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Conception (Conception Charts)<br />

The early asteroids studied by astrologers were named after mythological figures,<br />

and an exploration of <strong>the</strong> relevant myths provided a preliminary clue to <strong>the</strong><br />

nature of <strong>the</strong>se tiny planetoids’ influence. When researchers began shifting away from<br />

explicitly mythological asteroids and began examining asteroids named after concepts,<br />

<strong>the</strong>y continued to follow <strong>the</strong>ir previous line of exploration by finding initial clues to<br />

<strong>the</strong> astrological influences of such asteroids in <strong>the</strong> concepts after which <strong>the</strong>y were<br />

named. Pax, for example, is <strong>the</strong> Latin word for peace, which is a clue to <strong>the</strong> presumably<br />

“peaceful” or “pacifying” influence of <strong>the</strong> asteroid Pax.<br />

Sources:<br />

Kowal, Charles T. Asteroids: Their Nature and Utilization. Chichester, West Sussex, UK: Ellis<br />

Horwood Limited, 1988.<br />

Room, Adrian. Dictionary of Astronomical Names. London: Routledge, 1988.<br />

Schwartz, Jacob. Asteroid Name Encyclopedia. St. Paul, MN: Llewellyn Publications, 1995.<br />

CONCEPTION (CONCEPTION CHARTS)<br />

Although genethliacal, or natal, <strong>astrology</strong> has settled on <strong>the</strong> birth time as <strong>the</strong> moment<br />

for casting <strong>the</strong> horoscope, astrologers have long felt that it would also be desirable to<br />

cast charts for <strong>the</strong> moment of conception. Ptolemy, for example, asserted that gender<br />

as well as certain o<strong>the</strong>r prenatal events could be deduced from <strong>the</strong> planets at <strong>the</strong> time<br />

of conception. However, <strong>the</strong> obvious difficulties involved in determining precise conception<br />

moments have effectively frustrated astrological research in this area. For <strong>the</strong><br />

most part, <strong>the</strong> observation that Nicholas deVore made in his Encyclopedia of Astrology<br />

still applies: “The entire subject of prenatal cosmic stimulation is a welter of confused<br />

<strong>the</strong>orizing, which yet lacks confirmation in practice sufficient to bring about any unanimity<br />

of opinion.”<br />

Some contemporary thinkers, never<strong>the</strong>less, have been intrepid enough to<br />

explore this largely uncharted domain. Of greatest significance has been <strong>the</strong> work of<br />

Eugen Jonas, a Czech psychiatrist who developed a system of astrological birth control<br />

based on <strong>the</strong> discovery that women have a cycle of fertility beyond <strong>the</strong> normal ovulation<br />

cycle—one based on <strong>the</strong> phase of <strong>the</strong> Moon. Jonas found, among many o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

interesting things, that <strong>the</strong> sign <strong>the</strong> Moon (which rules <strong>the</strong> principal of conception<br />

and mo<strong>the</strong>rhood) was in during conception determined <strong>the</strong> offspring’s sex—male in<br />

<strong>the</strong> case of masculine signs and female in <strong>the</strong> case of feminine signs.<br />

In an effort to construct usable conception charts, some twentieth-century<br />

astrologers have picked up on <strong>the</strong> trutine of Hermes, an ancient principle for casting<br />

conception charts ascribed to <strong>the</strong> legendary Hermes Trismegistus that asserts that “<strong>the</strong><br />

place of <strong>the</strong> Moon at conception was <strong>the</strong> Ascendant of <strong>the</strong> birth figure [i.e., conjunct<br />

<strong>the</strong> ascendant of <strong>the</strong> natal chart] or its opposite point [conjunct <strong>the</strong> descendant].” If<br />

Hermes was correct, <strong>the</strong>n <strong>the</strong> trutine could be used to determine <strong>the</strong> precise time of<br />

conception in cases where <strong>the</strong> date and time of conception were known approximately.<br />

Prenatal charts relying on <strong>the</strong> trutine were seriously proposed in <strong>the</strong> early twentieth<br />

century by Walter Gornold (who wrote under <strong>the</strong> pen name Sepharial) in The Solar<br />

Epoch and by E. H. Bailey in The Prenatal Epoch.<br />

[168] THE ASTROLOGY BOOK

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