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Student of Astrology
Moderator
Join Date: 20 Apr 2002
Location: Wigan, UK
Posts: 6,071
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Lunalafey, The book is an account of Tracy Marks' method and weighting but if you are after a very methodical approach to chart interpretation then this is a good book. However it assumes that you are pretty familiar with the meanings attached to signs, planets and Houses and that you want some structure for integrating the various chart aspects - if this is where you are then this book is a very good buy. If you don't feel that you are familiar with these areas then Arroyo's book is the best one, then progress onto Marks when you feel comfortable. __________________ Minderwiz Wer meines Speeres Spittze furchtet durchschreite das Feuer nie! Wotan, Die Walkure, Act III, Scene 3 |
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Ask a Professional Tarot Reader Top #21 |
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Citizen
Join Date: 16 Feb 2006
Location: Texas
Posts: 5,017
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Pictures to help...ARGH!
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Is there pictures with the exact degree anywhere for reference? Example, L = ?degrees , _l= ?degrees. Sorry for this, but I have to see to understand. Thanks so much for your help! I've googled this question and got an answer. Thank you anyway. Barb __________________ The tree which moves some to tears of joy is in the eyes of others only a green thing that stands in the way. Some see nature all ridicule and deformity... and some scarce see nature at all. But to the eyes of the man of imagination, nature is imagination itself. Last edited by Barbaras Ahajusts; 20-11-2006 at 04:25. Reason: Goggled for Information... |
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Ask a Professional Tarot Reader Top #22 |
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Resident
Join Date: 17 Jun 2006
Location: North Carolina USA
Posts: 51
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Doubt isn't the issue
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Babylonian astrology lacked any kind of birth chart untl relatively late (circa 400 BCE) - so an comments about the planets before that were omenistic, not descriptive. Even once the birth chart developed, the birth was read omenistically - it showed what you would do, not who you were. In this context, stories about Marduk were not especially useful to astrological analysis. Hellenistic astrology developed in a culture in which the "gods" were not necessarily taken that seriously - and at any rate, there was a polyglot of possible deities. Stories of Aphrodite's loves were just that - stories. Hellenistic astrology developed ideas of timing - again, not mythic based. These were the two root systems for the development of Western classical astrology - along with cross-fertilization from India. By the development of classical astrology by the Arabs, one monotheism or another was the dominant cultural influence, and so again, these myths were just stories. And not especially applicable to event-based astrology. Mythology only comes on strong in astrology after Jung's work showing the correlation of mythical themes with many life issues for the person. And by this time, modern astrology had developed the concept that the birth chart shows who you are, as well as where you're going. It's within that context of "who" that mythical themes become important. But this kind of modern astrology is less than 100 years old. We have yet to see how stable it will be. |
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Ask a Professional Tarot Reader Top #23 |
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