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Glossary›Feng Shui

Glossary

Feng Shui

Ancient Chinese practice of arranging space to harmonize with qi—the flow of vital energy—through orientation, landscape, and the five elements.

What is Feng Shui?

Feng shui is a traditional form of geomancy that originated in ancient China. The term literally means “wind-water” (i.e., fluid). From ancient times, landscapes and bodies of water were thought to direct the flow of the universal qi—“cosmic current” or energy—through places and structures. More broadly, feng shui includes astronomical, astrological, architectural, cosmological, geographical, and topographical dimensions. Historically, and in many parts of the contemporary Chinese world, feng shui has been used to determine the orientation of buildings, dwellings, and spiritually significant structures such as tombs.

It is rooted in Daoist concepts of yinyang and the five elements: water, wood, fire, earth, and metal. The practice seeks to align human environments with invisible energies to promote health, prosperity, and well-being.

Origins & Lineage

Likely the oldest continuing geographic tradition, feng shui goes back to the early Zhou dynasty (1046–256 BCE). Some of the foundations of feng shui go back more than 3,500 years before the invention of the magnetic compass. It originated in Chinese astronomy. Archaeologists digging at the Banpo and Puyang sites in China’s Henan province found Neolithic tombs from around 6000–4000 BCE arranged on deliberate north-south axes. Shell mosaics of the Azure Dragon and White Tiger were laid beside a corpse—the same two cardinal-direction symbols still used in modern feng shui.

The term “feng shui” (literally, “wind water”) first appeared in The Book of Burial, attributed to Guo Pu (276–324 CE), which asserts that wind disperses qi and water stops it. Guo Pu is the author of The Book of Burial, the first-ever and the most authoritative source of feng shui doctrine and the first book to address the concept of feng shui in the history of China, making Guo Pu the first person historically to define feng shui, and therefore, Guo Pu is usually called the father of feng shui in China.

Feng shui split into two schools during the Tang and Song dynasties, and both still operate today. Form School (Luan Tou, 峦头) came first. Its founder, Yang Yun-Song—a court feng shui master in the late Tang (around the 9th century)—read landforms to find good Qi. Compass School (Li Qi, 理气) came next, refined during the Song dynasty (960–1279 CE) by Master Lai Wen-Jun and later scholars. It used the Luopan—a magnetic compass ringed with up to 40 concentric bands of trigrams, stars, and time cycles.

After Richard Nixon’s visit to the People’s Republic of China in 1972, feng shui practices became popular in the United States.

How It’s Practiced

There are two commonly known schools of classical feng shui: the Form school (Chiangsi school) and the Compass school (Fujian school). The Form school, founded by Yang Yun-Sung in the 800s ce, involves assessing yinyang balance and qi flow in natural sites and taking features such as rivers, trees, and mountains into consideration to identify the optimal place for a burial site or home or other building. The invention of a magnetic compass, called the luopan, heralded the rise of the Compass school in the 900s, which focuses not on direct study of natural features but rather complex calculations involving compass directions and astrology. The luopan includes markings for 24 directions (also known as the Twenty Four Mountains), and the needle points to the south magnetic pole.

Classical practitioners conduct a site analysis that includes external landforms (mountains, water, roads, neighboring structures), precise compass directions, and the time factor—particularly the construction date of the building. The term for Feng Shui in ancient Chinese texts was originally Kan Yu, which means ‘observe the ways of Heaven and investigate the ways of Earth’.

Practitioners use the bagua—an octagonal energy map—to divide a space into sectors corresponding to life areas such as wealth, relationships, career, and health. Originating from the I Ching and the Lo Shu, bagua is literally translated as “eight house.” It consists of eight external spaces or guas and a central one called the Tai Ji or center. Adjustments include placement of water features, mirrors, colors corresponding to the five elements, furniture arrangement, and decluttering to encourage smooth energy flow.

Feng Shui Today

Environmental scientists and landscape architects have researched traditional feng shui and its methodologies. Architects study feng shui as an Asian architectural tradition. In contemporary practice, seekers encounter feng shui primarily through interior design consultants, books, workshops, and online courses. Some practitioners offer residential or commercial consultations using classical methods with a luopan compass, while others teach simplified Western adaptations.

In the 1980s, feng shui master Thomas Lin Yun Rinpoche founded the influential Black Hat Sect Tantric Buddhist (BTB) style of feng shui in Berkeley, California. This form of feng shui became widely popular in the West. The popular “Western” or “Black Hat Sect (BTB)” Feng Shui, which uses the Bagua map aligned to the front door without a compass, is a modern simplification. While it can be a useful starting point for beginners, it is not part of the two main branches of Classical Feng Shui as it omits the crucial factors of compass direction and time.

Feng shui is now applied in architecture, urban planning, landscape design, interior decoration, and personal space arrangement. Some corporations consult feng shui experts when designing offices or selecting building sites.

Common Misconceptions

Feng shui is not a religion, though it draws on Daoist and Confucian philosophy. It is not fortune-telling or divination, though it shares some cosmological frameworks with Chinese astrology. It is not simply interior decorating with Asian aesthetics—classical feng shui involves complex mathematical formulas, precise compass measurements, and detailed landform analysis.

The psychologist Stuart Vyse has called feng shui “a very popular superstition.” Penn and Teller devised a test in which the same dwelling was visited by five different feng shui consultants: each produced a different opinion about the dwelling, showing there is no consistency in the professional practice of feng shui. Critics note that simplified Western forms often lack the rigor and consistency of traditional methods.

Feng shui is not about placing crystals or lucky charms everywhere. While traditional practice does use symbolic objects, classical feng shui emphasizes environmental features—real water, mountains, landforms—and precise directional calculations rather than decorative enhancers.

How to Begin

For those interested in exploring feng shui authentically, begin by distinguishing between classical Chinese feng shui and contemporary Western adaptations. Read foundational texts: The Book of Burial by Guo Pu (available in translation) introduces the core principles. Stephen Skinner’s Guide to the Feng Shui Compass provides an in-depth look at the luopan and classical methods.

Consider studying with a teacher trained in Form School and Compass School techniques. Organizations such as the International Feng Shui Guild and the Feng Shui Society maintain directories of certified practitioners. Avoid practitioners who promise instant wealth or make grandiose claims; reputable consultants frame feng shui as one factor among many influencing a space.

Start practically by observing your own environment: note where natural light enters, how energy (foot traffic) flows through rooms, and what landforms or structures surround your home. Classical feng shui is grounded in careful observation of the physical world, not mysticism.

Related terms

qi gongtaoismyin yangfive elementsi chingsacred geometry
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