TWO MAJOR
QUALITIES OF LUNG THE GREAT RULER
OSRC *ORIENTAL
STRATEGY RESEARCH CENTER*
Search for the "Great Leader"
The basic qualities of a leader would include strength, intelligence
and charisma with people. But what extra qualities provide the
winning edges for a person to become a truly "Great Leader"?
A strong man with good fighting skills would make a natural
leader if he could use his strength and skills for his people.
Otherwise, this man may bully and rob the people.
The man needs not be a fighter. He
could have good hunting skills, or even the ability
to advice his people on what to do, be it
in war or peace. The leader has
resources to use in guiding people into realising various
benefits, and help the people out of
problems and dangers. The greater the needs and problems of the people
the greater caliber the leadership must be. Leadership always relate
to people.
It is when the needs, problems and dangers are the greatest,
that the King Wen Yi Jing becomes the strategy
manual where one could find the required appropriate answers and
solutions. The King Wen Yi Jing addresses the two
major aspects of the caliber of the "great leader" appropriate
for circumstances of the greatest gravity.
Lung as "Arousing Thunder" in the East
In King Wen Later Heaven's arrangement of the eight trigrams
of the Pakua, the power of the "Arousing
Thunder" is Lung (Wilhelm 1951 p .273).
The association of the Lung with the
East and Spring is reflected in these comments of the Yi Jing:
The Arousing is thunder the Lung. It is dark
yellow, it is a spreading out, a great road, the eldest son. It
is decisive and vehement; it is bamboo that is green and young,
it is reed and rush. Among horses it signifies those which can
neigh well, those with white hind legs those which gallop, those
with a star on the forehead. Among useful plants it is the
pod-bearing ones. Finally, it is the strong, that which grows
luxuriously (Wilhelm 1951 p.276).
The passage portrays the symbolic powers of
Lung as the influence of Spring ("spreading out" =
blossoming and "grows luxuriously" are the characteristic features of
Spring). Thus, the King Wen Yi Jing associates the
vibrant dynamic moving image of the great leader with
large-scale production, which, in ancient times, depended on
agriculture and the Spring rains. All the great abilities and
resources of the great leader must be directed to affect the
large-scale production, without which the people cannot survive,
and a nation cannot exist.
The great leader must always be thinking of the needs
of the people and how to swiftly fulfill them. Hence, the
saying that government is government by the people for the
people, in which the great leader is only the chief custodian of
the people's wish. Lung has to be a person of great
ability and powerful resources, but his ability and resources
are associated with a great concern for the people.
A person with great ability and resources
but not having any loving care for the people does not qualify to be
Lung. Concern for the people is one of the two major
qualities of the Lung.
Mystery of Shift in Position of Lung
The East was the original location of the trigram
Li, the Fire in the
Fu Hsi Earlier Heaven's arrangement of the trigrams.
"Arousing Thunder"'s previous position in the Fu Hsi's
arrangement is in the North-East, while Li the
Fire's position in King Wen's arrangement is now in the South.
It may seems difficult to account for the reasons why King
Wen changed the arrays from those of the earlier Fu Hsi's
arrangement. Some speculations would be:
There is a more rational reason why Lung
"Arousing Thunder"'s position was shifted to the East.
The change denotes some ancient change to the significance of
Lung. Ong (1996) shows that the etymological
word for "Lung" originally, as reflected in 1700
B.C. oracle bones and 1100 B.C. bronze scripts, did not contain
the strokes for "water". It was in the later small seal scripts
(circa 300 B.C.) that three strokes (symbol of water) were added
to represent the "water" function of the Lung.
"Water", especially "rain water", is associated with Spring
and the East.
There was once a time when water was not a
problem. But at some time in ancient history, water became a
crucial problem, without which there would be no production and
the people would suffer great calamities. Hence, it appears
that, in the time of King Wen Later Heaven Array of the
Pakua, the chief "additional" function of the
Lung was to regulate the water for the production
in order to provide and ensure food for the people. This is
still the true function of the Lung in modern
times, to show concern for the people and address the production
needs of the people.
The original tradition was that the Shang people did not pray
to the Lung for rains. The eventual traditional
praying to Lung was a later evolution reflecting
the growing roles of the great leader as one who addresses the
ever-growing needs of the people.
Lung, Sacred Guardian of Creative Knowledge
The ancient Chinese Yi Jing commentators also
throw further light on the qualities of the great leader:
The essence of knowledge is thus symbolised by the
Lung. However, this knowledge is not stagnant but
ever growing and changing. It is particularly associated with
the ability to recognise the needs for "transformations", i.e.
changes. This is why the Yi Jing is the "Canon of
Change", indicating and reflecting that the heights of its
wisdom have to do with change.
To be able to grasp and handle the changes or transformations, the
leader must take time to think and meditate to see the
"changes". Then only would his knowledge grows and eventually
he would surpass the very knowledge to enter into a mysterious
divine realm. No one stubborn and too lazy to think can be
Lung. There is certainly no easy path to
greatness!
Adaptive knowledge, based on changing needs of the
people, is the second of the two major qualities of the Lung.
References
Ong, H.T. 1996. Legend of the Chinese Lung. Eastern Dragon Press.
Petaling Jaya, Malaysia.
Wilhelm, Richard. 1951. The I Ching. Routledge & Kegan
Paul. London and Henley.