Ancient Domain
Wǔxíng is often mistranslated as 'five elements,' but xíng means movement, conduct, or phase. Wood, fire, earth, metal, and water are not static substances but dynamic processes: wood grows, fire flames, earth ripens, metal contracts, water descends. Together they form a grammar of transformation that Chinese thinkers applied to seasons, organs, emotions, dynasties, and military strategy.
The system works through two main cycles: the generating cycle (wood feeds fire, fire makes earth, earth bears metal, metal carries water, water nourishes wood) and the controlling cycle (wood parts earth, earth absorbs water, water quenches fire, fire melts metal, metal chops wood).
