The '''''I Ching''''' ([[Simplified Chinese|Simplified]]: 易经; [[Traditional Chinese|Traditional]]: 易經; [[Hanyu pinyin]]: Yì Jīng), or '''''Book of Changes ''''', is one of the [[Chinese Classics]]. It was is used as a means of [[divination]].
==History==
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The history of the book is complicated. Around 2600 BC, the philosopher Fu Xi made diagrams of natural formations. These diagrams were the basis of the trigrams, the basis of ''I Ching''. During the [[Qin Dynasty]], an unknown government scribe found Fu Xi's diagrams and assembled them into the first version of ''I Ching''. However, at this point the ''I Ching'' was not used for divination, but rather as a guide for recording natural events. Only members of the bureaucracy even knew that it existed. During the [[Han Dynasty]], record keepers released the book to public repositories. From there, [[Daoist]]s developed the divination system. The first recorded ''I Ching'' reading was in 59 AD.