Study series
Feng Shui Theory
This page explains Feng Shui Theory as a practical cultural reference, covering the core idea, common use cases, careful checks, and responsible limits so readers can compare traditional guidance with real conditions.
Feng shui theory forms the foundation for all practical feng shui applications.
This course covers the classical theories and principles.
This course series on Feng Shui Theory is organized as a study path, not as a promise of fixed outcomes. It introduces the main vocabulary, common situations, and judgment boundaries so learners can understand how the tradition is usually applied.
Work through the lessons by comparing concepts with observable conditions. When a lesson mentions direction, timing, symbols, or personal patterns, pause to ask what evidence is available and what remains interpretive.
For responsible use, keep professional matters in their proper lane. Cultural interpretation can support reflection and communication, but it should not replace medical, legal, financial, psychological, or safety advice.
A useful way to study Feng Shui Theory is to keep short notes after each lesson: what concept was introduced, what real condition it refers to, and what would make the conclusion uncertain.
The course is strongest when used slowly. Review earlier lessons before applying advanced ideas, and prefer careful observation over dramatic promises or fear-based claims.
What you will learn
- Yin Yang theory in feng shui
- Five elements interactions
- The nine stars of feng shui
- Classical feng shui formulas
- Connect each concept in Feng Shui Theory with a real observation before drawing conclusions.
- Prefer practical, reversible adjustments and keep high-stakes decisions outside metaphysical claims.
- Use the course as cultural education and reflective structure rather than guaranteed prediction.
All lessons
This page explains History of Feng Shui as a practical cultural reference, covering the core idea, common use cases, careful checks, and responsible limits so readers can compare traditional guidance with real conditions.
This page explains Yin Yang and Five Elements as a practical cultural reference, covering the core idea, common use cases, careful checks, and responsible limits so readers can compare traditional guidance with real conditions.
This page explains Ba Gua and Nine Palace Principles as a practical cultural reference, covering the core idea, common use cases, careful checks, and responsible limits so readers can compare traditional guidance with real conditions.