Fortune Telling Collection - Free divination - Who wrote "One Hundred Cases of Naming by Measuring Characters"?

Who wrote "One Hundred Cases of Naming by Measuring Characters"?

This is written by Mr. Sang Feng.

Fortune-telling by measuring characters refers to an act of judging fate, good or bad.

Legend has it that there is a very distant place called Hua Xu, which is thousands of miles northwest of China, and people can't get there anyway. There is no leader in that country, and all people let nature take its course. They can enter the water without drowning, enter the fire without being hot, and feel no pain.

In this land, a girl named Hua Xushi has been to the East. On the edge of an infinitely beautiful swamp, she found a huge footprint and stepped on it with her foot. As soon as she stepped on it, she felt something inexplicable flow into her body. Later, she became pregnant and gave birth to a son named "Fuxi".

The huge footprints on the edge of the swamp were left by Thor, and later I learned that this swamp was called "Razer". Thor is a god with the head of a dragon. So Fuxi looks like a "human-faced snake" like Thor. Later, Fuxi became the Emperor of Heaven.

He "looked at the sky and the ground, looked at the law and looked at the ground, observed the culture of birds and animals and the suitability of the ground, and took things near and far away, so he started gossip." Eight symbols contain all kinds of phenomena in the universe, and people use them to record all kinds of things that happen in their lives.

Divination fortune-telling comes from early divination, which is a kind of foreknowledge, that is, using eight all-encompassing symbols (gossip) for divination fortune-telling. Divination and fortune-telling originated from Shamanism (non-Manchu Shamanism), and religious scholars collectively referred to early religions as Shamanism.

The origin of fortune telling:

A number of alchemists appeared in China during the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, especially Guiguzi, who was called the founder of fortune telling. Li in the Tang Dynasty pioneered birthday fortune telling. He infers the dignity of longevity by the date of birth. He said that Wang Yang was meaningful and his joints were untied, so the fortune teller respected him as his father.

There is also Li's "Shouxin", which is suspected to be a false letter by later generations. At the end of the Five Dynasties, Li's method was further developed. He worked out the "four pillars" of the year, month, day and hour. Each pillar has a heavenly stems and earthly branches character, and * * * is eight characters. Then he deduced his own destiny according to the changes of yin and yang and five elements, which is called four-column eight-character fortune telling or apennine.

There are books such as Purple Ping in the Far Sea and Tong Ming Fu. Since then, four-column eight-character fortune telling has swept the world. Su Dongpo has Dongpo Zhi Lin and Zhu has Xu Shuduan's Life Preface.

Wen Tianxiang has the postscript Peng Shuying's Notes on Life, Liu Bowen's Notes on Falling Eyes in Ming Dynasty, and Song Lian's Analysis of Life. In the Qing Dynasty, it developed into the iron plate number (based on the eight characters of parents and themselves, plus the five-tone gossip deduction, which spread to Shao Yong in the Song Dynasty) and the Ziwei Douhao number (based on my birthdates and the gossip deduction of the zodiac).

The so-called "naming method" refers to the application of a technology developed from the ancient Book of Changes in China to distinguish the influence of a person or a company's name on that person or company.

Does it look amazing? Yes, it is really amazing! Because people can really predict a person's personality and future fortune, or predict a company's future business success or failure, business problems and so on. There have been many empirical examples to prove that "nomenclature" is really influential.