
J.M.W. Turner — The Fighting Temeraire
J.M.W. Turner (1839)Turner painted this in 1839 depicting the HMS Temeraire, a warship from the Battle of Trafalgar, being towed by a steam tugboat to be scrapped. The old sailing ship gives way to new steamship technology, showing progress through generational transition.
Practical Integration
An aging warship glides toward its final berth, towed by a steam tugboat across glowing water in J.M.W. Turner's 1839 masterpiece. The HMS Temeraire—veteran of Trafalgar, Nelson's great sea battle—moves as a ghost of white sails against the setting sun. Behind the old ship, a small steam tug churns forward, black smokestack asserting the new industrial power that renders sailing vessels obsolete. Turner positions the viewer at the moment of transition, when one era yields to another, when the old gives way not through catastrophe but through the inexorable advance of what comes next. This is Jìn (晉), Progress. The character depicts the sun rising above the horizon, advancement becoming visible. Ancient diviners saw this configuration when Fire (Lí) sits above Earth (Kūn)—clarity and illumination rising from receptive foundation, light emerging into visibility. Turner's painting captures this structure: the old warship represents what has served its time, while the steam tug embodies the rising clarity of new methods, new powers advancing not through combat but through superior capability. Turner painted this in 1839 depicting the HMS Temeraire, a warship from the Battle of Trafalgar, being towed by a steam tugboat to be scrapped. The old sailing ship gives way to new steamship technology, showing progress through generational transition. The Judgment text addresses the psychology of advancement: \"Progress. The powerful prince is honored with horses in large numbers. In a single day he is granted audience three times.\" Zhou Dynasty practitioners understood that genuine progress brings recognition without self-promotion. When Fire rises above Earth, advancement occurs through merit becoming visible rather than through ambition pushing forward. Song Dynasty commentators noted this hexagram appeared when worthy officials received promotion, when beneficial innovations gained adoption, when ideas whose time had arrived spread through receptive acceptance rather than forceful advocacy. The Image Text reveals the method: \"The sun rises over the earth: the image of Progress. Thus the superior man himself brightens his bright virtue.\" Turner's sunset paradoxically illustrates this principle—the old warship moves toward darkness while embodying past glory, but the image captures how light itself demonstrates progress through its natural rising and setting. In the I-Ching's sequence, Jìn follows Dà Zhuàng (Great Power): after power reaches fullness, progress manifests through that power's proper application. The Temeraire advances toward its end with dignity, making way for what must rise next. Progress serves not the advancement of self but the unfolding of what naturally succeeds.
References & Citations
- The Fighting Temeraire — J.M.W. Turner-1839. Turner painted this in 1839 depicting the HMS Temeraire, a warship from the Battle of Trafalgar, being towed by a steam tugboat to be scrapped. The old sailing ship gives way to new steamship technology, showing progress through generational transition.