Here is the relevant page:

The I Ching, or, Book of Changes (Bollingen Series XIX) The Richard Wilhelm Translation rendered into English by Cary F. Baynes with a Foreward by C.G. Jung, Princeton, 1967
(You read that right - strangely, this book was translated first into German and then into English, for some reason.)
The name of this hexagram is translated differently by Pearson as "double vision" - which is an interesting way to think of dialectic:

The Original I Ching: An Authentic Translation of the Book of Changes translated by Margaret J. Pearson (2011)
In the Walker translation, we read: "...every opposition carries within it the seeds of agreement", and:

The I Ching or Book of Changes: A Guide to Life's Turning Points translated by Brian Browne Walker (2019)
Creating "unity by force" reminds my of what Hegel says about the understanding - that it avoids contradiction and tries to impose rigid distinctions.
In the interpretation of Wang Bi (王弼) (226 – 249), we read:

The Classic of Changes: A New Translation of the I Ching as Interpreted by Wang Bi, translated by Richard John Lynn (2004)