About
About vaken
vaken is a decision tool built around the I Ching, the 3,000-year-old Chinese Book of Changes. You type a question you are stuck on, cast a hexagram, and read an AI-written interpretation grounded in the Wilhelm/Baynes 1950 English translation — the same edition that Carl Jung wrote a foreword for, Philip K. Dick used to plot The Man in the High Castle, and composer John Cage used to generate Music of Changes. There is no horoscope, no birth chart, no daily affirmation. There is one reading at a time, about the specific thing you typed.
The product is a web app at vaken.app. The first reading is free with no account. Free users get three readings a day. Members pay $9.99 per month or $79 per year for unlimited readings.
What vaken is not
vaken is not a chatbot, a meditation app, or a wellness platform. It does not gamify your day with streaks or daily-draw rituals. It does not validate your existing position. It is not designed to make you feel good — it is designed to make you see what you have been avoiding. If you want a tool that tells you what you want to hear, this is the wrong tool.
Methodology
Each reading uses the three-coin casting method, which has been the standard simulation of the original yarrow-stalk procedure for at least 800 years. Three coins are tossed six times, building a hexagram from bottom to top. Coins are simulated in the browser using JavaScript’s Math.random() — a pseudo-random source that, like physical coins, produces a hexagram before the model ever sees it. The model never selects the hexagram; the model only reads it.
The reading itself is generated by DeepSeek (deepseek-chat), a large language model chosen because it produces interpretations that are specific to the question rather than templated. The model is prompted with three things: the user’s question, the primary hexagram, and any changing lines (with the resulting secondary hexagram if present). The interpretation is grounded in the Wilhelm/Baynes 1950 English translation.
vaken does not invent hexagrams, judgments, or images. The 64 hexagrams, their judgments, their images, and the structural logic of changing lines come from the canonical text. The model’s job is to read your question through the hexagram, not to invent the hexagram.
Who built it
vaken is built by Life Fine Tuning, a small independent software studio. The studio releases software under its own name rather than individual bylines. The studio has no academic affiliation with any university Sinology department and does not claim to be a religious or spiritual authority on the I Ching. It is a software studio building a tool that uses the I Ching as its underlying framework, in the same way a chess analysis tool uses chess rules without claiming to be a grandmaster.
Why this approach
Most I Ching apps treat the text as a fortune cookie — they give you a paragraph copy-pasted from a public-domain translation and send you on your way. vaken’s bet is that the value of the I Ching is not in the static text but in the friction between the text and your specific situation. A generic paragraph about Hexagram 11 (Peace) is not as useful as a reading that addresses the specific question you asked, written in the spirit of Wilhelm/Baynes by a model that has read the entire corpus.
The other bet is that you do not have to believe in divination for the I Ching to work. The hexagram is generated by chance. The randomness breaks the loop your conscious mind is stuck in. Carl Jung called this synchronicity. A more neutral framing is that random input forces your mind out of its existing model and into a different frame. The framework is useful whether you read it mystically or rationally.
Sources and translations
The canonical English text used is Richard Wilhelm and Cary F. Baynes, The I Ching or Book of Changes, Bollingen Series XIX, Princeton University Press, third edition 1967 (first English edition 1950).
For comparative reading we recommend:
- John Blofeld, I Ching: The Book of Change (1965)
- Stephen Karcher, Total I Ching: Myths for Change (2003)
- Rudolf Ritsema and Stephen Karcher, The Original I Ching Oracle (1994)
- Carl G. Jung, foreword to Wilhelm/Baynes (1949)
Privacy and data
You can use vaken completely anonymously — no account, no email, no tracking beyond what’s necessary to count daily readings per IP. If you create an account, we store your reading history. We do not sell your data. We do not train AI on your readings. We do not ask for your birthday, your name, or your location. See the privacy policy for the details.
Contact
vaken is reachable on X at @getvaken and on Instagram at @getvaken. For press, partnership, or correction requests, email oracle@lifefinetuning.com.