Guest guest Posted December 29, 2005 Report Share Posted December 29, 2005 Can anyone please explain the significance of fixed stars? I know what mine is and its major qualities, but don't understand how this affects me. Thank you very much. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2005 Report Share Posted December 29, 2005 At 01:19 PM 12/29/05 -0000, lpbfhll wrote: >Can anyone please explain the significance of fixed stars? I know what >mine is and its major qualities, but don't understand how this affects me. Hi... Your question is too vague for a good reply. Are you asking about a single fixed star in your chart that is near a planet? Several stars? Are you asking about the sidereal signs which are pegged to the stars? If you're interested only in the stars as such, there's an excellent web site that lists meanings for over 300 stars from the major star authors. These meanings may or may not be accurate since the stars are mainly an unexplored area as far as research goes. Do a search for 'Anne Wright fixed stars' and the site will come up. Sorry, I don't have the full URL at hand. Therese Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2005 Report Share Posted December 29, 2005 At 03:09 PM 12/29/2005, you wrote: >Are you asking about a single fixed star in your chart that is near >a planet? Several stars? Are you asking about the sidereal signs >which are pegged to the stars? The fixed star in my chart is Al Schemali (and I understand its strengths and attributes). What I can't seem to grasp is how any of these qualities relate to me. In other words, am I supposed to possess any of the know qualities in my chart? If not, how is my fixed star supposed to affect me? Thank you very much! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 31, 2005 Report Share Posted December 31, 2005 At 04:28 PM 12/29/05 -0500, lpbfhll wrote: >The fixed star in my chart is Al Schemali (and I understand its >strengths and attributes). What I can't seem to grasp is how any of >these qualities relate to me. In other words, am I supposed to >possess any of the know qualities in my chart? If not, how is my >fixed star supposed to affect me? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ All fixed stars in anyone's horoscope are not created equal. Every day, except for the Moon and ascendant, everyone will have the same fixed stars with their planets. It stands to reason that a star within one degree of the Moon would theoretically be the most important star. The same might be said to be true of stars within a degree of the ascendant. A star may refer only to the house ruled by the planet near the star. Thus, say if Venus is lord of the 7th, and a star is with Venus, it may relate to the wife or lover but not to the owner of the horoscope. It may also be that the only stars that matter are with planets near an equal house cusp because those are the 'active' planets in a chart. I personally question many of the meanings of stars in the textbooks. The best approach is to study many charts and events in relation to the stars. Diana Rosenberg has accumulated a huge mass of information on the stars, but there is so much information there that it's difficult to sort it all out. So many questions and so much we have yet to learn! Therese Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2006 Report Share Posted January 1, 2006 The fixed *stars* with very tight orbs as usually taught, seem rather élitist, giving their full light to the famous and infamous while mostly withholding from all the little lamps under a bushel. The chief disadvantage, to my thinking, of this vacuum cleaner suck up everything approach is that it finds anything everywhere. I don't have the workbook but wonder with the number of *stars* that the word " flood " might turn up under...we should all be awash. Dark*Star ________________________________ therese hamilton wrote: > All fixed stars in anyone's horoscope are not created equal. Every day, > except for the Moon and ascendant, everyone will have the same fixed stars > with their planets. > I personally question many of the meanings of stars in the textbooks. The > best approach is to study many charts and events in relation to the stars. > Diana Rosenberg has accumulated a huge mass of information on the stars, > but there is so much information there that it's difficult to sort it all out. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 2, 2006 Report Share Posted January 2, 2006 > The fixed star in my chart is Al Schemali (and I understand its > strengths and attributes). What I can't seem to grasp is how any of > these qualities relate to me. In other words, am I supposed to > possess any of the know qualities in my chart? If not, how is my > fixed star supposed to affect me? > that star has significant north latitude -- more by far than any planet (or the moon) except Pluto during an eighth of its cycle it is meaningless to " interpret " stars without using latitude the question is: what RAMC does the star rise, set, culminate, anticulminate with? and are those RAMC's the same as a given chart's (ie your birth chart's) ST? if not, where on earth IS the star angular (it will be angular at four points (actually, two lines each going across the globe, making " four " lines on a flat map), plus an orb-zone of geographic longitude around those lines -- roughly 4 degrees of longitude is one good guess). and: are the star's RAMCs at the angles the same as the correlating rise/set or mc/ic of a planet at the birthplace? at the residence? somewhere else? (it will ALWAYS be true " somewhere else " ) my advice: ignore what astrologers tell you until you are certain they have a clue about something OTHER THAN the zodiac ps if you don't know the non-zodiac method (the only one that makes sense), post the star's right ascension amd declination, and the longitude and latitude of your birthplace, plus your birth date/time Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 2, 2006 Report Share Posted January 2, 2006 , " fimtinnegan " <kh1100@n...> wrote: > > that star has significant north latitude -- more by far than any > planet (or the moon) except Pluto during an eighth of its cycle it is meaningless to " interpret " stars without using latitude > the question is: what RAMC does the star rise, set, culminate, > anticulminate with? and are those RAMC's the same as a given chart's > (ie your birth chart's) ST? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ There are two schools of thought on whether stars have influence via their ecliptic longitiude or latitude/RAMC. The question is by no means settled as yet. On one side are Ebertin, Diana Rosenberg, Anne Wright, etc. and on the other side are Brady and those who agree with her. This is another area of controversy just like the tropical/sidereal zodiac question. The only honest answer is " We don't know. " Therese Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2006 Report Share Posted January 21, 2006 , " therese92003 " <eastwest@s...> wrote: > > , " fimtinnegan " > <kh1100@n...> wrote: > > > > that star has significant north latitude -- more by far than any > > planet (or the moon) except Pluto during an eighth of its cycle it > is meaningless to " interpret " stars without using latitude > > the question is: what RAMC does the star rise, set, culminate, > > anticulminate with? and are those RAMC's the same as a given chart's > > (ie your birth chart's) ST? > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > There are two schools of thought on whether stars have influence via > their ecliptic longitiude or latitude/RAMC. The question is by no > means settled as yet. On one side are Ebertin, Diana Rosenberg, Anne > Wright, etc. and on the other side are Brady and those who agree with > her. This is another area of controversy just like the > tropical/sidereal zodiac question. The only honest answer is " We > don't know. " > > Therese > , " therese92003 " <eastwest@s...> wrote: > > , " fimtinnegan " > <kh1100@n...> wrote: > > > > that star has significant north latitude -- more by far than any > > planet (or the moon) except Pluto during an eighth of its cycle it > is meaningless to " interpret " stars without using latitude > > the question is: what RAMC does the star rise, set, culminate, > > anticulminate with? and are those RAMC's the same as a given chart's > > (ie your birth chart's) ST? > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > There are two schools of thought on whether stars have influence via > their ecliptic longitiude or latitude/RAMC. The question is by no > means settled as yet. On one side are Ebertin, Diana Rosenberg, Anne > Wright, etc. and on the other side are Brady and those who agree with > her. This is another area of controversy just like the > tropical/sidereal zodiac question. The only honest answer is " We > don't know. " > > Therese > OK, given that stars are meaningful, they will be meaningful objectively. Their meaning will not depend on a subjective and wholly arbitrary preference; a preference rooted in the long-term trend of astrologers being fixated upon the zodiac; a trend based not on first principles of astrology, but only on what is fashionable; and, almost all the time, based only on what astrologers happen arbitrarily to know about; and excluding the areas of their ignorance, which include almost every frame of reference outside of the convenient, ephemeris/sun-sign-encouraged ecliptic and/or zodiac. Just because astrologers are fixated on the zodiac, we insist the sky should be too. But the sky is NOT -- no principle of astrology could possibly justify thinking that the entire sky has any relationship to THE EARTH'S TILT. Why would it? It. simply. does. not. make. sense. Why would stars' positions be magically " relocated " to a position as much as 90 degrees away (on average, 45!), onto a circle based entirely on THE EARTH'S TILT? What on earth does the earth's tilt have to do with the stars? I can understand this in terms of moving bodies, given the declination cycle (and the corresponding change from " straight " astrocartography lines to " extremely curved " astrocartography lines). Maybe, indeed, the earth's tilt is a good frame of reference for solar system bodies -- though it probably isn't anything but a good approximation, due to the fact that the most common solar system bodies don't have huge latitude (the exceptions are comets and maybe some Kuiper belt things and maybe some asteroids, though I don't know; certainly not the lights and planets). But the STARS? Why would they be " relocated " up to 90 degrees (and ON AVERAGE 45 degrees)to a circle based on the earth's tilt? The fact that " there are two schools of thought " with Ebertin, Diana Rosenberg, Anne Wright, etc., accepting such an irrational, anti- astrological idea -- what relevance does that have? It doesn't make the idea any more rational in terms of astrological first principles, defined at the most minimal level with the most minimal application of simple thought. One " school of thought " is, simply, a school of thoughtlessness. This is not dogmatism -- it's common sense. Stars are not meaningful when measured in terms of the ecliptic and/or the zodiac. They must be measured based on some other reference system. (Astrocartography might be a useful point of departure . . .) Now -- schools of thought? It would be great if we had some ... You're right -- we DON'T know. But we do know that some sort of minimal level of thought is necessary to have useful ideas about astrology. We wouldn't, for example, measure the stars based on, say, the weather-vane on top of our house, or on a drawing of the sky made by somebody's kid. See -- that. wouldn't. make. sense. We know THAT. Asserting THAT would not be dogmatic, would not be closed- minded, would not be dismissive of a school of " thought " that thought otherwise. HAVING some schools of thought about what frame of reference to use for the stars -- once the silly ecliptic fixation is recognized as being counterproductive in encouraging thought, schooled or otherwise, about the stars -- would be an amazing and almost unprecedented achievement. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.