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- Astrological Houses and the Gauquelins' research.
-
- Maggie McPherson pisces@cs.mcgill.ca
-
-
- David's posting of a summary of the Gauquelins' research prompted me to
- think about astrological houses. The Gauquelins found that planets
- traditionally associated with certain careers (or with talents useful in
- those careers) appeared in the 12th and 9th houses with a frequency
- greater than chance for people successful in those careers. In traditional
- astrology, the 12th and 9th houses are considered "weak", and they have
- little to do with the career or personality type, which are ruled by
- the 10th and 1st houses respectively. Houses 1 and 10 are also considered
- "stronger", and so a planet placed in these houses should be more
- prominent. Planets related to a particular career should be prominent,
- one would think, in the charts of people who achieve prominence in that
- profession.
-
- The Gauquelins used a house system that differs from all the systems used
- by astrologers, but their findings cannot be accounted for in this way.
- Subsets of their data have been reanalysed using Placidus and Equal House
- systems, and the results were replicated. (The 10th cusp, the midheaven,
- is the same for the traditional systems and the Gauquelins' system, but
- their "rising point" differs from traditional ascendants by as much as
- 20 degrees for European latitudes.)
-
- How can one resolve this apparent discrepancy between tradition and the
- statistical findings of the Gauquelins?
-
- One might be tempted to assert that the traditional house system(s) should
- be abandoned in the face of the published evidence. On the other side, the
- astrologer whose experience convinces her/him that the traditional houses
- (e.g., the Placidus houses) are useful might be tempted to dismiss the
- Gauquelins' findings as a curious anomaly. In other words, one might be
- tempted to assume that the traditional houses are either right or wrong.
- But this would be to fall prey to a common fallacy in reasoning: the
- fallacy of the false dilemma. It need not be true that the traditional
- house systems are either wholly wrong or wholly right. A possibility
- exists that different house systems are appropriate when applying
- different astrological techniques or when addressing different questions.
-
- It may be possible to reconcile the two forms of evidence. Perhaps one kind
- of house system is useful for determining personality and success in career,
- and another is useful for other purposes, such as transits. The astrologer
- who has worked with transits will undoubtedly have found impressive
- correlations between transits through traditional houses and circumstances
- in the life of the querant.
-
- I know of one suggestion for an alternative approach to houses that might
- satisfy both the traditional astrologer and the astrologer who feels compelled
- to take account of the findings of the Gauquelins.
-
- The suggested approach is the brain-child of the always innovative Axel Harvey
- of Montreal. An excerpt from an article of his appears below. I present this
- excerpt without his permission, but I am sure he will not be upset with me
- for doing so; I have never known Aquarians to shy away from publicity. The
- excerpt is from an article entitled "Horoscopes in Azimuth" which appeared
- in the premier issue of the short-lived local publication "Considerations."
-
- In presenting this excerpt, my aim is to demonstrate that possibilities
- exist for house systems and combinations of house systems that will
- account for the Gauquelins' data as well as the daily experience of the
- astrologer. I cannot say whether the particular approach taken by Axel
- Harvey is the way of the future (although it is certainly worthy of
- serious consideration).
-
- ============================================================================
- HOROSCOPES IN AZIMUTH
- by Axel Harvey
-
- For over ten years I have been drawing clockwise horoscopes -- that is to say,
- with the Zodiac going in the usual direction but with the houses proceeding
- widdershins as in Figure 1.
-
- [Partial reproduction of Figure 1, using the medieval house wheel,
- which is slightly easier to produce in ascii than a circle; the 10th
- house follows the MC in a clockwise direction, where the 9th house
- would usually be; the 1st house follows the Vertex is a clockwise
- direction, and the 7th house follows the Antivertex in that direction:]
-
- MC
- ____________________
- |\ /\ /|
- | \ 9 / 10 \ 11 / |
- | \/________\/ |
- | 8 /| |\ 12 |
- | / | | \ |
- Antivertex |/ 7 | | 1 \| Vertex
- |\ | | /|
- | \ | | / |
- | 6 \|________|/ 2 |
- | /\ /\ |
- | / 5 \ 4 / 3 \ |
- |/________\/________\|
- IC
-
- The reasons for placing houses this way, contrary to zodiacal movement and
- to the habits of the profession, did not all come to me at once. Perhaps
- the best way to introduce the subject to readers is to retrace the steps
- I followed as I gradually developed my techniques.
-
- Traditional houses are a riddle to anyone who stops to think about them.
- No sooner has the Sun risen than it is in the twelfth house, having just
- crossed the cusp of the first. In the following 24 hours it will cross
- all the other cusps in reverse order, entering each house through the
- back door. Yet the circle of houses is supposed to be a local image of
- the great circle of the Zodiac. Why, then, is it so peculiarly arranged?
-
- The question must have occurred to thousands of young astrologers, whose
- teachers serenely answered, "Ah, yes, a typical beginner's question --
- the stars go westwards in hourly motion and eastwards in zodiacal motion,
- and there's nothing we can do about it."
-
- However, I felt there was something to be done about it. I tried various
- combinations of house numbering, of placing each house behind or ahead of
- its cusp, and of assigning starting points. The scheme I settled on had
- the upper meridian as cusp X, like most systems, but the tenth house lay
- clockwise from its cusp; then followed cusp XI and so on. Hence Figure 1.
-
- This sort of map had two advantages.
-
- First, the planets now proceeded from one house to the next in rational order,
- and entered each house by the cusp of that house. Diurnal movement thus
- resembled zodiacal movement more closely, so that the ancient analogy
- between signs and houses began to make more sense.
-
- Secondly -- and this must be the decisive point whenever anyone talks about
- houses -- it worked better. Even though I applied the most literal, old-
- fashioned interpretations to the houses, those interpretations gave better
- results with the houses in their new places.
-
- You will have noticed that I took the Vertex, rather than the Descendant,
- as cusp of the first house. Originally I made this choice on aesthetic
- grounds. Edward Johndro, Charles Jayne and others had studied the prime
- vertical and found that its western branch (the Vertex proper) was more
- sensitive and important than its opposite (the so-called Electrical
- Ascendant or Antivertex). Now if I were to choose the horizon to define my
- cusps I and VII, the first cusp (Descendant) would end up being secondary
- to the seventh (Ascendant); but if I chose the prime vertical then the
- first (Vertex) would be more powerful than the seventh (Antivertex) --
- and this certainly seemed to be the more proper arrangement. It should be
- added that the Ascendant continues to be a major point in the new system:
- but it is no longer a cusp and moves around in houses V, VI, VII and VIII.
-
- As it turns out there are more rigorous reasons for preferring the Vertex
- as Cusp I; we shall return to this issue at the end of this article.
-
- Since the Ascendant is no longer a cusp, I could not take just any popular
- house system and number it backwards. However, the Vertex is always 90
- degrees from the meridian as measured along the horizon; therefore it
- seemed natural to use a house system where the cusps were all 30 degrees
- apart in azimuth ("azimuth," a term familiar to sailors, simply means
- "distance measured along the horizon"). Such a system of houses must be
- the simplest of all to demonstrate in the field. Stand up and face due
- south. Raise your arm overhead and lower it until it points straight
- before you, and you have drawn the upper meridian: cusp X. Now swing
- your arm towards a point 30 degrees to the right and move it straight
- up and down again from that point: you have drawn cusp XI. Go another
- 30 degrees to the right and make the same gesture: there is cusp XII.
- Do this once more: by now you have moved your arm thrice 30 degrees,
- or one quarter-circle, from the meridian and you are drawing the prime
- vertical in the West -- cusp I. And so on around the horizon.
-
- The Azimuth houses must be older than the constellations. You have just
- repeated the gestures which would come naturally to a prehistoric queen
- dividing a berry patch between clan houses, or to a shaman dividing a
- hunting territory between twelve villages.
-
- The mathematically-minded will turn to the Appendix at the end of this
- article for information about calculating the longitude of Azimuth cusps
- and related matters.
-
- [An example horoscope deleted.]
-
- A FEW APHORISMS
-
- There is no room in an introductory article to discuss all the fine points
- of interpreting Azimuth maps. The following notes are a rough-and-ready
- guide for astrologers who wish to try Azimuth horoscopes but fear the
- confusion which can arise from the simultaneous use of two maps.
-
- 1. The Ascendant governs personality -- that is to say, how we appear to
- reasonably acute and compassionate observers. It also indicates our
- unconscious goals -- the values we adhere to even if we never think about
- them, and to which we will remain loyal even in the most difficult times
- (and even if we don't realize we are doing so).
-
- 2. The Vertex answers the question, "Who do you think you are?" It also
- corresponds to our will -- that is to say, the choices we make with open
- eyes -- and the values we adopt consciously. Whether or not we can defend
- these values successfully depends on various circumstances, such as aspects
- to the Vertex and its ruler.
-
- 3. Similarly the whole Zodiac map, with the Ascendant as cusp I, points to:
- fate, heredity, social and physical influences, things that happen to us.
- The whole Azimuth map points to: intentions, desires, opinions, how we
- try to organize our lives, what we do.
-
- One can look at the stars passively, as coming from the East, or one can
- think of oneself as a star like Paracelsus, and direct oneself westwards.
- That is Zodiac-wise and clockwise thinking. To hold the first view
- exclusively makes one a vegetable; the second, a fool.
-
- 4. Since the planets, by diurnal motion, pass through Azimuth houses in
- rational order, the Azimuth map is the ideal one to use for primary
- directions. On the other hand, traditional houses are the correct ones
- to use with transits. The general rule is: in predictive work, use a
- house system that goes in the same direction as the significators.
-
- Solar returns are a special form of transit and should therefore be handled
- entirely in the traditional framework.
-
- (Unfortunately I can't deal with primaries in this issue. Primary directions
- mentioned in this article are directions in Azimuth, which differ from
- classical methods.)
-
- 5. The most useful map for delineation is the Zodiac map with Azimuth
- cusps (e.g., Figure 1). It combines fate and will.
-
- 6. The Ascendant usually, but not invariably, governs physical appearance.
- A good example of a physique strongly coloured by the Vertex is that of
- musician Mick Jagger, whose spare frame and de'sabuse' features owe more
- to his Saturn-Vertex opposition than to his Jupiter-Ascendant conjunction.
- (Data: 04:30 UT, 26th July 1943; 51N27 00E12.)
-
- 7. The lords of the Descendant and the Antivertex represent the two possible
- types of spouse in the native's life.
-
- 8. Zodiacal aspects may be reflected in totality or in great part by
- identical aspects in the Azimuth map; or they may be almost entirely
- absent from the Azimuth chart, being replaced by different aspects
- involving different pairs of planets.
-
- In the first case we have a subject who always appears to know what he or
- she is about; whose resources and ambitions are evenly balanced; who is
- comfortable in the environment he or she was born to.
-
- In the contrary case we have both great over-reachers and under-achievers;
- people who rebel against society, or who simply deny the importance of
- historical or cultural roots.
-
- [Two examples deleted.]
-
- MORE RIGOROUS THOUGHTS ON HOUSE SYSTEMS
-
- I said that my original reasons for adopting a new house system were, firstly,
- the intuitive requirement that planets should proceed in proper order through
- the houses and that cusp I should be more important than cusp VII; secondly,
- a crude, empirical satisfaction with the results.
-
- There still remained doubts about the symbolic correctness of the arrangement.
- Astrologers have long believed that the diurnal cycle is manifested in the
- polarity of day and night, that the (tropical) zodiacal cycle is manifested
- in the polarity of Summer and Winter, and that an analogy between these
- two polarities is significant.
-
- Now if we put the first house in the West, where the Sun begins his descent
- under the Earth, it can hardly be paired with Aries where the Sun begins
- his climb to the height of Summer. One might make things work by calling
- Libra the first sign -- a practice endorsed by Jewish custom, in which the
- day begins at sundown and the year in September. Such a symbolic revolution,
- however, would be hard to accept for most Western astrologers: I, for one,
- find it impossible to associate Mayday with the eighth house.
-
- It has struck me recently that there is no analogy between two polarities.
- There is just one polarity: North and South. In Aries the Sun begins his
- vernal ascent to the North. In the West the Sun begins his daily tour --
- northwards.
-
- ...the horizon, which is none other than the "ecliptic" of the Azimuth
- house system, [as] viewed from the centre of the celestial sphere ...
- winds north [of the Equator], then south, then back to its starting point.
- [When the] Zodiac ... is viewed from outside the celestial sphere [then in
- both cases] house or signs follow one another in the familiar, natural order:
- arithmetic and symbol both maintained. [In other words, both the Azimuth
- houses and the Zodiacal signs follow a sinusoidal pattern with respect to
- the Equator such that the nodes or zero-points are at Vertex/0-Aries and
- Antivertex/0-Libra, the peak is in the north at 90 degrees, or IC/0-Cancer,
- and the trough is in the south at 270 degrees, or MC/0-Capricorn.]
-
- So it turns out that my choice of the prime vertical to define cusps I and
- VII was more appropriate than I had suspected. In order for a house system
- to follow the North-South dichotomy rigorously, a point situated on cusp I
- or VII should be exactly half-way between North and South. This is true of
- a point anywhere along the prime vertical, which is 90 degrees from both
- the North and South points of the horizon. It is *not* true of a point on
- the Ascendant or Descendant, which may lie considerably closer to the
- southern side (e.g. Sagittarius rising in the northern hemisphere) or the
- northern side (e.g. Cancer rising in the northern hemisphere) of the
- celestial sphere.
-
- (Australian readers will be dissatisfied with this explanation. As they can
- find out on reading the Appendix, I have generalized the discussion by
- referring to elevated and inferior poles instead of North and South. This
- still does not answer the old question of whether people in the southern
- hemisphere should begin their Zodiac in Aries or elsewhere -- a question
- I leave unraised.)
-
- APPENDIX
-
- The following notation is used throughout:
-
- L Geographic (geodetic) latitude
- E Obliquity of the ecliptic
- a RAMC (right ascension of the upper meridian)
- Ap, Dp Right Ascension and declination of a planet or other point
- T, N Astrological azimuth and altitude
- S Sign ( L ) = +1 for North latitudes
- = -1 for South latitudes
- n the appropriate cusp or house number
-
- The formulae given below make use of a three-variable function, R (A,B,C),
- which produces a correct Ascendant when:
-
- A = a, the RAMC,
- B = L, the latitude,
- and C = E, the obliquity
-
- A practical form of function R is
-
- R (a,L,E) = tan^-1 cos a /-g + H [where ^ means "to the power of"]
- where H = 0, if -g >= 0
- and H = 180 dg if -g < 0
-
- g = sin a cos E + tan L sin E
-
- The astrological azimuth of a planet, T, measured from the Vertex through
- the cardinal point of the horizon nearest the elevated pole, is found thus:
-
- (i) Let A = a - Ap - 90 dg
- B = Dp
- C = 90 dg - L
-
- (ii) Evaluate R. Subtract 90 dg from the result. Finally multiply
- by S, to obtain T, the azimuth.
-
- T = S(R - 90 dg)
-
- (iii) Altitude is
- N = sin^-1 (sin B cos C - sin A cos B sin C)
-
- Azimuth cusp longitudes in the Zodiac are found by using the following
- variables in R:
-
- In all cases,
- B = sin^-1 (cos L sin 30 dg[n + 2])
- C = obliquity, E
-
- Now let k = a - tan^-1 (sin L tan 30 dg[n + 2])
-
- Then, for Cusps X, XI, XII and I:
- A = k - 90 dg
-
- and for Cusps II and III:
- A = k + 90 dg
-
- One can employ the usual formulae for the Midheaven and Vertex instead of
- following the procedure given here for Cusps X and I.
-
- No further treatment of the result is needed in northern latitudes. For
- southern latitudes the following shuffle is necessary:
-
- Cusp III + 180 dg becomes Cusp XI
- Cusp II + 180 dg becomes Cusp XII
- Cusp XII + 180 dg becomes Cusp II
- Cusp XI + 180 dg becomes Cusp III.
-
- Azimuth houses are not defined on the Equator, and make confusing maps
- inside 15 degrees of latitude North and South. On the other hand they
- are increasingly well-behaved as they approach the poles. One cannot
- expect a house system to have both (a) the horizon or prime vertical as
- a cusp, and (b) validity at every point of the globe: it is wanting to
- square the circle. Besides, if astrological factors interact with the
- social or physical surroundings then it may be wrong to use the same
- kind of chart for Colombia and Uganda as for Canada and Finland.
- ========================================================================
-
- ... for your consideration.
-
-