Earth and moon were regarded as a unity and was assigned the number 2.
Sun, earth and moon were too regarded as a unity and was assigned the number 3.
From these the other numbers were computed:
23 43 27 28 04 49 41 31 52 58 22 47 18 17 26 45
35 05 21 48 64 63 38 39 56 60 30 29 50 03 14 08
20 34 42 32 59 55 61 62 53 54 37 40 57 51 09 16
12 11 25 46 06 36 10 15 33 19 13 07 44 24 01 02
The numbers are the hexagram numbers of I Ching and put in this order the hexagrams are a counting system from 2 to 65 and from 65 to 2; the hexagrams are counted both the natural way and reversed
This is the legendary Lien Shan oracle (Mountains Standing Together). It’s a neolithic tidetable calendar. You find all the details and the way to count hexagrams explained on my www below (a blog)
The original signs looked like the wellknown Tordos Vinca signs and I’m sure, that advanced scolars can use Lien Shan to translate many of the today unknown neolithic signs e.g. from predynastic egypt
What makes this interesting to philosophy is the way of regarding earth and moon and sun, earth and moon as unities
I’ve reconstructed the oracle from a “hidden code” in a prehistoric legend from the ancient chinese script called “the Ten Wings” (8th wing Shuo Kua). The tidetable is functional