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Taegeuk

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Taegeuk
Hangul 태극
Hanja 太極
Revised
Romanization
Taegeuk
McCune-
Reischauer
T'aegŭk
Taegeukgi, the flag of South Korea, with a blue and red Taegeuk in the center.
Sam-Taegeuk
Alternative Sam-Taegeuk

Taegeuk is the Korean cognate of Taiji, the Taoist concept of yin and yang, from which all is actualized. In South Korea, the Taegeuk symbol is typically portrayed in red (eum, or ground) and blue (yang, or heaven). The red and blue are portrayed upside down to accommodate the harmony of nature. The red (eum) on the flag is intended to pair up with the actual heaven (yang) and create a harmony with blue, which would pair up with the actual ground (eum). An example would be have two magnets adjoining each other, "Taegeuk" symbol being in the middle. If the symbol is portrayed according to how humans view the world, blue on the top would repel the heaven and red on the ground would repel the ground; this would break the harmony of nature.

The Taegeuk symbol is most prominently displayed on South Korea's national flag, called the Taegeukgi (along with four of the eight Palgwae diagrams). Because of the Taegeuk's association with the national flag, it is often used as a patriotic symbol, as are the colors red and blue.

A popular variant in Korea is the Sam-Taegeuk (三太極), which adds a yellow lobe, representing man, to the red and blue. The Sam-Taegeuk is frequently seen as a design on the face of fans.

Taegeuk (as well as palgwe) is also a series of Taekwondo forms practiced by Kukkiwon member instructors and their students; see Taeguk (Taekwondo).

In the film Attack the Gas Station!, a character argues that Pepsi is a Korean product because it bears a logo similar to the Taegeuk.

Prior to the end of the 2004 Summer Paralympics, the International Paralympic Committee used three Tae-Geuks in its logo. It was replaced with three Agitos. The usage started at the 1988 Summer Paralympics in Seoul, using five Tae-Geuk designs arranged similarly to the Olympic Rings, with a similar five color set.

[edit] See also

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