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Elements<br />

A fifteenth-century woodcut depicting <strong>the</strong> four elements: wood (Earth) burned by flames<br />

(fire) while a bird (air) flies above <strong>the</strong> sea (water). Reproduced by permission of Fortean<br />

Picture Library.<br />

People whose only contact with <strong>the</strong> word element was in a science class immediately<br />

think of <strong>the</strong> materials diagramed by <strong>the</strong> periodic table—oxygen, iron, hydrogen,<br />

silicon, and <strong>the</strong> like—when <strong>the</strong>y hear <strong>the</strong> term. It thus strikes <strong>the</strong>m as strange to<br />

consider earth, air, fire, and water by this designation. The astrological elements<br />

derive from <strong>the</strong> elements of ancient Greek philosophy. Classical philosophy and modern<br />

science share an interest in discovering <strong>the</strong> basic—<strong>the</strong> “elementary”—building<br />

blocks of <strong>the</strong> world. Prior to <strong>the</strong> advent of contemporary atomic <strong>the</strong>ory, intelligent<br />

people examining <strong>the</strong> world in which <strong>the</strong>y lived observed that all tangible things<br />

could be classified as solids (earth), liquids (water), or gases (air). Sources of heat and<br />

light, such as fire and <strong>the</strong> Sun, seemed to constitute a fourth factor (fire), which can<br />

be thought of as “energy.” When reworded as solid, liquid, gas, and energy, this<br />

ancient scheme of classification is not really so strange.<br />

When <strong>the</strong> ancients analyzed <strong>the</strong> human being in terms of <strong>the</strong>se four factors, it<br />

appeared to <strong>the</strong>m that <strong>the</strong> physical body was earthy, feeling and emotions watery, and<br />

thoughts airy. The fire element provided <strong>the</strong> spark of life that animated <strong>the</strong> human<br />

frame with activity. From this way of looking at human nature, it was but a short step<br />

to regarding sensitive, emotional people as having more of <strong>the</strong> water “element” in<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir constitution than <strong>the</strong>ir fellows, mental people as having more air, practical people<br />

as having more earth, and energetic, active people as having more fire. When<br />

<strong>astrology</strong> was being systematized in ancient Greece, this “psychological” system was<br />

applied to <strong>the</strong> 12 signs, resulting in a classification according to <strong>the</strong> four classical elements:<br />

<strong>the</strong> fire triplicity, Aries, Leo, and Sagittarius (energy signs); <strong>the</strong> earth triplicity,<br />

Taurus, Virgo, and Capricorn (practical signs); <strong>the</strong> air triplicity, Gemini, Libra, and<br />

THE ASTROLOGY BOOK<br />

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