26.01.2015 Views

the-astrology-book

the-astrology-book

the-astrology-book

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

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

Pandora<br />

disposition, an air hand indicates an intellectual nature, and so forth. Despite palmistry’s<br />

wholesale borrowing of astrological terminology, modern astrologers have<br />

shown little or no interest in studying correlations between patterns in palms and patterns<br />

in astrological charts.<br />

Sources:<br />

Gettings, Fred. The Book of Palmistry. London: Triune Books, 1974.<br />

Hamon, Louis. The Cheiro Book of Fate and Fortune: Palmistry, Numerology and Astrology. New<br />

York: Arco Publishing Co., 1971.<br />

PANDORA<br />

Pandora is <strong>the</strong> name of two distinct celestial bodies: A moon of Saturn and an asteroid.<br />

Pandora, <strong>the</strong> recently discovered (1980) moon in <strong>the</strong> Saturnian system, is about<br />

55 miles in diameter and orbits Saturn in less than two-thirds of a terrestrial day at an<br />

average distance of 88,200 miles. Pandora, asteroid 55 (<strong>the</strong> 55th asteroid to be discovered,<br />

on September 10, 1858), has an orbital period a bit longer than 4 1 ⁄ 2 years, and it<br />

is almost 113 kilometers in diameter. Both celestial bodies were named after <strong>the</strong><br />

mythological Greek woman who released <strong>the</strong> ills of humanity by opening a box that<br />

<strong>the</strong> gods had sent her but had forbidden her from unsealing. Only <strong>the</strong> asteroid has<br />

been investigated by astrologers.<br />

Pandora is one of <strong>the</strong> more recent asteroids to be investigated by astrologers.<br />

Preliminary material on Pandora can be found in Demetra George and Douglas<br />

Bloch’s Astrology for Yourself, and an ephemeris (table of celestial locations) for Pandora<br />

can be found in <strong>the</strong> second edition of George and Bloch’s Asteroid Goddesses.<br />

Unlike <strong>the</strong> planets, which are associated with a wide range of phenomena, <strong>the</strong> smaller<br />

asteroids are said to represent a single principle. George and Bloch give Pandora’s<br />

principle as “curiosity that initiates change.” Zipporah Dobyns also associates Pandora<br />

with curiosity and has found it prominent in <strong>the</strong> charts of many astrologers. J. Lee<br />

Lehman sees <strong>the</strong> effect of Pandora as twofold: “to stir a person into doing something,<br />

and to produce unintended options of <strong>the</strong> person.” Jacob Schwartz gives this asteroid’s<br />

significance as “encountering unanticipated ramifications and options of a larger<br />

process, caught off-guard, curiosity initiating change.”<br />

Sources:<br />

Dobyns, Zipporah. Expanding Astrology’s Universe. San Diego: Astro Computing Services, 1983.<br />

———. Asteroid Goddesses: The Mythology, Psychology and Astrology of <strong>the</strong> Reemerging Feminine.<br />

2d. ed. San Diego: Astro Computing Services, 1990.<br />

George, Demetra, with Douglas Bloch. Astrology for Yourself: A Work<strong>book</strong> for Personal Transformation.<br />

Berkeley, CA: Wingbow Press, 1987.<br />

Lehman, J. Lee. The Ultimate Asteroid Book. West Chester, PA: Whitford Press, 1988.<br />

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

PARADISE<br />

Paradise, asteroid 2,791 (<strong>the</strong> 2,791st asteroid to be discovered, on February 13, 1977),<br />

is approximately 20 kilometers in diameter and has an orbital period of 3.7 years. Par-<br />

[512] THE ASTROLOGY BOOK

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

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!