Page 9 - Three New Tables for an Astrology of Three Dimensions
P. 9

For axial latitudes south of the equator, the table may be used by
        first reversing the factor of axial longitude (adding or subtracting 12:00
        from  the  S.T.)  and  then  reversing  the  direction  of  the  resulting
        inclination and changing the zodiacal sign of the resulting nonagesimal
        to its opposite (e.g., north to south inclination, 14º Sagittarius 22’ to
        14º Gemini 22’).

        II. The second table: the altitude of a planet.

          The astrological value of the angle of a planet to the local time and
        place  on  earth  has  not  been  established:  like  the  rest  of  “hard”
        astronomical  data,  it  awaits  statistically  significant  correlation  with
        terrestrial  phenomena.  The  distortion  manifest  by  flat  horoscope  in
        ignoring  this  variable  can  be  seen  most  clearly  by  comparing  the
        position of the sun at noon, first on the equator at an equinox, then on
        the Arctic Circle at the winter solstice.

                Noon, March 21, 0ºN             Noon, December 21, 66º33’N













                                           Side View of Ecliptic

















                                   Two-dimensional Horoscope
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