Clarity,
Office 17622,
PO Box 6945,
London.
W1A 6US
United Kingdom
Phone/ Voicemail:
+44 (0)20 3287 3053 (UK)
+1 (561) 459-4758 (US).
I think you'll be totally unsurprised to learn that Brad talks about 1, 2, 19, 20, 33, 34, 61 and 62 in his book . He says they're called Great Trigrams; they certainly make sense as a kind of magnified picture of the trigram. I don't see what you're getting at with 63 and 64, though...
I see a kinship of structure and meaning between these pairs of hexagrams:
52 and 20
29 and 62
51 and 19
57 and 33
30 and 61
58 and 34
63 and 11
64 and 12
The trigrams (or bigrams) of the ones on the left are analogues of the hexagram structure of the ones on the right. I think they have parallel meanings as well, elements that match.
This must have been commented on in the Chinese past, but I've never noticed it before. Whatcha think?
Clarity,
Office 17622,
PO Box 6945,
London.
W1A 6US
United Kingdom
Phone/ Voicemail:
+44 (0)20 3287 3053 (UK)
+1 (561) 459-4758 (US).