You're probably thinking about the Tajitu (literally "diagram of the supreme ultimate") symbol of Yin/Yang, representing the duality of most things: male and female, light and dark, low and high, hot and cold, etc. Yin is female and Yang is male. They fit together as two parts of a whole.
It does not stand for good or evil, and Taoist philosophy generally discounts good/bad distinctions as superficial labels, preferring to focus on the idea of balance. Everything has both yin and yang aspects, although yin or yang elements may manifest more strongly in different objects or at different times. Yin/Yang constantly interacts, never existing in absolute stasis. The idea that Yin and Yang has a moral dimension originated in the Confucian school around the second century BCE.
It is impossible to talk about Yin or Yang without some reference to the opposite, since Yin/Yang are bound together as parts of a mutual whole. A race with only men or only women would disappear in a single generation; but men and women together create new generations that allow the race they mutually create (and mutually come from) to survive. The interaction of the two gives birth to things.
The moon is spherical and is lit by the sun. Only the side facing the sun can be lit by the sun. The other side is dark. If you were to stand on the moon you would find that the light side of the moon is experiencing day while the dark side is experiencing night.
The Apollo moon missions landed on the light side of the moon. The far side of the moon, often referred to as the "dark side," is not actually dark but is simply the side that always faces away from Earth.
The terminator is the line that separates "day" and "night" (the light and dark part of the Moon). It is interesting to note that close to the terminator, you can see more details, because of the shadows cast by mountains and craters.
one side of the moon receives light from the sun and the other will never get light..that side is called the dark side of the moon..so yes the moon is dark and also receives sunlight...(the moon does not make any of its own light)
Any side of the moon is colder when it's dark, and warmer when it's light. Just like Earth.
A shockwave has a light and dark side by when the particles in the shochwave are reflected upon from a source it makes a light and dark side, like the moon on the earth sort of.
There is no life anywhere on the moon - light or dark side.
On the opposite side from where the light is hitting the object. If the light side is on the left and the dark side is on the right, then the shadow is also on the right.
Forever, because the moon doesn't spin so the light side is always light and the dark side is alaways dark.
I learned that light is a great symbol in all religion. It is a great symbol because think of it like this darkness is the bad side and light is the good side. So it basically means that you have will are good and are on the good side always. The symbol means to remember not to fight or start war. As light is the symbol of happiness, hope, will, good not bad. That is basically all it means.
The Dark Side of Light - 2014 was released on: USA: 10 April 2014 (Tribeca Film Festival)
The moon is spherical and is lit by the sun. Only the side facing the sun can be lit by the sun. The other side is dark. If you were to stand on the moon you would find that the light side of the moon is experiencing day while the dark side is experiencing night.
Nothing. There is no life on the moon, dark side or light side.
Light side is more difficult, I had an easy time when i went dark right away, powers are awesome.
The Apollo moon missions landed on the light side of the moon. The far side of the moon, often referred to as the "dark side," is not actually dark but is simply the side that always faces away from Earth.
Because without it there is no light side.
The symbol for Light-Dependent Resistor (LDR) is a resistor symbol with photo-sensitive material added to one side. It looks like a regular resistor with one side having a shaded area to represent its light sensitivity.