OUFM – I Ching

OUFM – Resonances with the I Ching

A note on what this page is

The I Ching is one of the oldest observational systems humans have developed — a careful, millennia-long attempt to describe how change works in nature and in human life. The OUFM was developed independently, through personal thought experiment and then checked against other sources.

This page documents where the two systems converge. The convergences are structural — meaning they concern how both systems organize their understanding of change, not just surface similarities in language. Where the overlap is approximate rather than precise, that is noted honestly.

The OUFM does not derive from the I Ching. The resonances are independent arrivals at similar territory.


1. Layer 0 and the ontological minimum of the I Ching

The I Ching begins with a question that is structurally identical to the one that generated Layer 0: what are the minimal conditions required for any change to occur at all?

The I Ching’s answer, in Wilhelm’s translation, is:

These two are not opposites. They are the irreducible pair — neither can operate without the other. An impulse with nothing to receive it disappears. A receptive capacity with no impulse has nothing to respond to.

This maps directly onto the OUFM’s Layer 0 operative pair:

And the Tao itself — the prior condition in which both Qian and Kun can exist and interact — maps onto substrate: the precondition that allows the difference between impulse and reception to exist at all.

This is the strongest and most precise convergence between the two systems. Both arrived at the same three-part minimum independently: one precondition, two operative functions, nothing further required.


2. The layer structure and Heaven / Humanity / Earth

The I Ching organizes existence into three tiers:

The OUFM’s layer structure carries a similar orientation:

This is an approximate rather than exact mapping — the OUFM has five layers and the I Ching has three tiers, so some compression is necessary. But the orientation is shared: existence operates across multiple simultaneous levels, with the human being occupying the middle position between generative source and embodied matter.

What both systems share beyond the structure is the insistence that these levels are not separate. Heaven is present in Earth. Layer 0 is structurally present in Layer 4. The levels are not a hierarchy of importance but a description of how the same generative activity appears at different degrees of organization.


3. The adaptive cycle and yin/yang

The four phases of the adaptive cycle map onto the yin/yang distinction with one important qualification:

Thinking is the hinge phase where yin and yang meet. This explains a common pattern: when the cycle snags in thinking, it is often because thinking is trying to resolve the tension between receptive and directive rather than passing it on to action. The I Ching would recognize this immediately — it is the condition of a hexagram where the middle lines are in tension, preventing the movement from Heaven to Earth from completing itself.

The I Ching’s fundamental insight — that yin and yang are not opposites to be resolved but mutually necessary poles of a living process — is exactly how the adaptive cycle treats its four phases. None is more correct than another. Health is in the movement between them, not in the dominance of any one.


4. The regulatory tensions and the I Ching’s dynamic polarity structure

The three regulatory tensions in the OUFM — Coherence ↔ Openness, Agency ↔ Participation, Differentiation ↔ Interdependence — resonate with the I Ching’s fundamental approach to polarity.

The resonance is not that both systems have three pairs. It is qualitative: both treat opposing poles as mutually necessary and constitutive rather than as problems to resolve. In the I Ching, the question is never which pole is correct — it is always about the quality of movement between them, and whether that movement is appropriate to the current moment and situation.

This is precisely how the OUFM treats the regulatory tensions. They are not problems to solve. The capacity to stay inside the tension without collapsing into one pole is what keeps experience flexible and alive.

The I Ching adds something the OUFM currently does not develop explicitly: the idea that different situations call for different positions within a tension. Not just the capacity to move between poles, but the wisdom to know which position the current moment requires. This is what the hexagrams describe — not fixed states but appropriate responses to specific configurations of change.

This is worth developing further in the OUFM’s treatment of the regulatory tensions, possibly as a practical question: not just can you hold the tension, but can you read which direction the current situation is pulling?


5. Action profiles and the trigrams

The OUFM identifies four minimum parameters of action — Force, Time, Scope, and Initiation. The I Ching trigrams describe specific combinations of these parameters as they appear in nature:

TrigramForceTimeScopeInitiation
Wind/Wood ☴LowSustainedDiffuseParticipation
Water ☵AdaptiveImmediatePreciseParticipation
Thunder ☳HighImmediateConcentratedAgency
Mountain ☶NoneSuspendedNoneNeither
Fire ☲DependentSustainedRadiatingBoth

The trigrams are not a meta-layer on top of the action dials. They are independent descriptions of action quality that the I Ching developed through careful observation of nature. The OUFM arrived at the same minimum parameters through structural reasoning. The convergence is that nature expresses these combinations most purely — which is why the I Ching used natural phenomena to name them.

Practically: the trigrams offer a vocabulary for recognizing what quality of action a situation actually calls for. Layer 4 habits tend to lock a person into one action profile regardless of what the situation needs. The question the I Ching always asks — what does this moment call for? — is the same question the OUFM’s adaptive cycle asks when it is running deliberately rather than automatically.


Summary of convergences

OUFM elementI Ching equivalentStrength of convergence
Layer 0 triad: substrate, impulse, registeringTao, Qian, KunStrong — structural and precise
Layer hierarchyHeaven, Humanity, EarthApproximate — orientation shared, layer counts differ
Adaptive cycle phasesYin/yang qualitiesPartial — observing/feeling yin, acting yang, thinking both
Regulatory tensionsDynamic polarity structureStrong — qualitative resonance, not numerical
Action dialsTrigram profilesStrong — independent arrival at same minimum parameters

What this convergence means

The I Ching spent millennia observing how change actually works — in nature, in human situations, in the relationship between invisible source and visible form. The OUFM spent considerably less time arriving at structurally similar territory through thought experiment and cross-checking.

That independent convergence is not proof that either system is correct. But it is evidence that both are tracking something real — that the structure they describe is not arbitrary but reflects genuine features of how change, experience, and existence organize themselves.

The I Ching is richer in practical wisdom about navigation — what to do in specific configurations of change. The OUFM is more anatomical — more interested in the precise minimal conditions than in the wisdom of moving through them. They are complementary rather than competing.