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Nodes of <strong>the</strong> Planets<br />

line show <strong>the</strong>ir influence more in <strong>the</strong> public sphere whereas planets below <strong>the</strong> horizon<br />

are more private, but this distinction clearly breaks down when considering planets in<br />

such locations as <strong>the</strong> twelfth house (a largely private house situated above <strong>the</strong> horizon).<br />

The expression nocturnal arc refers to <strong>the</strong> distance, expressed in degrees and<br />

minutes of a circle, that a planet traverses between its setting in <strong>the</strong> west and its rising<br />

in <strong>the</strong> east. Classical <strong>astrology</strong> also classified signs as diurnal (<strong>the</strong> masculine signs) and<br />

nocturnal (<strong>the</strong> feminine signs). Contemporary astrologers no longer use <strong>the</strong> expression<br />

nocturnal sign.<br />

Sources:<br />

Bach, Eleanor. Astrology from A to Z: An Illustrated Source Book. New York: Philosophical<br />

Library, 1990.<br />

Brau, Jean-Louis, Helen Weaver, and Allan Edmands. Larousse Encyclopedia of Astrology. New<br />

York: New American Library, 1980.<br />

NODES OF THE PLANETS<br />

Take <strong>the</strong> orbit of Earth around <strong>the</strong> Sun, imagine it as a flat plane, and project it outward<br />

against <strong>the</strong> backdrop of <strong>the</strong> stars. This projection is <strong>the</strong> ecliptic. Although all <strong>the</strong><br />

principal planets in <strong>the</strong> solar system orbit <strong>the</strong> Sun in approximately <strong>the</strong> same plane,<br />

none of <strong>the</strong>ir orbital paths lies in exactly <strong>the</strong> same plane. The geocentric (earth-centered)<br />

nodes are <strong>the</strong> points at which <strong>the</strong> planets cross <strong>the</strong> ecliptic. The point at which<br />

a planet moves northward—with respect to our terrestrial perspective—as it crosses<br />

<strong>the</strong> ecliptic is its north node; correspondingly, <strong>the</strong> point at which it moves southward<br />

is <strong>the</strong> south node. Traditionally, <strong>the</strong> only nodes regarded as important were <strong>the</strong> lunar<br />

nodes because <strong>the</strong>se were <strong>the</strong> points where eclipses occurred.<br />

In heliocentric (Sun-centered) <strong>astrology</strong>, <strong>the</strong> nodes are located where <strong>the</strong><br />

orbits of any two planets cross. While only <strong>the</strong> lunar nodes are significant in traditional,<br />

geocentric <strong>astrology</strong>, <strong>the</strong> planetary nodes are major points of reference in heliocentric<br />

systems. Some astrologers have also tried to develop interpretations of <strong>the</strong> geocentric<br />

planetary nodes, but <strong>the</strong>se have not caught on, partly because <strong>the</strong> basic astrological<br />

tool required to place <strong>the</strong>se points in a chart—an adequate ephemeris (table of<br />

positions)—has not generally been available. However, some of <strong>the</strong> new computer<br />

programs include ephemerides for <strong>the</strong> nodes. The Solar Fire program produced by Esoteric<br />

Technologies, for example, will locate <strong>the</strong> nodes and even place <strong>the</strong>m in a second<br />

ring outside of <strong>the</strong> primary chart.<br />

Sources:<br />

Fitzwalter, Bernard, and Raymond Henry. Dark Stars: Invisible Focal Points in Astrology. Wellingborough,<br />

Northamptonshire, UK: Aquarian Press, 1988.<br />

Gettings, Fred. Dictionary of Astrology. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1985.<br />

NONPLANETS<br />

Nonplanets are everything placed in a horoscope that is not <strong>the</strong> Sun, Moon, or one of<br />

<strong>the</strong> eight planets (e.g., <strong>the</strong> part of Fortune, <strong>the</strong> lunar nodes, etc.).<br />

[498] THE ASTROLOGY BOOK

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