In describing "go energy" and "stop energy", you're getting very close to a full understanding of yang qi and yin qi, in the Yinyang School of Classical Chinese Philosophy. The dyadic processual nature of yang qi and yin qi is best described in The Philosophical Foundations of Classical Chinese Medicine, by Keekok Lee, http://www.keekoklee.org/books.html .
In describing "go energy" and "stop energy", you're getting very close to a full understanding of yang qi and yin qi, in the Yinyang School of Classical Chinese Philosophy. The dyadic processual nature of yang qi and yin qi is best described in The Philosophical Foundations of Classical Chinese Medicine, by Keekok Lee, http://www.keekoklee.org/books.html .
For a fast look into yang qi and yin qi, search on the term in this interview transcript at https://daviding.wordpress.com/2023/04/19/2021-06-16-keekok-lee-philosophy-of-chinese-medicine-1/
We've been working on research towards a postcolonial constructive philosophy bridging American pragmatism and the Yinyang School, see https://coevolving.com/commons/2024-01-sciencing-philosophizing-jisss