Hexagram (64)
卦
In simple terms
a figure of six stacked lines. Two trigrams (upper and lower) combine into one, giving 8 × 8 = 64 hexagrams in all.
At a glance
A little deeper
The classic gives each of the 64 hexagrams a judgment (卦辭) plus a statement for each line (爻辭). The lower three lines are the “inner” trigram, the upper three the “outer”; the two trigram images combine into the whole situation’s meaning.
See this energy in your own chart
Just enter your birth date and time to read the energies in your own chart, free.
Related terms
an unbroken solid line (⚊). It stands for yang — active, strong, outward energy — one of the two building blocks of every hexagram.
a broken line split in two (⚋). It stands for yin — receptive, yielding, hidden energy — the counterpart to the yang line.
a single horizontal line — either yang (⚊) or yin (⚋). Six of them stack from bottom to top to form one hexagram.
the hexagram you first cast. It shows the present shape of your situation or question — the starting point of the reading.
the “moving line” that flips from yin to yang (or back). It marks the key variable in the situation and the line the reading focuses on most.
the second hexagram formed when the moving lines of the primary flip. It shows the direction the situation is moving toward. Also called the “resulting hexagram.”
a hidden hexagram drawn from the inner four lines (2-3-4 and 3-4-5) of the primary. It reveals the background beneath the surface.