Hexagram 38: Kui -

Opposition
Fine Art
Caravaggio — David Goliath

Caravaggio — David Goliath

Caravaggio (Unknown)

Caravaggio painted this dramatic work around 1599-1607 showing the young David holding the severed head of Goliath. The stark contrast between youth and giant, victory and defeat, illustrates fundamental opposition. Goliath's face may be a self-portrait, suggesting internal conflict.

Practical Integration

Caravaggio's dramatic canvas shows the young David holding the severed head of Goliath, painted sometime between 1599 and 1607. The boy's face carries no triumph, only troubled contemplation as he gazes at the giant's head—which art historians believe is Caravaggio's self-portrait. Light strikes David from the left while darkness surrounds the scene, emphasizing the stark opposition between youth and age, victor and vanquished, the living and the dead. The painting captures fundamental polarity made flesh: beauty and horror, innocence and experience, the small overcoming the large through means the large cannot anticipate. This is Kuí (睽), Opposition. The character depicts two eyes looking in opposite directions, seeing different things. Ancient diviners saw this configuration when Fire (Lí) sits above Lake (Duì)—flames rising upward while water flows down, two forces that cannot merge, that move in contrary directions despite sharing space. Caravaggio's painting embodies this structure: David and Goliath represent opposed principles that cannot reconcile, victor and victim locked in permanent separation despite—or because of—their intimate connection through violence. Caravaggio painted this dramatic work around 1599-1607 showing the young David holding the severed head of Goliath. The stark contrast between youth and giant, victory and defeat, illustrates fundamental opposition. Goliath's face may be a self-portrait, suggesting internal conflict. The Judgment text acknowledges the reality without resolution: \"Opposition. In small matters, good fortune.\" Zhou Dynasty court diviners understood that opposition differs from conflict—it describes forces that naturally diverge rather than forces competing for the same territory. Ancient practitioners noted this hexagram appeared when consultation revealed fundamental incompatibility, when family members held irreconcilable views, when partners discovered their paths led separate directions. The text promises success only in small matters because opposition cannot be overcome through grand gestures or decisive action—only through acknowledging divergence and working within its constraints. The Image Text offers unexpected counsel: \"Above, fire; below, the lake: the image of Opposition. Thus amid all fellowship the superior man retains his individuality.\" The ancient text does not seek to eliminate opposition but to understand its function. In the I-Ching's sequence, Kuí follows Jiā Rén (The Family): after establishing unity within the household, one encounters the external world's fundamental diversity. Caravaggio's self-portrait as the defeated giant suggests a deeper truth—we contain our own oppositions, carry within ourselves the conflicts we encounter without. The painting captures not resolution but recognition, the moment when opposition becomes visible and must be acknowledged rather than denied or destroyed.

References & Citations

  1. David Goliath — Caravaggio-Unknown. Caravaggio painted this dramatic work around 1599-1607 showing the young David holding the severed head of Goliath. The stark contrast between youth and giant, victory and defeat, illustrates fundamental opposition. Goliath's face may be a self-portrait, suggesting internal conflict.

The Judgment

Opposition. In small matters, good fortune. When people live in opposition and estrangement they cannot carry out great undertakings together, but in small matters success can still be expected. Opposition does not preclude all agreement.

kuíestrangement
xiǎo(in) little
shìmatters
promising

The Image

Above fire, below the lake. The superior man amid all fellowship retains his individuality. The cultured person is never led into baseness through intercourse with persons of another sort.

shàng(up) above
huǒ(is) (a
xià(and
(is) (a
kuíestrangement
jūn(a
young one
accordingly
tóngassociate
érbut (still)
(is) unique

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1悔亡喪馬勿逐自復見惡人無咎

huǐregret(s)
wángpass
sàng(a
horse
do not
zhú(be) pursue
(and) of
(it) returns
jiàn(to
è(the) evil
rén(in) people
is not
jiùto blame

Line 2遇主于巷無咎

meeting (with)
zhǔ(a
in
xiàngalley
no
jiùblame

Line 3見輿曳其牛掣其人天且劓無初有終

jiànseeing
輿(a
(being) held up
its
niúoxen
chèhindered
its
rénoccupant's
tiānhead shaved (bald to heaven)
qiěand (even
(his
regardless of
chū(a
yǒu(but) there is
zhōng(a

Line 4睽孤遇元夫交孚厲無咎

kuíestranged
(and) (all) alone
meet
yuán(a
(gentle)man
jiāoexchange
(in
(the) difficulty
(is) not
jiù(a) wrong(ness)

Line 5悔亡厥宗噬膚往何咎

huǐregret(s)
wángpass
juéits
zōngkind
shìeat
(soft
wǎng(in) going
where is
jiù(the) blame

Line 6睽孤見豕負塗載鬼一車先張之弧後說之弧匪寇婚媾往遇雨則吉

kuíestranged
(and) (all) alone
jiànseeing
shǐ(a) pig
covered
filth
zàihaul
guǐdemons
(and
chēwagon
xiān(at) first
zhāngstretch
zhīhis
(long)bow
hòu(and
shuōrelaxing
zhīhis
(long)bow
fěiit
kòu(a
hūn(but) (a) marital
gòusuitor
wǎngin going
greet
(the) rain
(and
promising

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

Fire (☲) above, Lake (☱) below—the Clinging mounted on the Joyous. Flame burns upward, water seeps downward. Movements in direct contrast.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

Wilhelm describes this as people whose wills are not the same but divergently directed. Yet opposition within a comprehensive whole serves useful functions—enabling differentiation by categories through which order is brought into the world.

Character Analysis

Paul and Feyd as productive opposition: different training, divergent philosophies, combat styles that define each other through contrast. The superior man amid deadly combat retains his essential nature.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Lake

Upper Trigram

Fire

Binary

110101

Energy State

Fire and water in contact but not mixing—maintained difference generating creative tension. Read bottom to top: joyous energy below, clinging clarity above, each preserving nature.

Trigram Symbolism

☲ Fire (Upper) - Clinging, ascending, passionate ☱ Lake (Lower) - Joyous, descending, reflective Elements that define each other through contrast.

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