Chien / Obstruction

above: K'an The Abysmal, Water
below: K^ en Keeping Still, Mountain

In (the state indicated by) Kien advantage will be found in the southwest and the contrary in the northeast. It will be advantageous (also) to meet with the great man. (In these circumstances), with firmness and correctness, there will be good fortune.

Overall Meaning

Inhibition, obstruction, the symbol of difficulty

Chien is the symbol for incompetency in the feet and legs, involving difficulty in walking; hence it is used in this hexagram to indicate a state of the kingdom which makes the government of it an arduous task. How this task may successfully be performed now by an activity on the part of the ruler, and now by a discreet inactivity; this is what the figure teaches, or at least gives hints about. For the development of the meaning of the symbolic character from the structure of the lineal figure, see Appendixes I and II.

The Thwan seems to require three things: attention to place, the presence of the great man, and the firm observance of correctness, in order to cope successfully with the difficulties of the situation. The first thing is enigmatically expressed, and the language should be compared with what we find in the Thwan of hexagrams 2 and 40. Referring to Figure 2, we find that according to Wan's arrangement of the trigrams, the southwest is occupied by Khwan ( ||| ) and the northeast by Kan ( ::| ). The former represents the champagne country; the latter, the mountainous region. The former is easily traversed and held; the latter, with difficulty. The attention to place thus becomes transformed into a calculation of circumstances; those that promise success in an enterprise, which should be taken advantage of, and those that threaten difficulty and failure, which should be shunned.

This is the generally accepted view of this difficult passage. The Khang-hsi editors have a view of their own. I have been myself inclined to find less symbolism in it, and to take the southwest as the regions in the south and west of the kingdom, which we know from the Shih were more especially devoted to Wan and his house, while the strength of the kings of Shang lay in the north and east.

'The idea of "the great man", Mencius's "minister of Heaven"', is illustrated by the strong line in the fifth place, having for its correlate the weak line in 2. But favorableness of circumstances and place, and the presence of the great man do not dispense from the observance of firm correctness. Throughout these essays of the I this is always insisted on.