Hexagram 56: Lu -

The Wanderer

Anti-Tech Manifesto

Hexagram 56 digital artifact

Industrial Society and Its Future

FC / Theodore Kaczynski (1995)

The most infamous FBI manhunt sketch in American history—hoodie, aviator sunglasses, anonymous face—was posted on every FBI office wall for eighteen years (1978-1996): the Unabomber, unknown, unreachable, operating from a 10×12 foot Montana cabin without electricity or running water. In 1995, major newspapers published his 35,000-word manifesto explaining his complete withdrawal from technological civilization. His central thesis: industrial society destroys human autonomy through 'oversocialization' and loss of the 'power process,' creating psychological suffering that cannot be reformed, only escaped. Thirty years later, his predictions—algorithmic control, surveillance capitalism, performative morality as surrogate activity—describe our 2025 exactly. Fire on Mountain (☲☶): clarity that doesn't settle, the wanderer achieving insight through complete exile from the system he's observing. The sketch captures hexagram 56 perfectly: anonymous, unreachable, refusing all integration. His methods were unconscionable. His analysis was prophetic. The wanderer's position enables truth-telling but extracts terrible cost—from himself and from others.

Practical Integration

Fire on Mountain. The wanderer who leaves civilization entirely sees patterns the embedded cannot. From total exile, he predicted our 2025 exactly: oversocialization creating cancel culture, technology removing the power process (autonomous goal-setting) leaving surrogate activities, algorithmic control, inability to opt-out, biological manipulation debates. All written from a cabin in 1995. The wanderer's position—outside, isolated, unreachable—enabled clarity. But Line six warns: "The bird's nest burns up. The wanderer laughs at first, then must weep and wail." Recklessness from isolation ends catastrophically. Three dead, twenty-three injured, eighteen years of bombings. Right diagnosis, monstrous treatment. The practical question: can you achieve the wanderer's clarity without the catastrophe? Temporary exile works. The programmer who goes off-grid yearly. The executive doing digital detoxes. The academic maintaining one foot outside their discipline. You see less than complete exile, but you don't end up as an FBI sketch. The hexagram is honest: real clarity requires real distance. The further you withdraw, the more you see—and risk. Success through smallness, the text says. Not manifestos or bombings. Small, precise movements at the boundary. See what you can see, say what you can say, then come back. Fire moves to new fuel; it doesn't burn the mountain down. The tension: enough distance to see, enough connection to remain human. Thirty years later, we're living in the world he predicted—that proves the clarity. The bombing campaign proves exile alone doesn't grant wisdom. You need the clarity without the catastrophe, the outside perspective without complete severance. That's harder, but it's the only version that doesn't end in pursuit.

The Judgment

The Wanderer. Success through smallness. The wanderer who knows his position succeeds not through grand gestures but through precision, humility, careful navigation. The classical text warns: maintain inner dignity, avoid trivial entanglements, don't mistake temporary position for permanent belonging. The wanderer who forgets this ends badly.

the wanderer
xiǎowith a little
hēngfulfillment
and a
zhēnpersists
promising

The Image

Fire on the mountain: the image of the Wanderer. Thus the superior man is clear-minded and cautious in imposing penalties. Wilhelm: the fire does not linger in one place but travels on to new fuel. It is a phenomenon of short duration.

shānthe mountain
shàngon top of
yǒuis
huǒa fire
the wanderer
jūnthe noble
young one
accordingly
míngis clear
shènand prudent
yòngabout
xíngof penalty
érand so
avoids
liúprolonged
legal dispute

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1 旅瑣瑣斯其所取災

the wanderer
suǒis mean
suǒand frivolous
as such
this
suǒplace
draws
zāiadversity

Line 2 旅即次懷其資得童僕貞

the wanderer
comes to
an en)camp(ment)
huáicherish
these
resources
and gain
tónga young
servant
zhēnpersistence

Line 3 旅焚其次喪其童僕貞厲

the wanderer
fénburns
this
camp
sàngand lose
this
tóngyoung
servant
zhēnpersistence(ing)
is difficult

Line 4 旅于處得其資斧我心不快

the wanderer
is
chùthe shelter
having secured
his
resources
and an ax
but lamenting 'my...
xīnheart
is not
kuàihappy

Line 5 射雉一矢亡終以譽命

shèshooting
zhìthe pheasant [as a gift for the local noble]
one
shǐarrow
wángis lost
zhōngbut in the end
for the sake of
praise
mìngand commission

Line 6 鳥焚其巢旅人先笑後號咷喪牛于易凶

niǎolike a
fénthat
its own
cháonest
this wandering
rénone
xiānbegins
xiàoto laugh(ter
hòufollowed by
háowailing
táoand weeping
sàngforfeiting
niúcattle
in
the exchange
xiōnginauspicious

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

Fire (☲) sits above, Mountain (☶) sits below—flame that does not rest, stone that does not move.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

Wilhelm describes the wanderer as one who must maintain inner dignity despite outer vulnerability. Strange lands require circumspection.

Character Analysis

The wanderer achieves clarity through complete separation from society. The mountain stands still; above it, fire flames upward and does not tarry. From voluntary exile, patterns invisible to those embedded in the system become obvious. But the wanderer pays the price: isolation, pursuit, and the impossibility of return.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Mountain

Upper Trigram

Fire

Binary

001101

Energy State

Brightness that cannot settle, solidity that cannot move. Read bottom to top: stillness below, movement above, never meeting.

Trigram Symbolism

☲ Fire (Upper) - Clarity, transience, illumination ☶ Mountain (Lower) - Stillness, boundary, immovability The fire cannot root; the mountain cannot follow.

References & Citations

  1. Industrial Society and Its Future - Wikipedia
  2. Unabomber Manifesto - Washington Post
  3. Harvard and the Making of the Unabomber - The Atlantic
  4. Ted Kaczynski's Terrifying Legacy - Rolling Stone

For the classical Wilhelm translation and line-by-line commentary, see Wilhelm Translation.

Digital Artifact

Hexagram 56 digital artifact

The Replicant's Memory in Blade Runner

Ridley Scott / Hampton Fancher (1982)

Roy Batty has four years. Pris has four years. Rachael doesn't know she has any limit at all—she thinks her memories are real, that the photographs prove something. The replicants are wanderers by design: no home, no history, just implanted recollections of childhoods they never lived. Roy's seen attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion, watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate—but these moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. The wanderer has no fixed dwelling. The replicant has no fixed identity. Both must carry themselves with dignity precisely because their position is uncertain. Roy doesn't demean himself begging Tyrell for more life; he states his case, then acts. The fire on the mountain doesn't linger—it travels to new fuel, then burns out. Four years. Then nothing.

Practical Integration

You're in temporary position. The contractor, not the permanent hire. The consultant passing through the system without a permanent desk. The classical text's advice: maintain inner dignity, avoid trivial entanglements, don't mistake temporary position for permanent belonging. The wanderer who forgets this ends badly. Line six: the bird's nest burns up, the wanderer loses his resources. The stability was always illusory. But there's a reading the traditional text doesn't quite reach. Roy Batty demonstrates it in the final scene. The wanderer who fully accepts transience achieves something the settled person never can: perfect clarity about what matters. He's seen attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. C-beams glittering in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate. These moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. He knows this. The knowledge doesn't diminish the seeing—it intensifies it. Four years of life, fully lived, knowing the limit. This produces a different quality of attention than unlimited time would. The person who thinks they have forever dilutes their presence. The person who knows exactly when the clock runs out sharpens every moment. The text says: success through smallness. Roy's final act—saving Deckard after Deckard tried to kill him—is small. One person saved. One moment of mercy. But it's the perfect action for someone who has four years and knows it. Not building empires. Not securing legacy. Just doing the right thing in this specific moment because this moment is all you actually have. You're passing through. Act accordingly. That doesn't mean act small. It means act clear. Don't build elaborate scaffolding for a structure you won't finish. Don't entangle yourself in conflicts that outlast your tenure. Don't mistake the temporary platform for the permanent ground. But also: don't waste the time by treating it as meaningless. The wanderer's position is precarious, but it's not worthless. You see things the settled people don't see. You move through spaces they never enter. Use that. The fire on the mountain doesn't root, but while it burns, it illuminates. Four years. Or four months. Or four decades. All temporary. Act from that knowledge. See what the settled people miss. Then move on to new fuel.

The Judgment

The Wanderer. Success through smallness. The wanderer who knows his position succeeds not through grand gestures but through precision, humility, careful navigation. Roy's final act isn't revenge—it's saving Deckard. Success through smallness.

the wanderer
xiǎowith a little
hēngfulfillment
and a
zhēnpersists
promising

The Image

Fire on the mountain: the image of the Wanderer. Thus the superior man is clear-minded and cautious in imposing penalties. Wilhelm: the fire does not linger in one place but travels on to new fuel. It is a phenomenon of short duration. This is what lawsuits should be like—quickly passing, not prolonged.

shānthe mountain
shàngon top of
yǒuis
huǒa fire
the wanderer
jūnthe noble
young one
accordingly
míngis clear
shènand prudent
yòngabout
xíngof penalty
érand so
avoids
liúprolonged
legal dispute

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1 旅瑣瑣斯其所取災

the wanderer
suǒis mean
suǒand frivolous
as such
this
suǒplace
draws
zāiadversity

Line 2 旅即次懷其資得童僕貞

the wanderer
comes to
an en)camp(ment)
huáicherish
these
resources
and gain
tónga young
servant
zhēnpersistence

Line 3 旅焚其次喪其童僕貞厲

the wanderer
fénburns
this
camp
sàngand lose
this
tóngyoung
servant
zhēnpersistence(ing)
is difficult

Line 4 旅于處得其資斧我心不快

the wanderer
is
chùthe shelter
having secured
his
resources
and an ax
but lamenting 'my...
xīnheart
is not
kuàihappy

Line 5 射雉一矢亡終以譽命

shèshooting
zhìthe pheasant [as a gift for the local noble]
one
shǐarrow
wángis lost
zhōngbut in the end
for the sake of
praise
mìngand commission

Line 6 鳥焚其巢旅人先笑後號咷喪牛于易凶

niǎolike a
fénthat
its own
cháonest
this wandering
rénone
xiānbegins
xiàoto laugh(ter
hòufollowed by
háowailing
táoand weeping
sàngforfeiting
niúcattle
in
the exchange
xiōnginauspicious

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

Fire (☲) sits above, Mountain (☶) sits below—flame that does not rest, stone that does not move.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

Wilhelm describes the wanderer as one who must maintain inner dignity despite outer vulnerability. Strange lands require circumspection.

Character Analysis

Roy Batty is the archetype: stranger in a world not built for him, moving through it with controlled intensity, knowing his time is limited. The mountain stands still; above it, fire flames upward and does not tarry.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Mountain

Upper Trigram

Fire

Binary

001101

Energy State

Brightness that cannot settle, solidity that cannot move. Read bottom to top: stillness below, movement above, never meeting.

Trigram Symbolism

☲ Fire (Upper) - Clarity, transience ☶ Mountain (Lower) - Stillness, boundary The fire cannot root; the mountain cannot follow.

References & Citations

  1. Tears in rain monologue - Wikipedia
  2. Roy Batty - Off-world: The Blade Runner Wiki
  3. Blade Runner: What Roy Batty's Tears In The Rain Speech Means
  4. Blade Runner – 'I've seen things you people wouldn't believe'
  5. Rutger Hauer's Tears in the Rain Blade Runner Monologue Is Genius

For the classical Wilhelm translation and line-by-line commentary, see Wilhelm Translation.

Fine Art

Hexagram 56 digital artifact

Winslow Homer — The Gulf Stream

Winslow Homer (1899; reworked by 1906)

American realist Homer depicts a Black sailor stranded on a dismasted boat surrounded by sharks in tropical waters. The man lies isolated far from home, adrift without anchor or destination, embodying The Wanderer's precarious existence. Homer painted this after extended time in the Bahamas, capturing the vulnerability of displacement and temporary passage through hostile territory.

Practical Integration

American realist Winslow Homer depicts a Black sailor stranded on a dismasted boat surrounded by sharks in tropical waters. The man lies on the tilted deck, one arm trailing in the ocean, sugarcane stalks scattered around him. Behind, a waterspout twists across the horizon. The vessel drifts without anchor or destination, far from any shore. Homer painted this between 1899 and 1906 after extended time in the Bahamas, capturing the vulnerability of displacement. The sailor has survived the storm that destroyed his mast, but now floats in hostile territory without the means to navigate home. This is Lǚ (旅), the Chinese hexagram of The Wanderer. The character originally referred to military units traveling in formation, later extending to any stranger passing through unfamiliar territory. Ancient diviners saw this configuration when Fire (Li) sits above Mountain (Gèn): flame on the mountain cannot remain fixed but must move across the landscape, finding temporary fuel before traveling onward. Homer's sailor embodies this precarious existence—the boat provides momentary rest but cannot sustain him indefinitely. He clings to wreckage between home and oblivion, belonging nowhere. American realist Homer depicts a Black sailor stranded on a dismasted boat surrounded by sharks in tropical waters. The man lies isolated far from home, adrift without anchor or destination, embodying The Wanderer's precarious existence. Homer painted this after extended time in the Bahamas, capturing the vulnerability of displacement and temporary passage through hostile territory. The Judgment counsels: \"The Wanderer. Success through smallness. Perseverance brings good fortune to the wanderer.\" The ancient text warns that the stranger lacks social capital to recover from errors—each action carries amplified risk. Homer's sailor demonstrates this principle: adrift without supplies, every movement matters. A wrong gesture might attract the circling sharks. Inaction means slow death from exposure. In Zhou Dynasty China, travelers existed outside the ritual networks that defined belonging. They couldn't participate in ancestral rites or local governance, moving through communities without connection. Classical commentaries note that even the sage may find himself in wanderer's position, displaced by political upheaval or necessary retreat. The Image Text declares: \"Fire on the mountain: the image of The Wanderer. Thus the superior man is clear-minded and cautious in imposing penalties, and protracts no lawsuits.\" Fire moves across the mountain, consuming brush before moving on—it establishes no permanent presence. The wanderer must travel light, maintaining inner dignity while adapting to diminished circumstances. Homer exhibited this painting in 1906, as millions of immigrants crossed oceans seeking new homes. Critics objected to the painting's ambiguous ending—Homer refused to show rescue or death, leaving the sailor suspended in the wanderer's permanent transit. In the hexagram sequence, The Wanderer follows Abundance: after the zenith comes displacement, the necessary journey away from fullness toward the unknown that begins the cycle again.

The Judgment

The Wanderer. Success through smallness. The wanderer who knows his position succeeds not through grand gestures but through precision, humility, careful navigation. Roy's final act isn't revenge—it's saving Deckard. Success through smallness.

the wanderer
xiǎowith a little
hēngfulfillment
and a
zhēnpersists
promising

The Image

Fire on the mountain: the image of the Wanderer. Thus the superior man is clear-minded and cautious in imposing penalties. Wilhelm: the fire does not linger in one place but travels on to new fuel. It is a phenomenon of short duration. This is what lawsuits should be like—quickly passing, not prolonged.

shānthe mountain
shàngon top of
yǒuis
huǒa fire
the wanderer
jūnthe noble
young one
accordingly
míngis clear
shènand prudent
yòngabout
xíngof penalty
érand so
avoids
liúprolonged
legal dispute

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1 旅瑣瑣斯其所取災

the wanderer
suǒis mean
suǒand frivolous
as such
this
suǒplace
draws
zāiadversity

Line 2 旅即次懷其資得童僕貞

the wanderer
comes to
an en)camp(ment)
huáicherish
these
resources
and gain
tónga young
servant
zhēnpersistence

Line 3 旅焚其次喪其童僕貞厲

the wanderer
fénburns
this
camp
sàngand lose
this
tóngyoung
servant
zhēnpersistence(ing)
is difficult

Line 4 旅于處得其資斧我心不快

the wanderer
is
chùthe shelter
having secured
his
resources
and an ax
but lamenting 'my...
xīnheart
is not
kuàihappy

Line 5 射雉一矢亡終以譽命

shèshooting
zhìthe pheasant [as a gift for the local noble]
one
shǐarrow
wángis lost
zhōngbut in the end
for the sake of
praise
mìngand commission

Line 6 鳥焚其巢旅人先笑後號咷喪牛于易凶

niǎolike a
fénthat
its own
cháonest
this wandering
rénone
xiānbegins
xiàoto laugh(ter
hòufollowed by
háowailing
táoand weeping
sàngforfeiting
niúcattle
in
the exchange
xiōnginauspicious

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

Fire (☲) sits above, Mountain (☶) sits below—flame that does not rest, stone that does not move.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

Wilhelm describes the wanderer as one who must maintain inner dignity despite outer vulnerability. Strange lands require circumspection.

Character Analysis

Roy Batty is the archetype: stranger in a world not built for him, moving through it with controlled intensity, knowing his time is limited. The mountain stands still; above it, fire flames upward and does not tarry.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Mountain

Upper Trigram

Fire

Binary

001101

Energy State

Brightness that cannot settle, solidity that cannot move. Read bottom to top: stillness below, movement above, never meeting.

Trigram Symbolism

☲ Fire (Upper) - Clarity, transience ☶ Mountain (Lower) - Stillness, boundary The fire cannot root; the mountain cannot follow.

References & Citations

  1. The Gulf Stream — Winslow Homer-1899; reworked by 1906. American realist Homer depicts a Black sailor stranded on a dismasted boat surrounded by sharks in tropical waters. The man lies isolated far from home, adrift without anchor or destination, embodying The Wanderer's precarious existence. Homer painted this after extended time in the Bahamas, capturing the vulnerability of displacement and temporary passage through hostile territory.

For the classical Wilhelm translation and line-by-line commentary, see Wilhelm Translation.

The Judgment

The Wanderer. Success through smallness. The wanderer who knows his position succeeds not through grand gestures but through precision, humility, careful navigation. The classical text warns: maintain inner dignity, avoid trivial entanglements, don't mistake temporary position for permanent belonging. The wanderer who forgets this ends badly.

the wanderer
xiǎowith a little
hēngfulfillment
and a
zhēnpersists
promising

The Image

Fire on the mountain: the image of the Wanderer. Thus the superior man is clear-minded and cautious in imposing penalties. Wilhelm: the fire does not linger in one place but travels on to new fuel. It is a phenomenon of short duration.

shānthe mountain
shàngon top of
yǒuis
huǒa fire
the wanderer
jūnthe noble
young one
accordingly
míngis clear
shènand prudent
yòngabout
xíngof penalty
érand so
avoids
liúprolonged
legal dispute

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1旅瑣瑣斯其所取災

the wanderer
suǒis mean
suǒand frivolous
as such
this
suǒplace
draws
zāiadversity

Line 2旅即次懷其資得童僕貞

the wanderer
comes to
an en)camp(ment)
huáicherish
these
resources
and gain
tónga young
servant
zhēnpersistence

Line 3旅焚其次喪其童僕貞厲

the wanderer
fénburns
this
camp
sàngand lose
this
tóngyoung
servant
zhēnpersistence(ing)
is difficult

Line 4旅于處得其資斧我心不快

the wanderer
is
chùthe shelter
having secured
his
resources
and an ax
but lamenting 'my...
xīnheart
is not
kuàihappy

Line 5射雉一矢亡終以譽命

shèshooting
zhìthe pheasant [as a gift for the local noble]
one
shǐarrow
wángis lost
zhōngbut in the end
for the sake of
praise
mìngand commission

Line 6鳥焚其巢旅人先笑後號咷喪牛于易凶

niǎolike a
fénthat
its own
cháonest
this wandering
rénone
xiānbegins
xiàoto laugh(ter
hòufollowed by
háowailing
táoand weeping
sàngforfeiting
niúcattle
in
the exchange
xiōnginauspicious

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

Fire (☲) sits above, Mountain (☶) sits below—flame that does not rest, stone that does not move.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

Wilhelm describes the wanderer as one who must maintain inner dignity despite outer vulnerability. Strange lands require circumspection.

Character Analysis

The wanderer achieves clarity through complete separation from society. The mountain stands still; above it, fire flames upward and does not tarry. From voluntary exile, patterns invisible to those embedded in the system become obvious. But the wanderer pays the price: isolation, pursuit, and the impossibility of return.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Mountain

Upper Trigram

Fire

Binary

001101

Energy State

Brightness that cannot settle, solidity that cannot move. Read bottom to top: stillness below, movement above, never meeting.

Trigram Symbolism

☲ Fire (Upper) - Clarity, transience, illumination ☶ Mountain (Lower) - Stillness, boundary, immovability The fire cannot root; the mountain cannot follow.

For the classical Wilhelm translation and line-by-line commentary, see Wilhelm Translation.