Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Almanac inquiry - What does fate mean?

What does fate mean?

Fate means the fate of past lives. The star's operation has a different order. The comprehensive movement of the earth in the universe classifies people's feelings and tests people's fate with celestial bodies as coordinates.

First, pinyin

The pinyin of fate is s not sōng.

Second, synonyms

1, samsara: a Buddhist term. A sermon on karma. Buddhism believes that good is rewarded with good, evil with evil, and life and death continue in the six paths of heaven, man, evil spirit, hell, hungry ghost and beast, and continue like a wheel.

2. Fate: refers to the pattern that things are composed of fixed numbers and variables. Life and luck are two different concepts. Destiny is a fixed number, referring to a specific object; Transportation as a variable refers to the transformation of time and space. The combination of fate and luck is the process of the transformation of a specific object in time and space.

3. Soul: Metaphor plays a guiding and decisive role. Mind.

Historical records of fate:

In China's ancient philosophy, heaven was regarded as a god, which could kill people and decide their lives. As early as the Yin and Zhou Dynasties, "the theory of destiny" was popular. The appearance of inscriptions on Oracle Bone Inscriptions and Yi wares and "being ordered by heaven" found in unearthed ancient artifacts shows that the concept of destiny has taken root in people's minds as early as the Yin and Zhou Dynasties.

In the words of Ji Chang's Book of Changes in the Zhou Dynasty, this is called "the change of the avenue, each for his own life." For the life here, later generations commented: "Those who are destined are endowed by people, if they belong to a noble life."

In ancient people's ideas, people's wealth, wealth, good fortune, misfortune, death, poverty, gains and losses, and even making money in Huo Zhi's examination room all depend on a force beyond human control, that is, fate.