Samonism

Samonism (:三元敎; : :삼원교), also known as Yenism, is a philosophy and belief system from ancient Jinye, which laid the foundation for much of Northern Yedal’s culture. The name Samonisim comes from the Yedalis word 삼원교, which means “Three Element Theory”. Song hak was a philosopher and teacher who lived from 872 to 941. He tried to integrate, , and with local beliefs, and taught his followers the results of his lifelong research.

The main idea of Samonism is based on, and in a two-element theory that there is originally heaven and earth. Humanity was added to establish a three-element theory that the world is consisted of Heaven, Earth, and Humanity. And those three elements interact and harmonize with each other through a medium, water connects Heaven and Earth (rain or snow from the sky, evaporate and go back to heaven), bird connects Heaven and Humanity (People believed that the bird is God's agent, and bring messages form the sky), and the tree connects Earth and Humanity (people build houses or eat fruits from the tree, and water them to make them grow).

Each element has two opposite characteristics, Heaven symbolizes dark-light (night-day), Earth symbolizes intensity-mildness (river and the mountains), Humanity symbolizes movement-stop (animal-plant). According to Samwongyeong, which is an religious text of Samonism, people can learn how to live a decent life from those characteristics. So many countries of Yedal have designated Samonism as the state religion and made it the fundamental ideology of the country.

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