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Feng Shui,

Or, The Rudiments Of Natural Science In China

By Ernest J. Eitel

[1873]

This is a short monograph about Feng Shui, written by a European in the
19th century.
Eitel is somewhat dismissive of Chinese culture, but he grudgingly admits that there may be some grain of truth in Feng Shui.

Feng Shui is much more than a way of arranging furniture for good luck.
The Chinese geomancers have a very intricate set of beliefs with roots in Animism, Taoism and Confucianism.
Feng shui teaches that the earth has rivers of energy, much like the meridians in the human body of the acupuncturists.
Feng shui also takes into account stellar alignments, including some mysterious invisible stars in the north which don't seem to correspond to a present-day constellation.

Ancient monuments around the globe are well-known to be aligned by principles similar to this; for instance, the Pyramids of the Giza plateau form an enormous and very exact map of the belt of Orion.
The ley lines of the English country-side link important sites from one end of the island to the other.
And some believe that the strange layout of the streets of Washington DC have an arcane Masonic signficance.
Whether or not you believe in geomancy, evidence of its use is all around us.

--j.b.
Hare

Title Page

Contents

Chapter I: Introductory

Chapter II: The Laws of Nature

Chapter III: The Numerical Proportions of Nature

Chapter IV: The Breath of Nature

Chapter V: The Forms and Outlines of Nature

Chapter VI: The History and Literature of Feng-Shui

Chapter VII: Conclusion
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