In Chinese philosophy and religion, two principles, one negative, dark, and feminine (yin) and one positive, bright, and masculine (yang), from whose interaction all things are produced and all things are dissolved. As a concept the two polar elements referred originally to the shady and sunny sides of a valley or a hill but it developed into the relationship of any contrasting pair: those specified above (female-male, etc.) as well as cold-hot, wet-dry, weak-strong, etc. It is not a distinct system of thought by itself but permeates Chinese life and thought. A balance of yin and yang is essential to health. A deficiency of either principle can manifest as disease. (Encyclopedia Americana)
Qi, Baishi, 1864-1957 -- Exhibitions. : Tracing the past, drawing the future : master ink painters in twentieth-century China / Xiaoneng Yang ; essays by Zaixin Hong ... [and others] ; catalogue entries by Gao Tianmin ... [and others]
2010
1
Qi, Bangyuan. : The great flowing river : a memoir of China, from Manchuria to Taiwan / Chi Pang-yuan ; edited and translated by John Balcom ; with an introduction by David Der-wei Wang
Qi ye po chan fa China : Government intervention in the reorganisation of listed companies in China / Huimiao Zhao, Beijing University of Chemical Technology
2019
1
Qi yue (Wuhan, China) : Buglers on the Home Front : the wartime practice of the qiyue school / Yunzhong Shu
2000
1
QÌ⁴abil, AhÌĐmad, 1957-2021 : Ahmad QaÌ⁴bel and contemporary Islamic thought : rational Shariah in twenty-first-century Iran / Lloyd Ridgeon