Guest guest Posted September 7, 2004 Report Share Posted September 7, 2004 In a message dated 9/6/2004 5:40:30 PM Central Daylight Time, kyuseiki writes: It is in essence an aberration to make a Virgo from a Libra or an Aries from a Pisces, because the current interpretation of the Zodiac (i.e., those meanings laden with astrological history), has been developed within the framework of 'tropical astrology.' " those meanings laden with astrological history " refutes the tropical scheme, not the sidereal. tropicalist interpretation is rife with meanings and rulerships originally ascribed to the sidereal signs. there may be gaps in the sidereal literature, due to the ignorance within the tropical hegemony. there is a gigantic truth which ithe tropicalist meets with a blind eye: when you look at the moon amidst the stars of leo or virgo or taurus or whichever, you must believe what you see. Only fools cannot find this fundamental truth. If the tropical community were one bit interested in furthering the science of astrology, they would join forces, accept the sidereal " view " (literally, not figuratively, as the tropicalist is wont to do), and devote their research to that end. Unfortunately, though, astrology long-ago became a coffeetable-book. /// chris wing /// Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 7, 2004 Report Share Posted September 7, 2004 , cpwing44@a... wrote: > gigantic truth which ithe tropicalist meets with a blind eye: when you look > at the moon amidst the stars of leo or virgo or taurus or whichever, you must > believe what you see. Only fools cannot find this fundamental truth. If the > tropical community were one bit interested in furthering the science of > astrology, they would join forces, accept the sidereal " view " (literally, not > figuratively, as the tropicalist is wont to do), and devote their research to that > end. Unfortunately, though, astrology long-ago became a coffeetable-book. I agree. It is this alone that convinced me of the inherent truth in the sidereal approach to astrology. Otherwise one ends up (as Guinard has) with an astrology that is entirely Sun-centred, one in which the Sun is the only star, through which all other stellar influences are mediated. I recall that the late Dane Rudhyar wrote a book called 'The Sun Is Also A Star' which might have been better entitled 'The Sun Is The Only Star.' Guinard also made an error in his article: a sidereal Aries cannot become a tropical Pisces, as he stated in his critique. Andrew Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 7, 2004 Report Share Posted September 7, 2004 Chris... For some it remains on the coffee table.... For others(and I include yourself) it will always be a kaleidoscope of evolution, synchronism & the understanding of one's behavior and one's self. Jivio cpwing44 wrote: In a message dated 9/6/2004 5:40:30 PM Central Daylight Time, kyuseiki writes: It is in essence an aberration to make a Virgo from a Libra or an Aries from a Pisces, because the current interpretation of the Zodiac (i.e., those meanings laden with astrological history), has been developed within the framework of 'tropical astrology.' " those meanings laden with astrological history " refutes the tropical scheme, not the sidereal. tropicalist interpretation is rife with meanings and rulerships originally ascribed to the sidereal signs. there may be gaps in the sidereal literature, due to the ignorance within the tropical hegemony. there is a gigantic truth which ithe tropicalist meets with a blind eye: when you look at the moon amidst the stars of leo or virgo or taurus or whichever, you must believe what you see. Only fools cannot find this fundamental truth. If the tropical community were one bit interested in furthering the science of astrology, they would join forces, accept the sidereal " view " (literally, not figuratively, as the tropicalist is wont to do), and devote their research to that end. Unfortunately, though, astrology long-ago became a coffeetable-book. /// chris wing /// Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 8, 2004 Report Share Posted September 8, 2004 Hi Andrew, In response to your post, first it goes without saying that all evidence is that the 12 sign zodiac in India was imported at a much later date than the traditionalists believe. There are even Tropical references in a few of India's earliest astrological texts. So as far as I'm concerned, India has no support for a sidereal zodiac prior to Hellenistic times. However, there is abundant evidence that a sidereal zodiac existed in Mesopotamia prior to Hellenistic times. Please go to: http://users.snowcrest.net/sunrise/LostZodiac.htm Scroll down and click on " The Zodiac in Mesopotamia. " Our best references regarding a sidereal zodiac are from scholarly university sources, so I'm not sure what Patrice Guinard meant by some of his statements. He seems to be ignorant of the lastest discoveries by David Pingree and other scholars. I have no idea what 'the three star markers are' in your quote below. Also, since you didn't quote Schnabel, I don't know what he actually said. Sincerely, Therese At 05:59 PM 9/6/04 -0000, you wrote: >Hi. I am new to this list but I have a question which I hope some of >you might be able to help me answer. > >Patrice Guinard writes (see link): > >http://cura.free.fr/10athem3.html > >'The theories of Cyril Fagan, as astrologer of Irish origin and the >instigator and inspiration for western sidereal astrology, are in part >based on this error by Schnabel. [46] In his practice, Fagan refers >only to planetary aspects and angles... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 8, 2004 Report Share Posted September 8, 2004 , Therese Hamilton <eastwest@s...> wrote: > In response to your post, first it goes without saying that all evidence is > that the 12 sign zodiac in India was imported at a much later date than the > traditionalists believe. There are even Tropical references in a few of > India's earliest astrological texts. So as far as I'm concerned, India has > no support for a sidereal zodiac prior to Hellenistic times. I agree. I have never believed that the sidereal zodiac was 'revealed' by the rishis before it was ever known anywhere else in the world. > Our best references regarding a sidereal zodiac are from scholarly > university sources, so I'm not sure what Patrice Guinard meant by some of > his statements. He seems to be ignorant of the lastest discoveries by David > Pingree and other scholars. I have no idea what 'the three star markers > are' in your quote below. Also, since you didn't quote Schnabel, I don't > know what he actually said. Guinard writes: 'Let us stay a moment longer with the topic of siderealist pseudo-astrology, not because its representatives occupy a significant place among astrologers, but rather because they are privileged correspondants -- and the easy target -- of scientific anti-astrology. Their principal argument concerns the supposedly historic precedent of a so-called sidereal Zodiac. That argument usually calls to its support the beginning of the fifth tablet of the cosmogenic tale 'Enuma Elish' [35] created in the 2nd millenium B.C. and recorded in a Babylonian version dating back to approximately 1200 B.C.: 'He [Marduk] gave term to the year, defined its limits, [and], for each of the twelve months, put in place three stars.' [36] This passage stipulates the association of only three stars with each of the twelve months of the year, nothing more. Siderealists deduce from that basis that there existed at that point in time a Zodiac divided into decans based on sidereal constellations! Now, in point of fact all one has to hand here is a *marking by the calendar* of the rising of stars in the 36 decans of 10 days duration (assimilated only much later into Greco-Egyptian astrology) in the course of the secular year. Similar documents, the 'diagonal calendars,' have been found in Egyptian tombs of the Middle Kingdom. The oldest of them dates back to the beginning of the 21st century B.C. [37] Neugebauer has shown that these constellations lie along a southern band rougly parallel to the ecliptic. [38] The theories of Cyril Fagan, an astrologer of Irish origin and the instigator and inspiration for Western sidereal astrology, are in part based on this error by Schnabel. [46]' Please see the entire essay I referenced in my initial post. Note [47] in the essay references David Pingree, 'Astronomy and Astrology in India and Iran,' in Isis, vol. 54, no. 2, 1963. It is certainly possible that the latest discoveries by Pingree were made well after 1963, and that Guinard is completely unaware of these discoveries, or chooses not to be aware of them. Please note that I am not posting this material in order to cast doubt on the sidereal system: of the validity of the sidereal zodiac I have no doubt whatsoever. I am just wondering how best to reply to these arguments put forth by Guinard -- if indeed any argument would ever be accepted by him. I found the following link especially helpful: http://www.glenn.freehomepage.com/writings/sidereal Ad astra per aspera Andrew Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 8, 2004 Report Share Posted September 8, 2004 , Therese Hamilton <eastwest@s...> wrote: > However, there is abundant evidence that a sidereal zodiac existed in > Mesopotamia prior to Hellenistic times. Please go to: > > http://users.snowcrest.net/sunrise/LostZodiac.htm > > Scroll down and click on " The Zodiac in Mesopotamia. " By the way -- this is your site? It is wonderful. I visited it for the first time a few days ago. There is so little material available on the web about western sidereal astrology -- there seem to be thousands of sites dedicated to various schools of Jyotish and even thousands more about tropical astrology of one bent or another but precious little on siderealism or Cyril Fagan. Andrew Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 8, 2004 Report Share Posted September 8, 2004 At 02:55 AM 9/8/04 -0000, Andrew wrote: >> >> http://users.snowcrest.net/sunrise/LostZodiac.htm >> >> Scroll down and click on " The Zodiac in Mesopotamia. " > >By the way -- this is your site? It is wonderful. I visited it for the >first time a few days ago. There is so little material available on >the web about western sidereal astrology -- there seem to be thousands >of sites dedicated to various schools of Jyotish and even thousands >more about tropical astrology of one bent or another but precious >little on siderealism or Cyril Fagan. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Yes, it's my site. Thank you, Andrew. I've been sidetracked from finishing the remaining nine signs. The coming election and other current events keep getting in the way. For many years I've thought about the sidereal signs, and so I'm putting my thoughts out there for consideration and possible modification. Not all siderealists like my site! Fagan got some sign principles right, but he really didn't have enough time to think everything through, and he ran out of time to thoroughly test various concepts. He didn't have AstroDatabank with it's 22,000 mostly timed charts and a computer to run off 50 charts a day. Since Fagan left us, siderealists have pretty much departed from sign symbolism in favor of return charts and angularity. In my humble opinion, sidereal sign symbolism (both western sidereal and Jyotish) has become thoroughly messed up. So I'm doing what I can to suggest new ways of looking at sidereal signs. I don't get very many compliments, so thanks! Therese Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 8, 2004 Report Share Posted September 8, 2004 , Therese Hamilton <eastwest@s...> wrote: > Fagan got some sign principles right, but he really didn't have enough time > to think everything through, and he ran out of time to thoroughly test > various concepts. He didn't have AstroDatabank with it's 22,000 mostly > timed charts and a computer to run off 50 charts a day. Since Fagan left > us, siderealists have pretty much departed from sign symbolism in favor of > return charts and angularity. In my humble opinion, sidereal sign symbolism > (both western sidereal and Jyotish) has become thoroughly messed up. So I'm > doing what I can to suggest new ways of looking at sidereal signs. This is probably true. My astrology background is in traditional natal, predictive, horary, electional, relationship and medical astrology. By 'traditional' I mean the late medieval tradition embodied in the works of Lilly, Coley, and later writers like Simmonite and Sepharial. One of my ancestors was a prominent British astrologer and Theosophist who did a lot of astrological research and I believe that I may have inherited his penchant for investigation. Traditionalists would decry my use of the sidereal zodiac and siderealists might dismiss the application of traditional techniques to the sidereal zodiac. But I ended up exploring and ultimately adopting the sidereal zodiac precisely because it works well with these medieval and renaissance techniques. Not in fatalistic ways of course but in the sense of providing much deeper insight into charts. Ad astra per aspera Andrew Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2004 Report Share Posted September 13, 2004 Hi Therese, Cyril said somewhere that it was Maurice Wemyss who introduced him to the sidereal zodiac. Go to his 5 vol. Wheel of Life where you find over and over, " in the Constellations " , etc. I believe that's where Fagan picked it up. I should think the conclusions of a uniquely sensitive and psychic chart superior to a merely yeoman grasp of any batch of computer generated charts. You might want to check out Fagan's transit " openings " for the dates of his various discoveries. It was Blackwell who privately rectified his chart to the Sun exactly culminating. There is sometimes a knowing that precludes all testing. But any of the various times for Fagan are blindingly impressive to my eyes. There are still all kinds of siderealists. Some of us use Placidian houses and pant after sign symbolism as well as angularity. In fact it was only Sidereal that brought me to a warm appreciation of Tropical astrology. I see the former as skye zodiac and the latter as earth zodiac. I swim in both schools. Hey, you have a very interesting site! Did I never tell you? Dark*Star --------------------------- Therese Hamilton wrote: > At 02:55 AM 9/8/04 -0000, Andrew wrote: > >> > >> http://users.snowcrest.net/sunrise/LostZodiac.htm > >> > >> Scroll down and click on " The Zodiac in Mesopotamia. " > > > >By the way -- this is your site? It is wonderful. I visited it for the > >first time a few days ago. > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > Yes, it's my site. Thank you, Andrew. I've been sidetracked from finishing > the remaining nine signs. The coming election and other current events keep > getting in the way. For many years I've thought about the sidereal signs, > and so I'm putting my thoughts out there for consideration and possible > modification. Not all siderealists like my site! > > Fagan got some sign principles right, but he really didn't have enough time > to think everything through, and he ran out of time to thoroughly test > various concepts. He didn't have AstroDatabank with it's 22,000 mostly > timed charts and a computer to run off 50 charts a day. Since Fagan left > us, siderealists have pretty much departed from sign symbolism in favor of > return charts and angularity. In my humble opinion, sidereal sign symbolism > (both western sidereal and Jyotish) has become thoroughly messed up. So I'm > doing what I can to suggest new ways of looking at sidereal signs. > > I don't get very many compliments, so thanks! > > Therese Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2004 Report Share Posted September 13, 2004 ps...Fagan has Aldebaran on the MC of his Diurnal today and for esoterica...ASC = Baker's Vulcan/New Moon... which would be a supreme astrological signature. d*s... Dark Star wrote: > Hi Therese, > > Cyril said somewhere that... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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