Theory of Five Elements
Students of Internal Arts can develop quite happily without knowing anything about the Theory of Five Elements. However, this theory is quite ubiquitous in Chinese thought and crops up in most unlikely places. For instance, it is one of the pillars on which Traditional Chinese Medicine was built. It was also used to provide theoretical framework for a number of Chinese martial arts. In particular it is most closely interwoven into Xingyiquan. As most of the articles to date have referred mainly to Taijiquan, I thought it was time to redress the balance and include something for my Baguazhang/Xingyiquan students. The Theory of Five Elements seems most suitable and it would also be of interest to Taijiquan and Qigong students.
The name Five Elements is misleading as it suggests association with static, immutable properties. Occasionally an attempt is made to find a better translation and so far Iâ⿬⿢ve seen Five Phases and Five Elementals. The last one, I am told, is the most accurate so far but as the name Five Elements is the one almost universally adopted, Iâ⿬⿢ll use that one. The Five Elements in question are abstract entities represented in nature by Metal, Water, Wood, Fire and Earth and are used to classify all known phenomena by how closely their properties match those of these Five Elements. Having classified things by their properties, the Theory is then used to explain and chart their relationships and mutual interaction. The following table shows some typical categories:- ÿÂ
| Element | Direction | Weather | Five Yin organs | Feelings | Five Yang organs | Colours | Tastes |
| Wood | East | Wind | Liver | Anger | Gall Bladder | Green | Sour |
| Fire | South | Hot | Heart | Joy | Small Intestine | Red | Bitter |
| Earth | Centre | Humid | Spleen | Meditate | Stomach | Yellow | Sweet |
| Metal | West | Dry | Lung | Worry | Large Intestine | White | Pungent |
| Water | North | Cold | Kidney | Fear | Urinary Bladder | Black | Salty |
There are three cycles which describe the mutual interaction of the five elements. They are Creative Cycle, Destructive Cycle and Counter-active Cycle. Sometimes you may come across different description but the relationships are always the same. Creative Cycle:This cycle describes the interaction of the Five Elements where one Element promotes the next one. We water plants (wood) to make them grow, so we say Water gives rise to or is mother of or promotes Wood. Wood burns easily so Wood gives rise to Fire. When you burn things, you are left with ashes which we can take as representation of Earth, so Fire gives rise to Earth. Metals are mined underground, i.e. Earth gives rise to Metal. If you heat Metal, it melts into a liquid form; being liquid is a property of water so Metal gives rise to Water. Expressed in a diagram - ã⿬⿬
Each Element is said to be a Mother of the Element following it, and a Son of the one preceding it. Thus Wood is the Mother of Fire and Fire is the Son of Wood, etc. The problem with this cycle is that the Elements would keep on growing indefinitely. We need some mechanism for controlling such unchecked growth. The next cycle, the Destructive cycle, provides just such a control. Destructive Cycle:This cycle is the opposite of the Creative Cycle in that it expresses relationship where one Element exerts control, suppresses or inhibits another Element. Plants deplete earth as they extract nutrients and even the hardest rock will eventually crack when soft plants take root. Thus Wood destroys Earth. An axe, being made of metal, can split wood. Thus Metal destroys Wood. Fire can melt metal, thus Fire destroys Metal. Water can be used to douse fire, thus Water destroys Fire. And finally, flow of water can be stopped by earth, thus Earth destroys Water. Expressed in a diagram - ã⿬⿬ã⿬⿬













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