King James Association Disciplinary Prescription (set of 3 volumes)

What is unique about the appearance of this book (:.. cyan 1. Qing): .. Yun Lu 1. Lu Yun and other careful readers will notice that this is a book with almost every page divided into two columns, because there are no footnotes at the bottom of every page! Deduct two pages of preface, table of contents, title page of each chapter and bibliography attached to each chapter. This 267-page book has footnotes at the bottom of each page, and there are more than one, at least two. In fact, according to the statistics in table 1, the average number of footnotes in each chapter varies, but there are at least three and more than four. The average number of footnotes in the whole book is close to four, which is very inconsistent with the convention of general academic books (). As can be seen from the table 1, the bibliography alone accounts for 59 pages, accounting for 20% of the book's length, and it is basically between chapters. Repeated projects are too numerous to mention. Not only that, the complete spatio-temporal data of these books or papers that are repeatedly quoted between chapters will be marked again when each chapter first appears in the footnote at the bottom of each page. Footnotes and bibliography make the author, title, time and place, page number and other information account for less than half of the book, at least more than one third. On the bright side, this is an extremely friendly approach for readers, because almost every time readers see a piece of data being cited, they don't have to go far to know the complete source, and repeatedly seeing the same source information can also help beginners to learn again and again, which has a deepening effect. However, in case readers need enlightenment as expected, as long as they are familiar with the academic situation of humanities and social sciences, it may not be difficult to see that this is the result of hastily compiling original journal papers into books [9], rather than a planned and efficient special book-ordering contract. Qin Ding Jieji Fang was written in the fourth year of Qing Qianlong (1739), with dozens of pieces led by Zhuang Yunlu. Emperor Qianlong personally prefaced it and named it Hee Sa's Flat Square Book. It is said in the Preface to Imperial System that those who distinguish between husband and wife respect the discipline of heaven and earth. The book is collected in the sub-volume of Sikuquanshu. The so-called age refers to the five years of year, month, day and star. The so-called square refers to five directions: east, south, west, north and middle. The so-called coordinated identification discipline is to coordinate and identify the relationship between people and weather (five disciplines) and geographical location (five aspects), and adapt to the weather and geographical location, so as to seek advantages and avoid disadvantages and pray for disaster elimination. Book * * * 36 volumes, including the original volume 2, positive example 6, attention 1, avoidance 1, public regulation 2, chronology 6, monthly table 12, daily table 1, utilization 2, appendix 1, and discrimination 1. It is a national universal auspicious anthology textbook compiled by the royal family. This paper analyzes the theory of choosing auspicious days in past dynasties, removes the rough and the fine, removes the false and preserves the true, corrects the mistakes and fallacies of secular miscellaneous sayings one by one, and studies and sorts out a set of methods for choosing auspicious days from the aspects of yin and yang, geomantic omen, astrology and numerology, which has become the norm for people to choose auspicious days. The content involved is closely related to people's food, clothing, housing and transportation, and has strong practicability and operability. It can be said that it is the representative work of auspicious anthology in ancient China. Some people even think that if you are familiar with the prescriptions of King James Association, you can know astronomy, geography and communication.