home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: alt.astrology
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!newsserver.jvnc.net!louie!gloin.cis.udel.edu!hughes
- From: hughes@gloin.cis.udel.edu (John Hughes)
- Subject: Re: House Systems (Was Re: what are "campanus" houses...)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.014907.2807@udel.edu>
- Sender: usenet@udel.edu (USENET News Service)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: gloin.cis.udel.edu
- Organization: University of Delaware, Newark
- References: <77117@apple.apple.COM> <1993Jan22.005306.29885@udel.edu> <C1BH4r.84o@cs.mcgill.ca>
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 01:49:07 GMT
- Lines: 101
-
- In article <C1BH4r.84o@cs.mcgill.ca> pisces@cs.mcgill.ca (L. M. P. McPherson) writes:
- >In article <1993Jan22.005306.29885@udel.edu> hughes@mercury.cis.udel.edu (John Hughes) writes:
- >>It's important to understand these systems, I believe; I'm something of a
- >>purist and believe that only Campanus captures what most people think of when
- >>they think of houses. I have suspected that Placidus was invented before much
- >>was known about spherical trigonometry, and this dividing up rising times was
- >>an attempt to approximate Campanus. But of course I cannot prove this.
- >
- >As a scientist, I believe in taking a more empirical approach
- >to such questions. I know of (from Dean's summary in "Recent
- >Advances in Natal Astrology") only one large-scale study of
- >house systems. It was conducted by the Church of Light, and
- >they found that the Placidus system worked best. Unfortunately,
- >in keeping with their usual practice (one apparently deemed
- >acceptable in the astrological community -- in general),
- >they failed to publish details of their methods and analyses.
-
- Swell guys, those Church-of-Lighters.
-
- >I look, therefore, to my personal experience. Here is one
- >data point, based on very recent and very striking personal
- >experience. I have conducted similar analyses in the past,
- >but I don't have a record of them.
-
- [description of a ninth-house Saturn transit with altogether appropriate
- life changes accompanying it]
-
- >The only house systems which place my ninth-house cusp near
- >these positions of transiting Saturn are Meridian, Morinus,
- >Topocentric, and Placidus (i.e., Saturn is within 5 degrees
- >of the cusp using these systems).
-
- I've always tried to be rather scientific myself about these things. I learned
- very early on in my astrological training the peculiar fury that accompanies
- friendly discussions about the various merits and stupidities of using the
- different house systems (and zodiacs...). My own conviction has been more or
- less strengthened by watching the big planets, especially Jupiter and Saturn,
- roll across my chart through the years. Especially around the time of puberty,
- when life is very dramatic and shifting, these two planets crossed successive
- Campanus cusps right on time, like clockwork, tracing my evolution into
- adulthood quite nicely, slicing my life up into interlaced one- and
- two-and-a-half-year acts.
-
- >I have always used Placidus because I found it worked well
- >during transits with some obvious link to events in my life.
- >The Topocentric cusps are virtually identical to the Placidus
- >cusps, so I would have to understand their theoretical motivation
- >before choosing between Placidus and Topocentric.
-
- As I recall, Topocentric houses are Placidus houses corrected for the fact
- that births actually happen on the surface of the earth, not at its center
- (a rather embarrassing oversight on the part of all other house systems).
- I thought I remembered Dean extolling their virtues with a few other
- expermental results as well. If you have found success with Placidus, I would
- strongly suggest you try your method on Topocentric cusps. Again, this is
- the intuitivist in me speaking again. I would be delighted if someone would
- work out similar corrections for Campanus houses-- my math degree has grown
- ever so rusty...
-
- >The above argument contains the hidden assumption that one
- >and only one system is the "correct" one. In truth, I reject
- >this assumption. [...] Houses calculated
- >as divisions of the prime vertical (e.g., Campanus) may
- >well represent some other facet of existence. Each great
- >circle may have its own domain of influence/coincidence.
-
- This is altogether plausible, and I must admit it has a certain appeal (though
- the most favored house systems, Placidus and Koch, are not to my knowledge
- based on the division of any great circle, and in addition Placidus houses are
- never exactly calculated but are approxiamted in a rather complicated scheme).
- At the same time, it is alarming to me to face the prospect of adding yet more
- points to the progressively hairier horoscope wheel; one is tempted to tune
- into the subtle variations this will add to an already rich map, though I
- suspect no one not born with a caul over his head would have much success!
-
- I have always counselled beginners in the art that the only good, reliable
- study is onesself. I don't believe anyone can teach the intuitions from third-
- hand experience of a native who is not intimately known to the novice--
- ubiquitous pedagogic analyses of Queen Elizabeth and Marilyn Monroe in
- popular texts notwithstanding. One really needs to feel the symbolism come
- alive in onesself first, only later focusing the twelvefold lens on loved ones
- and good friends, and then much later on the unsuspecting public.
-
- There is no telling what is going on in our minds when we form the critical
- associations we use to decipher the horoscope wheel. I can't say why Ms.
- McPherson has had such good luck with Placidus in her life, or why it should
- do so poorly when I read my own. Perhaps *she* would have better luck, show me
- things I never would have seen myself. And perhaps I and Campanus could
- surprise her as well. If it does indeed turn out the be the case that the
- different time and space slices have subtle variations in meaning, we could
- have something of an answer: I have learned to tune myself into the Prime
- Vertical, to view the world as it looks due south, arcing over my head. And
- Ms. McPherson reads in a universe where zodiac is best divided according to
- natural divisions of potential energy. And others train themselves to see the
- world along the thin disk of the ecliptic, sliced up like a flat pie, while
- others have been lying on their backs staring straight up into heaven all
- these years. Maybe this isn't such a peculiar way to proceed after all.
-
-
- John
- hughes@cis.udel.edu
-