Divination in Da Liu Ren is determined by relationships of
five elements () and
yin and yang () between and among the Three Transmissions, Four Classes,
Twelve Generals, and the Heaven and Earth Plates. Each
double-hour of the day contains a cosmic board for daytime and evening divination. The Three Transmissions are derived from configurations of the
Heavenly Stem and
Earthly Branch of the date. The Four Classes are determined in a similar manner. Qi Men Dun Jia was widely used in China during the
Tang and
Song dynasties. By the time of the
Yuan dynasty, Da Liu Ren had overtaken Qi Men Dun Jia in popularity, at least according to source documents found in the caverns of Dunhuang. The overwhelming popularity of Da Liu Ren in ancient China was perhaps due to its higher degree of precision, in comparison with Qi Men Dun Jia. As is true with Qi Men Dun Jia, Da Liu Ren was first used in China for the purposes of devising military strategy and later developed into a more popular and widespread form of divination which grew to include medical divination, matchmaking, childbirth, travel, criminology, weather forecasting, etc. types of divination. In view of its complex nature, Da Liu Ren was regarded as the highest of the Three Styles, since mastery of its complex rule structure required many years of memorization. In contemporary China, few claim mastery of Da Liu Ren, while aging masters worry that younger generations of Chinese will come to disdain Da Liu Ren leading to its practice dying out in China. Da Liu Ren is further complicated by the necessity of mastering a large body of rules and regulations which govern the relationships named above. Da Liu Ren contains perhaps four times as many rules as Qi Men Dun Jia, for example. The extant historical literature on Da Liu Ren by far surpasses that of Qi Men Dun Jia. ==See also==