The ancient Chinese scholars are fond of applying the Yin and Yang
diagram to correlate almost everything. This book continues that
tradition and uses the model to study other non-"dialectical" theories
and models. The major finding qua contribution in this publication is
to point out that the four diagrams are equivalent to the BaGua or
BaGuaTu (BG), a set of eight ancient China symbolic
notations/gossip. Another finding is that dialectical/crab and frog
motion remark is just the opposite of a non-dialectical/crab and frog
motion (usually deductive, linear, or cause and effect) remark, or, at
best, they must meet half-way.
The two major tasks of this book are to, first, apply the author's
one-dot theory, which is shored up by the crab and frog motion model, to
convert other theories and models as well as studies and, second, apply
his theory and model to reinvent some well-known western-derived
theories and models and studies, such as game theory. The attempt is to
narrow down the gap between the East and the West scholarship/XueShu,
broadly defined, making the book of interest to Eastern and Western
philosophers and scholars alike.