dialectics by viewing the two opposites, yin and yang, as temporal changes that give rise to each other. When yin reaches its extreme, yang is born within it (i.e., one yang comes and goes), and when yang reaches its extreme, yin is born within it. This figure is also called the “yin-yang fish” because of its resemblance to the shape of a fish.
Jiro Kawakita Conflict and cyclical relationship between maintenance and creation.
See also: 3 fat-comma shapes arranged to form a circle, Kitaro Nishida’s self-contradictory identity.
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