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Research in Scientific Feng Shui and the Built Environment

出版日期
2009
閱讀格式
PDF
書籍分類
學科分類
ISBN
9789629371722

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  • 1The Role of the Twenty-eight Xiu [宿] in Feng Shui
    • 1 Introduction
    • 2 Definition and List of the Twenty-eight Lunar Mansions
    • 3 History
    • 4 The Astronomical Function of the Shi [式]
    • 5 Using Eclipses to Refine the Calendar
    • 6 The Significance of Eclipses in Making Predictions
    • 7 Conclusion
  • 2Observations Linking Megalithic Monuments to the Chinese Luopan
    • 1 Introduction
    • 2 Types of Monuments
    • 3 The Five Rams of Canton
    • 4 Chamber Tombs at Puyang and Hougue Bie
    • 5 Perforated Stones
    • 6 North-east Orientation
    • 7 The Shi (式)
    • 8 The Four Corner Inscriptions
    • 9 The Ghost Gate (鬼門)
    • 10 Source in Yi Jing (易經)
    • 11 Aubrey Holes
    • 12 Use of the Shi
    • 13 Beidou
    • 14 Morbihan
    • 15 Purpose of the Monuments
    • 16 Conclusion
  • 3An Assessment into the Basics of Eight Mansions Feng Shui Theory
    • 1 Introduction
      • 1.1 The Faith Gua(命卦)
      • 1.2 The 60 Years Cycle
      • 1.3 Faith Gua Calculation
    • 2 Analysis of Eight Mansion Theory
      • 2.1 The Distribution Faith Gua for East and West Groups
      • 2.2 The Distribution of Faith Gua Based on Same Year/Same Stem and Branch
    • 3 Chinese 12 Sign Zodiac
    • 4 Auspicious and Inauspicious Direction in Eight Mansions
    • 5 Fixing of Four Auspicious Directions and Four Bad Directions
    • 6 Conclusion
  • 4Feng Shui and the Energy of the Land
    • 1 Introduction
    • 2 Theoretical Basis
      • 2.1 Weng Wenhao
    • 3 Feng Shui and Geology
    • 4 China and Australia
  • 5Tracing Rational Aspects of Feng Shui (Geomancy)
    • 1 Introduction: Is Feng Shui a Science, Superstition or Religion?
    • 2 The Nature and Origin of Feng Shui
    • 3 The Origin of Feng Shui
    • 4 Three Rational Aspects of Feng Shui Principles for Choosing Auspicious Sites: A Glimpse of Traditional Environmental Science in China
      • 4.1 Rationality behind Preferred Landform Conditions and Facing Directions
      • 4.2 An Early Chinese Idea of a Dynamic Environmental Cycle
      • 4.3 Treating Mountain Ranges as “Chinese Dragons”Led to the Development of Unique Feng Shui Maps
    • 5 Korean Feng Shui Maps and Traditional Korean Cartography
      • 5.1 Mountain Ranges as a Main Feature
      • 5.2 Presenting Mount Paiktu as the Ancestral Mountain
      • 5.3 Emphasizing and Exaggerating the Crescent Shaped Hill Ranges
    • 6 Conclusion
  • 6The Core Principles of Feng Shui
    • 1 Introduction
    • 2 The Core Principles of Feng Shui
      • 2.1 Core Principle 1—An Integrated and Holistic System (整體系統原則)
      • 2.2 Core Principle 2—Being Suitable and Appropriate to the Restriction and Limitation of the Site (因地制宜原則)
      • 2.3 Core Principle 3—Bound by Mountains and Near Water (依山傍水原則)
      • 2.4 Core Principle 4 —Carry the Yin and Embrace the Yang (負陰抱陽原則)
      • 2.5 Core Principle 5—Observe the Form and Examine the Configuration (觀形察勢原則)
      • 2.6 Core Principle 6—Examine the Geology of the Land (地質檢驗原則)
      • 2.7 Core Principle 7—Analyze the Quality of Water (水質分析原則)
      • 2.8 Core Principle 8—Determine the Amount and the Standard (定量規定則)
      • 2.9 Core Principle 9—Take Advantage of the Sheng Qi (順乘生氣原則)
      • 2.10 Core Principle 10—Suitably Located in the Middle and Residing in the Middle (適中居中原則)
      • 2.11 Core Principle 11—Esthetic Appreciations (審美原則)
      • 2.12 Core Principle 12—Greening the Environment (綠化原則)
      • 2.13 Core Principle 13—Feng Shui can be Transformed and Improved (改造風水原則)
      • 2.14 Core Principle 14—Yin Yang Dialectics to Achieve Harmony (陰陽調和辯證原則)
      • 2.15 Core Principle 15—Being Timely and Affectionate (合時有情原則)
    • 3 Conclusion
  • 7A Conceptual Framework of Feng Shui Knowledge
    • 1 Introduction
    • 2 Form School Approach
    • 3 Fundamental Concepts of Form School Approach
      • 3.1 Concept of the Feng Shui Model
      • 3.2 Concept of Parallelism
      • 3.3 Concept of Four Design Modules
      • 3.4 Concept of Feng Shui Criteria
    • 4 Hierarchical Structure of Feng Shui Knowledge
    • 5 Conceptual Framework for Feng Shui Design Evaluation
    • 6 Conclusion
  • 8Feng Shui Design and Planning of Ming and Qing City of Beijing
    • 1 Introduction
    • 2 The Feng Shui Explanation
      • 2.1 From Macro to Micro
    • 3 The Feng Shui Concept
    • 4 Directional Elements
      • 4.1 The Earth and Human Elements
    • 5 Modular Matrix
    • 6 Numberology
    • 7 Conclusion
  • 9Tracing Feng Shui in Ancient Japanese Capital Cities—Case Study: Nagaoka, Japan’s Forgotten Capital
    • 1 Feng Shui in Ancient Japan
    • 2 The “Four Gods”
    • 3 The Nagaoka Capital
      • 3.1 Topography of the Area Surrounding the Nagaoka Capital
      • 3.2 Feng Shui and the Construction of the Nagaoka Capital
    • 4 The Geomantic Model of the Nagaoka Capital
    • 5 Conclusion
  • 10A Study on Feng Shui Village Landscape Structure in the Ryukyu Islands
    • 1 Introduction
    • 2 Material and Methods
      • 2.1 Case Study Area
      • 2.2 Data Collection
    • 3 Results
      • 3.1 The Feng Shui Village Layout
      • 3.2 House-embracing Fukugi Trees
    • 4 Discussions and Conclusions
      • 4.1 A Practical Use of Tree Planting in a Ryukyu Feng Shui Village
      • 4.2 The Naturally Regenerated Ho:go Forest of Rich Biodiversity and the Forest in the Rear Hills
  • 11Feng Shui and Contexturalism in Western Architecture
    • 1 Introduction
    • 2 Contextualism in Western Architecture
      • 2.1 Universal Contextual Understanding
      • 2.2 Contextual Understanding Emphasizing Proportions
      • 2.3 Individual Contextual Understanding
      • 2.4 Meaning of the Local Context
      • 2.5 Fragmentation of Architecture
      • 2.6 Contextualism in the Late 19th–Early 20th Centuries
      • 2.7 Modern Architecture and Contextualism
      • 2.8 Contextual Architecture
    • 3 Feng Shui and the Context of a Site
      • 3.1 Theory of Qi as the Basic Concept for Feng Shui
      • 3.2 The Assessment of Qi
      • 3.3 The Principle of Mutual Resonance in Feng Shui
      • 3.4 The “Timeliness” Aspect in Feng Shui
      • 3.5 Inner and Outer Space
      • 3.6 Feng Shui
    • 4 The Comparison of Feng Shui with Contextualism
    • 5 Conclusion
  • 12The Comparison and Contrast between Green Design and Feng Shui
    • 1 Introduction
      • 1.1 Background and Opportunity
      • 1.2 History and Conceptual Development for Green Design and Feng Shui
      • 1.3 Current Needs and Influential Characters
    • 2 Process
      • 2.1 Contents
      • 2.2 Comparison
      • 2.3 Examples of Integrative Studies for Green Design and Feng Shui
      • 2.4 The Future Needs
    • 3 Findings and Conclusion
  • 13Sustainable Feng Shui Eco-house
    • 1 Introduction
      • 1.1 The Concept of Feng Shui
      • 1.2 The Concept of Ecology
      • 1.3 The Relationship between Feng Shui and Ecology
    • 2 Feng Shui House
      • 2.1 The Principle of Feng Shui House Based on Nine-Square Mandala
      • 2.2 The Development of Feng Shui House
      • 2.3 Further Discussion Using Sketch-Up Modeling
      • 2.4 The Design Principles in Feng Shui House
      • 2.5 Services
      • 2.6 The Open Planning
      • 2.7 The Self-help Concept
      • 2.8 Example of Feng Shui Houses
    • 3 Conclusion

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