On 3/5/07, Ralph Shumaker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
James G. Sack (jim) wrote:

>Every method and scheme and process that comes along ends up being
>pitched (or caught?) by _someone_ as the solution to all the world's
>problems. None of them are, of course. The challenge is to discover what
>is useful, where. Pardon the generalized handwaving, but I really do
>think a yin/yang approach works better than a black/white one.

And yet the symbol for yin/yang is black/white.

With a little bit of each in the other and a curvy border meant to
represent a dynamic boundary rendered as static only because paper is
so. Of course, now that we have computers we can do this:
http://personal.denison.edu/~stocker/aniyin.gif

Although it's missing the "yin in yang" and "yang in yin".

(Found at http://personal.denison.edu/~stocker/yinyanganimated.html --
and gotta love that mid-90's web style! His home page is even
"better".)

-Chuck

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