic, and astrological ideas.[2]
For a place to have "good feng shui" is for it to be in harmony with Nature, to have "bad feng shui" is to be incongruous with Nature. People aren't usually described as having good or bad feng shui.[2]
Doctrine
Qi (or Chi)
Underlying the practical guidelines of feng shui is a general theory of Nature. Nature is generally held to be a discrete organism that breathes qi (a kind of life force or spiritual energy). The details about the metaphysics of what Nature is, what qi is and does, and what breath consists in vary and conflict. It is not generally understood as physical, but neither is it meant to be metaphorical or fictionalistic (the latter being the view that even though an entity is fictional, it is useful to talk as if it really exists).[4]
The goal of feng shui guidelines is to orient dwellings, possesions, land and landscaping, etc., so as to be attuned with the flow of qi.
Guidelines
Very generally, some common rules are:
• When sitting at a desk or lying in bed, the entrance door should be in a clear line of sight, and you should have a view of as much of the room as possible.
• Straight lines and sharp corners are to be avoided, and especially should not point where people tend to sit, stand, or sleep.
• Avoid clutter.
• Roads to and from ancient towns were often curved and windy, an attempt to disorient and keep away evil spirits, who were believed to travel in straight lines.[2]
Some objects are believed to have the power of redirecting, reflecting, or shifting energy in a space. These include mirrors, crystals, windchimes, and flowing water.
The bagua
The bagua (or pa kua) of the I Ching (Book of Changes) is an octagonal diagram that is used in feng shui analysis. Each direction on the octagon (north, northeast, etc.) is thought to have certain significant aspects, perhaps in part depending on the birthdate of the person using it. By mapping the bagua onto a home, village, cemetary, etc., information about correct orientation and placement can be gleaned.
Use in burials
The effect of proper feng shui on the living is thought to carry over to the afterlife. In traditional feng shui belief, the feng shui of cemetaries affects the state of the dead spirits and, indirectly, their living descendants. Spirits of the buried were believed to remain at their gravesites or by the homes of their kin, and just as bad feng shui harms relaxation and ease of mind among the living, the spirits of people buried with bad feng shui will be anxious and restless, and therefore more likely to bring chaos to their kin. This reasoning led to careful feng shui planning of cemeteries.[2] Conversely, desecrating the feng shui of the grave of an enemy's ancestor was thought to be a powerful weapon.[3]
The straight lines and sharp corners should not point at a gravesite or at the cemetery generally, a smooth or gradual landscape is preferable to rocky or otherwise sharp terrain. Waterways should be visible from the gravesite, but not loose rocks or boulders, which can be hidden by trees or bamboo.
The use of early forms of feng shui or geomancy in picking burial sites can be traced back at least to The Book of Burial (c. 300 CE), written by Guo Pu of the Jin Dynasty.[7]
Skepticism
Since first learning about feng shui, many Westerners have been quick to dismiss it as superstition. Eitel calls it "a conglomeration of rough guesses at nature, sublimated by fanciful play with puerile diagrams."[3]
More recently, the high consultancy fees charged by feng shui masters have raised eyebrows. This has led to accusations of fraud, and practitioners being called cult members or snake oil salesmen.
Magicians-turned-social-critics Penn and Teller tackled Feng Shui in their Showtime series, Penn and Teller: Bullshit! (Season 1, Episode 7. "Feng Shui/ Bottled Water".) While recording with hidden cameras, the duo ask several Feng Shui "experts" to arrange the same room for maximum harmony; No two arrange the furniture in the same manner.
Use in the West
In recent decades many feng shui books have been published in English, often focusing on interior design, architecture, interior decorating, and landscape design. Audiences have reacted skeptically towards the purported benefits of crystals, wind chimes, mirrored balls, etc., on one's life, finances, and relationships. Often, these claims are dismissed as New Age, pseudoscience, relying on the placebo effect, or even outright fraud. The high prices charges by some feng shui analysts is sometimes cited as evidence of the fraud claim.
Other audiences reject feng shui's justification for its rules (movement of various energies, etc.), but believe that some of its more practical rules (such as not working with one's back to a door) are very useful.
It is unclear what relationship these Western interpretations of feng shui have to the Eastern tradition. Many traditional feng shui practioners in Asia regard Western adaptations as inauthentic.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Copyright © 2006 All Rights Reserved www.horoscope-astrology.net
|
|