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Dictopedia Reference Index Page
anomoly -
something that doesn't fit science or the conventional view of
reality.
Anomaly - the
angular distance of a planet from its perihelion or
aphelion.
Anipathies - the
unaccountable aversions and antagonisms people feel toward each
other when positions in their Nativities are in conflict. Among
the causes of such conflict are the luminaries in dissociate
Signs, or in inharmonious aspect to one another; the Ascendants
in opposition Signs; the Infortunes conjunct or in inharmonious
aspect to the luminaries, or to each other, or in opposition
from angular Houses. Sometimes loosely applied to planets seen
in an inharmonious relationship through an adverse aspect,
whereat they are considered to bear an anipathy to one
another.
antahkarana -
mind vehicle: bridge between the higher and lower mind.
(Sanskrit)
Anthroposophical
Society - spiritual movement founded by Rudolf
Steiner in 1912, emphasizing bio-dynamic gardening, farming,
and Christian Theosophy.
Antipathy -
disharmony of two bodies, usually planets, which rule or are
exalted in opposite Signs. For example, Saturn
ruling Capricorn
has an antipathy for the
Moon, ruling Cancer.
Antiscion - as
modernly used in the so-called Uranian Astrology, it is the
reflex position of a planet's birth position, in that degree on
the opposite side of the Cancer-Capricorn axis, of which either
0º Cancer or 0º Capricorn is the midpoint. For example, the
antiscion of a planet at 14º Capricorn is at 16º Sagittarius,
which point becomes effective when occupied by another planet,
or one in transit or by direction. As first used by
Ptolemy
the term is applied to two planets which
have the same declination on the same side of the
equator. One in the same declination on
the opposite side
was termed a contra antiscion. v.
Parallel.
Antisedentia - an
older term descriptive of retrograde motion.
Anti-Christ - opposing Christ's
teachings, ie., evil, materialism, dis-harmony.
Aphelion
- v. Orbit.
Apheta,
Prorogator - the planet or place that exercises
an influence over the life and death of the native. v.
Hyleg.
Aphorism - a
short, pithy statement of a truth, presumably based on
experience; the dictum of a wise man. Applied in Astrology to
consciderations involved in the summing-up or synthesis of the
various testimonies contained in the Figure. In interpreting a
figure, or chart, consider the Signs as static forces; the
planets as driving forces. The planets
in the Signs
show capacities that make for character,
but the aspects, like verbs, denote
action. Neptune
gives the answer to 'Who is he?';
Uranus
to 'Why is he and what is his purpose?';
and the rest of the planets answer the question 'How will
he fare?'
Apogee
- v. Orbit.
Apparent Motion -
in describing motions it is traditional to speak of them in
terms of what they appear to be rather than what they are. The
west wind personifies the wind that comes out of the west but
which actually blows in an easterly direction. Because of the
axial rotation of the
Earth, the planets appear to
rise over the Ascendant
and travel across the meridian to the
west, while they actually travel in the opposite
direction. The Signs likewise appear to travel in a
westerly direction while actually they do not travel at
all. When we say the Sun
is in Taurus, we are not
actually speaking of the Sun's travel or of its position,
but of the Earth's position and travel as measured by the
Sun.
Application
- n. applying to; to apply.
Said of a body in motion toward a point whence it will aspect
another body. (v. Aspect.). Applying, Retrograde: When the
applying body is in retrograde motion. (v. Motion.) Some
authorities have used the term 'approach' as synonymous with
'apply'. The faster-moving body is said to be applying to an
aspect of the slower-moving one. Precision in this regard
might indcate, for example, that Saturn in direct motion could be applying
to an aspect of Uranus, Neptune or Pluto only. Aspects are more powerful when forming
than when separating. If either planet be retrograde, the
influence is said to be injurious, or the promised result so
subject to delay that it is of little value when it
materializes.
applied
kinesiology - a technique using body muscles
to test and evaluate the different nerve and energy patterns
of the body, developed during the 1960s by George Goodheart,
D.C.
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