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What is the relationship among the Book of Changes, Buddhist Scriptures and Tao Te Ching?

The Book of Changes is the crystallization created by Fuxi, King Wen and Confucius. A vast number of Buddhist scriptures were recorded by the disciples as classics after the death of the Buddha in India, and used as "Buddhism" to educate future generations. There are also some new scriptures developed by future generations, such as the Six Ancestors Tanjing. According to legend, Tao Te Ching is a work written by Laozi and the foundation of Taoist culture. Although the authors, times and styles of writing are different, they have strong internal relations. The Book of Changes is the ancestor of all the classics in China, so we say that the Book of Changes is "the beginning and the head of the hundred classics". The book of changes comes from the eight diagrams of Fuxi and the evolution of sixty-four hexagrams of King Wen, which explains the truth of heaven and earth, universe, country and individual. Therefore, from this perspective, Laozi's Tao Te Ching is actually just a reinterpretation and re-creation of the truth discussed in the Book of Changes. Confucius wrote The Book of Changes in order to make people deeply understand it, making it one of the Confucian classics, and also reinterpreting and recreating the Book of Changes. Buddhist scriptures, on the other hand, advocate "karma" and talk about how to teach people to get rid of bitterness and happiness and how to transcend the six divisions in the wheel of karma. What the three classics have in common is that they all talk about the laws of the universe and nature. The Book of Changes is very similar to the Tao Te Ching, which teaches us how to conform to the laws of the universe and nature, while the Buddhist scriptures go further and teach us how to transcend the laws of the universe and finally get rid of it and become a Buddha.