26.01.2015 Views

the-astrology-book

the-astrology-book

the-astrology-book

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS
  • No tags were found...

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Horary Astrology<br />

watershed for <strong>the</strong> translation of Arabic materials into Latin. To fully understand <strong>the</strong><br />

significance of this transmission, it is important to recall what actually happened to<br />

<strong>astrology</strong> in <strong>the</strong> Arabic period:<br />

Hellenistic (and Persian, i.e., Babylonian) methods were translated into Arabic<br />

and studied.<br />

Vedic methods were also translated in Arabic.<br />

Hellenistic (Western) and Vedic methods could be combined and syn<strong>the</strong>sized.<br />

The Arabic-speaking practitioners <strong>the</strong>mselves added and modified <strong>the</strong> inheritance<br />

<strong>the</strong>y received.<br />

The influx of material into <strong>the</strong> Latin West was even more extensive than that<br />

experienced by <strong>the</strong> Arabic scholars four centuries before. Thus, when Guido Bonatti<br />

wrote on horary in <strong>the</strong> thirteenth century, <strong>the</strong> tradition he built upon was already rich.<br />

The medieval horary astrologer practicing in <strong>the</strong> West navigated turbulent<br />

waters since <strong>the</strong> very essence of horary <strong>astrology</strong>—divination—was at best an uncomfortable<br />

topic for <strong>the</strong> Christian church, and at worst, a mortal sin. Church philosophers<br />

postulated that if one can really predict human behavior, <strong>the</strong>n <strong>the</strong> individual is<br />

not “free” to choose Christ and salvation. While o<strong>the</strong>r branches of <strong>astrology</strong> can<br />

adopt <strong>the</strong> position that <strong>the</strong> stars incline, but do not compel, doing so for horary would<br />

destroy its very substance, which is <strong>the</strong> prediction of human behavior. The church had<br />

effectively restricted prophesy as its own perquisite, banning and ana<strong>the</strong>maticizing it<br />

in o<strong>the</strong>r quarters. So despite brilliant individual horary astrologers like Bonatti, most<br />

portions of horary apart from medical usage were outside <strong>the</strong> pale of acceptable astrological<br />

behavior for much of <strong>the</strong> Middle Ages. Yet somehow, its rules continued to be<br />

transmitted to future generations, and no doubt individual astrologers continued to<br />

answer <strong>the</strong>ir own questions.<br />

The survival of horary <strong>astrology</strong> is due in no small part to <strong>the</strong> fact that people<br />

continued to ask <strong>the</strong> kind of questions that are <strong>the</strong> grist for horary <strong>astrology</strong>: Will I marry<br />

X Is she a virgin Where is my bro<strong>the</strong>r’s ship Will my son die in <strong>the</strong> war The people<br />

wanted <strong>the</strong> answers, while <strong>the</strong> church said it ei<strong>the</strong>r was not possible to have <strong>the</strong>m, or <strong>the</strong><br />

answers were from a demonic source. This hardly represented a stable situation.<br />

Ultimately, every town had its own cunning man or woman. He or she would<br />

ei<strong>the</strong>r “fix” <strong>the</strong> problem, or at least explain what was going to happen. These people<br />

were often <strong>the</strong> targets of <strong>the</strong> Inquisition in Catholic countries, but <strong>the</strong>y flourished in<br />

Protestant ones, as long as <strong>the</strong>y kept a low profile. How <strong>the</strong>y did <strong>the</strong>ir job might vary,<br />

with prayer a frequent accompaniment, but <strong>the</strong>re were herbalists, palmists, readers of<br />

bird lore, physiognomists, scryers, talisman makers, psychics, and some astrologers.<br />

The <strong>astrology</strong> practiced might have been primitive by <strong>the</strong> usual standards, but as literacy<br />

increased and <strong>book</strong>s became more available, astrological technique became<br />

increasingly available.<br />

The Renaissance had opened <strong>the</strong> door on classical learning, and it was never<br />

completely closed again after that. Part of what this opening represented was an alternate<br />

source of knowledge, one not controlled by <strong>the</strong> church. Distracted by <strong>the</strong> rise of<br />

Protestantism, <strong>the</strong> Catholic Church was never able to regain <strong>the</strong> keys to knowledge. It<br />

was in this heady mix of <strong>the</strong> sixteenth and seventeenth centuries that horary once<br />

[330] THE ASTROLOGY BOOK

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!