Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - Great joy is easy to slip up, great anger is easy to gaffe, great earthquake is easy to gaffe, and great anger is easy to gaffe.

Great joy is easy to slip up, great anger is easy to gaffe, great earthquake is easy to gaffe, and great anger is easy to gaffe.

This famous saying comes from the Book of Changes, and the original text is as follows:

Great joy is easy to slip up, great anger is easy to gaffe, great earthquake is easy to gaffe, great sorrow is easy to lose face, great joy is easy to gaffe, great fear is easy to lose honor, great thinking is easy to lose love, great drunkenness is easy to lose morality, great talk is easy to break faith, and great desire is easy to lose life.

Talking too much will lose you, especially when you are happy, you will lose your manners when you are particularly angry, you will lose your manners when you are particularly surprised, you will lose face when you are particularly sad, you will ignore it when you are particularly happy, you will lose your bottom line when you are particularly afraid, you will lose your love if you think too much, you will lose your virtue when you are drunk, and you will often lose your integrity and life if you indulge too much.

Extended data value-added:

The Book of Changes is a masterpiece of China's ancient philosophy, natural science and social science. It has always been regarded as an encyclopedia of China culture. For thousands of years, The Book of Changes has exerted great influence on China's philosophy, history, literature, religion, natural science and social science.

Analysis:

1. Strictly speaking, I ching and I ching constitute I ching; Zhouyi, Lianshan and Ghost Stories constitute three changes. Lianshan is the Yi-ology of Xia Dynasty, Tibet is the Yi-ology of Yin Dynasty, and Zhouyi is the Yi-ology of Zhou Dynasty. It's a pity that even the mountain and the Tibet are lost.

2. The Book of Changes, also known as the Book of Changes, was written from the early Western Zhou Dynasty to the late Zhou Dynasty about 3,000 years ago. The Book of Changes consists of hexagrams and epigrams. * * * Sixty-four hexagrams, six hexagrams each, * * * three hundred and eighty-four hexagrams each. The Book of Changes has ten wings, that is, ten chapters, namely, upper, lower, upper image, upper image, classical Chinese, upper copula, upper copula, upper hexagram, upper sequence and upper mixed hexagram. The Book of Changes was written from the Spring and Autumn Period to the mid-Warring States Period, which is an interpretation and development of the Book of Changes.

3. Historians believe that the Book of Changes was written by Fuxi, Wen Wang, Zhou Gong and Confucius, that is, Fuxi painted eight diagrams, Wen Wang wrote hexagrams, Zhou Gong wrote poems and Confucius wrote Yi Zhuan.