Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - A physiognomy teacher, five mountains and four blasphemies, five senses and six hospitals, Kyushu octupole, seven doors and two instruments, what do you mean?

A physiognomy teacher, five mountains and four blasphemies, five senses and six hospitals, Kyushu octupole, seven doors and two instruments, what do you mean?

Get to know people first. Traditional physiognomy has made such a division and definition of human appearance: five mountains and four blasphemies, five senses and six hospitals. Kyushu has eight poles, seven doors and two instruments. Firstly, five mountains are used to describe the forehead, chin, nose and left and right cheekbones respectively. Yangtze River, Yellow River, Huaihe River and Jishui are used to describe ears, eyes, mouth and nose respectively.

He also designated eyebrows as longevity officers, eyes as supervisors, nose as judges, mouth as cashiers and ears as hearing officers, which were collectively called five senses. Two pairs of bones, two cheekbones, and two bones are six hospitals. Behind the eyebrows, forehead closed, below the temples, behind the cheekbones is the Ming gate, below the ears is the treacherous gate, and in the middle of the court, * * * is seven gates.

One foot on the head is two tools. Whether these parts are perfect or not is related to a person's wealth and longevity.