150 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
150 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
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The basic precept of Astrology has been summed up with the phrase
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"As Above, So Below." What is displayed in the heavens is said to be
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mimicked on Earth.
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Astrologers once believed that the planets, luminaries, and stars
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introduced a force or influence upon earthly creatures and events.
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One may easily imagine a Wise Man (or Woman, aka. the Essenes)
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standing on his palatial balcony in 5,000 B.C.E., gazing intently up
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at the night sky, carefully noting the passage of heavenly bodies.
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These notes would then be compared to the events of the Kingdom,
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realm, of region.
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If events of the current period matched previous events, the Magi
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would expect similar planetary configurations in the heavens. If the
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events of the period were original, careful notes would be made for
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future study. These notes would of necessity been closely guarded and
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secret, least they fall into the hands of a rival.
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There are accounts of Wise Men (Magi, Astrologer, same thing) who
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gained great power through contrived, controlling predictions that
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were not later born out in reality. These gentlemen and women usually
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lost their heads, but many lost their gonads- quite literally. Job
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security fell to those who new their profession well or could talk
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very fast.
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Many religious cults, as cults today, frowned upon astrology
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schools. The students were not conforming to what was religiously
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demanded of them by those in power, and were often hacked to pieces
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for their efforts.
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There is a story told by a woman who was "regressed" to a "past
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life," where she was a Astrology student. Those who were in her group
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were all male youths under the tutelage of one purple robed Teacher.
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Late one night while they were going about their business learning the
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Hieros Logoi (sacred accounts), another group who practiced religious
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intolerance decided to do a little butchering the same night.
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The astrology students were castrated and left to die.
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If this account is true or not, the point is the same: If they
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had spent more time considering earthly events (staying in the
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Present), they may have been able to avoid the horror that night.
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(They might have gone out for pizza instead).
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Around the time Rome was being built, those in power thought it a
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good idea to marry off the Goddess (the Triple Lunar Goddess) to their
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Air Gods. With the patriarchy taking power, something had to be done
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to diminish the Goddess in the eyes of mankind, and make Her
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subservient to the Male. Thus the goddess Juno was conceived, who
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would be the "goddess of marriage."
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Juno was married off to Zeus, who didn't believe he was bound to
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any marriage vows and liked to frolic in any and all pastures
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available, begetting sons by the score. No other goddess has been
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hurt by marriage more than Juno.
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To make the profane act of marriage complete, a new Sign was
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added to the Zodiac. Libra, which is said to rule marriage as well as
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relationships in general, was the twelfth Sign placed in the popular
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Zodiac. The Wise Men (and Women) of this period thus had to alter
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their methods and ways of thinking.
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The oldest known astrology "chart" only had eight signs. House
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systems were added later. It was square, and the planetary bodies had
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to be placed precisely on the paper so that a straight edged graduated
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"ruler" could be used to determine aspects. It seems that the "equal"
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or "fixed" house system was the one used.
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With the advent of "houses," the astrologer could determine which
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arena of life was to be involved. It seems reasonable that the number
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of houses should match the number of Signs in the Zodiac, right?
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Well, not really. There were usually eight houses used, even when the
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number of Signs grew to twelve.
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Today the most popular methods of Astrology use twelve Signs and
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houses, using the Tropical Zodiac in the West, Geocentric (Earth
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centered). There are many variations available. One may use
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Heliocentric (Sun centered) astrology, or use the Sidereal Zodiac
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(which takes into account the precession of the Equinox).
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There are many popular houses systems in use today as well.
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Porphyrus (spelling differs) was a poet, astrologer, and scholar in
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ancient times. He came up with a house system called "Porphyry,"
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though I don't know anyone who uses it.
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Most astrologers today tend to believe that the heavenly bodies
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do not reach down and push us about. Rather, the planets, luminaries,
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and stars "mimic" Earthly events. Synchronistic in nature, they
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corollate instead of dictate. This hands one's fate back to the
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individual, to augment or squander as one sees fit. The slight
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comfort of Fate has been replaced by responsibility for one's actions.
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A few astrologers still portend death and destruction from the
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"astrological chart." This mode of thinking (a belief pattern based
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on preconceived ideas) is almost extinct. One may stay on the rail
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road tracks, deeming it "fate" has said one must be mashed by the
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train, or one may say "Screw it," and step to the side and let fate
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pass. It is one's right and responsibility to take charge of one's
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life events.
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Still, one always has the right to be squashed by one's "trains."
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If you refuse to drink, you are allowed to die of thirst. It's your
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right.
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The perceptions of "Fate Versus Free Will" seems to lean towards
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"free will" for the individual in the current astrological community,
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but the question of the "Fate of Nations," and the rulers of Nations,
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is still hotly disputed.
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There are arguments that a Nation must follow what is "Fated,"
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and that those closely connected to that Nation are heavily minified
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in their rights to act freely. It is well documented that a Nation in
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trouble always produces a single individual to correct the problem.
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Abe Lincoln believed in Fate, and was said to know when he would
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die and how. Did he have the Right to choose? Since he was closely
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connected to the United States and the Civil War, I doubt it.
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Kennedy chose to ignore warnings from "psychics," we've been told
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to believe, and ended up slaughtered on national television,
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presumably by the hand of Cuba, Castro. But did he have a choice? I
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believe not.
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Someone ponderously, corpulently, grossly into religious
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intolerance mentioned to me that "The One True God destroys Nations,"
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while individuals destroy themselves, I will add. Bending his idea of
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"God" to a non anthropomorphic deity, we could say that "The Universe"
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takes care of nations and leaves the individual to fend for her or his
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self.
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Astrology does not predict. It points to probabilities, not
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unequivocal, assured events. Any likely event can be circumnavigated
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if one knows about it first. This is why I believe Astrology to be
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the single most useful tool for taking responsibility for one's life.
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The question "Is Astrology valid?" is one that I cannot answer
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competently. It is always best to question everything, and take
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nothing as it is offered (without the arena of astrology as well as
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within). I leave this question to others for exploration.
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Document 3 in Astr-4.0
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David Rice 7/11/88
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unar Goddess) to their
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Air Gods. With the patriarchy taking power, something had to be done
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to diminish the
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