Hexagram 39: Jian -

Obstruction
Fine Art
Pieter Bruegel the Elder — The Tower of Babel

Pieter Bruegel the Elder — The Tower of Babel

Pieter Bruegel the Elder (1563)

Bruegel painted this in 1563 depicting the Biblical Tower of Babel, a massive structure spiraling toward the heavens but incomplete. The painting shows human ambition encountering obstruction, with the tower representing plans that cannot be completed due to divine intervention and human discord.

Practical Integration

Pieter Bruegel the Elder painted the Biblical Tower of Babel in 1563, depicting a massive spiral structure rising toward the heavens but visibly incomplete. The tower dominates the landscape, its thousands of arches and levels creating a cityscape turned vertical. Workers swarm across scaffolding, cranes lift materials, yet the upper levels remain unfinished, exposed to sky. Bruegel renders the architecture with precise detail drawn from Rome's Colosseum, but the structure cannot complete itself—the top remains open, the ambition literally interrupted. The painting captures monumental effort meeting immovable obstacle, human construction confronting limits it cannot overcome. This is Jiǎn (蹇), Obstruction. The character depicts a lame person, someone whose progress is impeded. Ancient diviners saw this configuration when Water (Kǎn) sits above Mountain (Gèn)—danger and difficulty piling up ahead, stillness and immobility beneath. Bruegel's tower embodies this structure: the workers face the insurmountable task above (water's abyss) while the massive foundation locks them into commitment to a project that cannot be finished (mountain's immobility). The painting captures what practitioners described as \"danger in front, inability to advance.\" Bruegel painted this in 1563 depicting the Biblical Tower of Babel, a massive structure spiraling toward the heavens but incomplete. The painting shows human ambition encountering obstruction, with the tower representing plans that cannot be completed due to divine intervention and human discord. The Judgment text speaks with careful emphasis: \"Obstruction. The southwest furthers. The northeast does not further. It furthers one to see the great man. Perseverance brings good fortune.\" Zhou Dynasty practitioners understood that obstruction requires recognizing what cannot be overcome through direct advance. The text specifies direction—southwest represents the yielding and receptive approach, while northeast suggests pushing against resistance. Ancient commentators noted this hexagram appeared when military campaigns faced impassable terrain, when projects encountered fundamental barriers, when plans met obstacles that force revision rather than merely delay. The tower builders press forward when the text counsels turning back. The Image Text reveals the method for navigating obstruction: \"Water on the mountain: the image of Obstruction. Thus the superior man turns his attention to himself and molds his character.\" When external advance proves impossible, the energy redirects inward. Bruegel painted this during the religious conflicts that would tear the Netherlands apart—his tower depicts collective ambition meeting divine refusal, human unity fragmenting through language confusion. In the I-Ching's sequence, Jiǎn follows Kuí (Opposition): after recognizing fundamental divergence, one encounters the obstacles that prevent forcing unity. The painting stands as permanent monument to incomplete ambition, to the moment when obstruction becomes absolute and the only question becomes what to do with energy that cannot move forward.

References & Citations

  1. The Tower of Babel — Pieter Bruegel the Elder-1563. Bruegel painted this in 1563 depicting the Biblical Tower of Babel, a massive structure spiraling toward the heavens but incomplete. The painting shows human ambition encountering obstruction, with the tower representing plans that cannot be completed due to divine intervention and human discord.

The Judgment

蹇。利西南,不利东北。利见大人。贞吉。暂停、退却、集结盟友、搵到适当领导。表面向后运动是克服的准备。

jiǎnimpasse
worthwhile
西(from) west
nán(and
(and
worthwhile
dōng(from) east
běi(and
worthwhile
jiànto see
(a
rénhuman being
zhēnpersistence
(is) promising

The Image

山上有水,蹇。君子以反身修德。劣等人责怪其他人;上等人在自己里面寻求错误,透过内省外部障碍变成内在丰富的机会。

shān(a
shàngover
yǒuis
shuǐwater
jiǎnimpasse
jūn(a
young one
accordingly
fǎnturns (the
shēnbodily
xiūto work (up)on
(the) character

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1往蹇來譽

wǎng(if
jiǎn(is) impassable
lái(then) coming (back)
praise(worthy)

Line 2王臣蹇蹇匪躬之故

wáng(a
chénminister
jiǎn(is
jiǎn(and) interrupted
fěi(but
gōnga person
zhīone ...'s
cause

Line 3往蹇來反

wǎng(if
jiǎn(is) impassable
lái(then) coming (back)
fǎnturning around

Line 4往蹇來連

wǎng(if
jiǎn(is) impassable
lái(then) coming (back)
liánalliance(s)

Line 5大蹇朋來

(at) (a) major
jiǎnimpasse
péngcompanions
láicome

Line 6往蹇來碩吉

wǎng(if
jiǎn(is) impassable
lái(then) coming (back)
shuòripeness
promising

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

水(☵)在上,山(☶)在下——险在前面,艰在后面。被障碍包围。

Period

周代

Traditional Use

Wilhelm 描述这个为在时间过程中出现但能够同应该克服的障碍。西南(退却、集结)有利。东北(直接前进)不利。见大人——搵到适当领导——有利。

Character Analysis

Case 对 Tessier-Ashpool 的运行:不能直接克服,必须退却准备,同志同道合盟友加入,服从合格领导(甚至 AI 领导),透过表面向后运动坚持向目标。

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Upper Trigram

Binary

001010

Energy State

水在山上——前面危险,后面静止。由下读到上:不动障碍作为基础,上面流动危险。没地方直接前进。

Trigram Symbolism

☵ 水(上)— 险,危险,流动 ☶ 山(下)— 静,坚固,阻挡 需要内在工作同间接方法的障碍。

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