the turn of fortune after reaching one extreme
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ō J í Z é f ù, which means that the Yin and Yang of stripping hexagram rise and fall, and the Yang of repeating hexagram rise and fall. It means that things will turn in the opposite direction when things are in the extreme. It comes from Liang Qichao's on the origin of China's weakness.
Idiom usage
It refers to the mutual transformation of things
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: the extreme will be restored, the extreme will be reversed
The origin of Idioms
Liang Qichao's on the origin of China's accumulated weakness: "to suppress the meaning of the great book of changes, to strip the extreme is to recover, to deny the extreme is to be peaceful. Is China still weak today? Think about it, think about it. "
Idiom explanation
Stripping the hexagram, Yin flourishes and Yang declines, and restoring the hexagram, cathode and Yang. It is a metaphor for things going against the extreme.
Chinese PinYin : bō jí zé fù
the turn of fortune after reaching one extreme
Good night and good scenery. liáng xiāo hǎo jǐng
disreputable quarters of the city. sān wǎ liǎng shě