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      • In Taoist cosmology, Wuji refers to a state of non-distinction prior to the differentiation into the Yin and Yang that give birth to the ten-thousand-things-- all the phenomena of the manifest world, with their various qualities and behaviors.
      www.learnreligions.com › wuji-wu-chi-3183136
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  2. May 22, 2019 · The Chinese word Wuji (pinyin) or Wu Chi (Wade-Giles) refers to the unmanifest aspect of Tao: Tao-in-stillness, in other words. Wuji is the undifferentiated timelessness which, in the Taijitu Shuo (a traditional Taoist diagram) is represented by an empty circle.

    • Elizabeth Reninger
  3. The wuji is the mechanism of both movement and quiescence; it is situated before the differentiation between movement and quiescence, metaphorically located in the space-time between the kun 坤, or pure Yin, and fu 復, the return of the Yang.

  4. Feb 12, 2023 · Wu Chi (aka Wuji) is a classic position used in most Tai Chi forms. Pronounced Woo Jee, the loose translation is “emptiness in movement, thought, or activity”. In other words, the quiet time before actual form starts and ends.

  5. Wuji is the perspective with no distinctions: nonduality. Taiji is the perspective with distinctions: duality. They are concurrent, equally valid ways to look at what there is.

    • Elizabeth Reninger
    • Yin-Yang Symbol. Taoism's Dance Of Opposites The Yin-Yang Symbol: Dance Of Opposites. Wikimedia Commons. The Yin-Yang Symbol is one you're probably already familiar with.
    • Taijitu Shuo. The Taijitu Shuo—Diagram of the Supreme Polarity—represents the whole of Taoist Cosmology, and is similar in many ways to the Wu Ji Diagram.
    • Five Element Chart. Yin Qi and Yang Qi give birth to the Five Elements, whose various combinations produce the Ten-Thousand-Things. The operation of the Five Elements can be seen within the human body, within an ecosystem, or within any other living system.
    • Ba Gua. Undifferentiated Unity—the Tao—differentiates into Supreme Yang, Lesser Yang, Supreme Yin, Lesser Yin. Supreme Yang, Lesser Yang, Supreme Yin, Lesser Yin then combine in various ways to form the Ba Gua—the "Eight Symbols" or "Eight Trigrams."
  6. However, taiji has sometimes been thought of as a monistic concept similar to wuji, as in the Wujitu diagram. Wuji literally translates as "without roof pole", but means without limit, polarity, and/or opposite. Compared with wuji, taiji describes movement and change wherein limits do arise.

  7. Through the principle of Dao, chaos manifested itself and became "nothing with something around it”: 无极 wújí, anglified as Wuji. This literally means “there is no pole" or “does not have an utmost point.”. Infinity would be one way of understanding that, insofar as we can understand infinity.

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