Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Lucky day inquiry - Is it a lie to build a house in the countryside to find the date and place of Yin and Yang?

Is it a lie to build a house in the countryside to find the date and place of Yin and Yang?

You are absolutely right.

What is scientific is correct, and it must be "universally applicable". This is the case in China and abroad. What the south looks like is what the north looks like. Guided by scientific theory, it has been verified in practice.

The geomantic omen mentioned by the ancients in China originally refers to the natural environment of the residence. It is about the harmony between human beings and the natural environment, and it is by no means a factor that can affect a person's life.

Choosing a date is even more absurd and has no scientific basis. How can you imagine that on the day selected by Mr. Feng Shui, you will build a house and move when there is heavy wind, rain and snow?

The five elements were originally the guesses of ancient China people about the elements of the world. China people guess that the world is made up of five elements: gold, wood, water, fire and earth. Europeans guess that it is composed of four elements: water, fire, light and gas. Originally the simplest materialistic thought was interpreted by the ignorant as the lowest superstition.

These junk cultures have long been buried in the graves of history. Some bad guys use the greed and selfishness of China people to revive their bodies and continue to deceive the world, so as to cheat money and color.

Some young people I saw on the Internet also talked about geomantic omen, five elements and I ching gossip in a muddle, and they were really worried. In the long run, how come, a nation, a country, isn't this going to fall and destroy?

Greed, selfishness and indifference are hotbeds of feudal superstition.