PUNYCODEX

Extended Lore

太極 Tàijí

Etymology · Phonology · Orthography · Cultural Legacy · Primary Sources

Tier 1 Tàijí.com
Tàijí — Supreme Ultimate, Origin
01

Quick Facts

Essential information about Tàijí, Supreme Ultimate, Origin

Original Script太極
Unicode RestorationTàijí
Reconstructed Pronunciation/tʰaɪ̯˥˩ tɕi˧˥/
PantheonChinese
DomainSupreme Ultimate, Origin
MeaningGreat extreme
ClassificationTier 1
Primary DomainTàijí.com
Sacred SymbolsThe taijitu circle, The empty circle of wuji, Solid and broken lines, Water, The center
02

Etymology & Word Family

From original script to Unicode restoration

Original Script 太極 Tàijí — "Great extreme"
Unicode Restoration Tàijí Restored stress, length, and script
Modern ASCII taichi Plain-ASCII fallback

太極 (Tàijí) means the 'Supreme Ultimate' or 'Great Extreme', the primordial source from which yin and yang differentiate in Neo-Confucian cosmology. The Modern Standard Mandarin reading is tài (Tone 4) + jí (Tone 2), per the Hanyu Pinyin scheme (ISO 7098) and the Unihan Database (kMandarin). Baxter & Sagart (2014) reconstruct the component characters as 太 *l̥a[t]-s (GSR 0317d) and 極 *[g](r)ək (GSR 0910e). The Unicode restoration Tàijí preserves both citation tones.

03

Unicode Character Breakdown

Character-by-character philological analysis

CharacterUnicodeNameBlockPhonetic Role
TU+0054Latin Capital Letter TBasic LatinSame, capitalized
àU+00E0Latin Small Letter A with GraveLatin-1 SupplementStress on a
iU+0069Latin Small Letter IBasic LatinSame
jU+006ALatin Small Letter JBasic LatinSpecial character
íU+00EDLatin Small Letter I with AcuteLatin-1 SupplementSpecial character
N/ADropped characterChinese orthographyDropped

The Tier 1 classification reflects which ancient features stress, length, or script are preserved in this restoration.

04

Cultural Significance

From ancient cult to modern Unicode

Ancient Domain

Tàijí is the moment before distinction. In Neo-Confucian cosmology it is the 'Supreme Ultimate' or 'Supreme Polarity' — not a god but a generative singularity from which yin and yang unfold. The famous opening of Zhou Dunyi's Taijitu shuo (c. 1073 CE) sets the sequence in motion: Wújí gives rise to Tàijí; Tàijí moves and generates yáng; at the limit of movement it becomes still and generates yīn.

This is not static monism. Tàijí is the axis of a cosmic breathing — the one that contains the two, the undivided source of all subsequent differentiation.

Tàijí in Later Traditions

Tàijí sits at the intersection of three Chinese traditions. For Daoists it is the cosmological stage just after the Dao; for Neo-Confucians it is the metaphysical foundation of ethics and natural order; for martial artists it is the physical principle of softness overcoming hardness. The symbol of the taijitu migrated into Korean Taoism, Japanese martial arts, and Vietnamese folk religion, often detached from Zhou Dunyi's text. In the modern West, Tai Chi is usually known as a health exercise, while the taijitu has become a generic emblem of balance and Eastern wisdom — sometimes stripped of its specific philosophical grammar but instantly recognizable.

Modern Legacy

Taijiquan is now practiced by millions worldwide and was added to UNESCO's Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2020. Hospitals prescribe it for balance, hypertension, and stress; parks from Beijing to San Francisco fill with slow, synchronized movement at dawn. The taijitu symbol appears on flags, album covers, tattoos, and corporate logos — a visual shorthand for equilibrium. Yet the most lasting legacy may be conceptual: Tàijí gave Chinese thought a vocabulary for describing how a single dynamic source can generate an ordered cosmos without recourse to a creator god.

Unicode Restoration as Cultural Act

Restoring Tàijí in a domain name is more than orthographic accuracy. It is a statement that the internet should recognize the full range of human writing — not only the ASCII keyboard.

05

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Tàijí, Supreme Ultimate, Origin, and Unicode restoration

01How do you pronounce Tàijí?

In reconstructed pronunciation, Tàijí is /tʰaɪ̯˥˩ tɕi˧˥/ — approximately TIE-JEE — 'tai' like 'tie' with a sharp falling tone (high to low), and 'ji' like 'gee' with a rising tone..

02What does Tàijí mean?

Tàijí means Great extreme in the chinese tradition.

03What are the symbols of Tàijí?

Tàijí is associated with The taijitu circle (The whole that contains both yin and yang in dynamic interdependence), The empty circle of wuji (The limitless void from which Tàijí emerges), Solid and broken lines (Yang and yin as the two building blocks of all subsequent forms), Water (The softest thing that overcomes the hardest — the practical image of Tàijí's yielding power), The center (The still point around which all motion turns).

04Why restore Tàijí in Unicode?

Plain ASCII taichi strips the stress, length, and script that make the name specific. Unicode restoration returns the name to its original written dignity.

05What is the most important myth about Tàijí?

Zhou Dunyi's Explanation of the Diagram of the Supreme Ultimate opens: 'Wújí ér Tàijí' — the limitless, and yet the supreme ultimate. From this arise movement and stillness, yang and yin, the five phases, and finally the moral order of the sage. The text became the cosmological charter of Song Neo-Confucianism and shaped Chinese state orthodoxy for centuries.

06

Scholarly Sources

The philological foundations of this restoration

Every claim on this page is grounded in established scholarship. The orthographic restorations follow disciplinary convention. The etymological chain follows the best available reference works. This is not invention — it is resurrection through scholarship.

Lexicography & Philology

  • I Ching
  • Zhou Dunyi

Primary Texts

  • Primary sources in the chinese tradition for Tàijí.

Archaeology & Art History

  • Material evidence — iconography, inscriptions, and temple archaeology — for Tàijí and related cults.
  • Tàijí as a named cosmological term is textual rather than archaeological. Its locus classicus is Zhou Dunyi's Taijitu shuo, preserved in Song dynasty editions and woodblock prints. Earlier antecedents appear in Han commentaries on the Yijing and in the Mawangdui silk manuscripts, which transmit variant versions of the Daodejing and Yijing. The distinctive two-tone taijitu diagram itself becomes common only in Song and Ming visual culture, though the yin-yang pairing it encodes is far older.

Religious Studies

  • Zhou Dunyi, Taijitu shuo
  • Laozi, Daodejing
  • Yijing (Book of Changes)
  • Adler, 'The Discovery of the Tao' / Zhou Dunyi studies
  • Baxter & Sagart, Old Chinese Reconstruction
  • Graham, Disputers of the Tao
  • Unihan Database (Unicode Consortium)
Return

The Surface Awaits

You have traced the name from its earliest attestation to its Unicode restoration. Now return to the myth. The story is where the name lives.

Back to Lore
Tàijí mascot