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Combining <strong>the</strong> doctrine of karma with <strong>the</strong> <strong>the</strong>ory of <strong>astrology</strong> can account for<br />

<strong>the</strong> fated quality of a person’s life and character. The chart may be seen as a seed plan<br />

or blueprint of destiny, but in <strong>the</strong> end it is a self-created fate. This perspective suggests<br />

that <strong>the</strong> infinite wisdom of <strong>the</strong> cosmos decrees that a person is born when <strong>the</strong> planets<br />

are arranged in a structure that reflects <strong>the</strong> fate that <strong>the</strong> individual has earned on <strong>the</strong><br />

basis of past actions in past lives. Subsequent experiences with one’s culture and caretakers<br />

derive out of a pre-existent psychic structure. The environment, <strong>the</strong>n, beginning<br />

with <strong>the</strong> body, is not so much a primary as a secondary cause of behavior; it is a<br />

mirror reflecting <strong>the</strong> soul’s already existing internal structure.<br />

In regard to <strong>the</strong> etiology of a pathological condition, <strong>the</strong> environment confirms,<br />

but it does not originate, <strong>the</strong> child’s primary anxieties and inner conflicts. Of<br />

course, one cannot dispute environmental deficits and <strong>the</strong>ir effects. What needs to be<br />

emphasized, however, is <strong>the</strong> individual’s accountability. In this view, <strong>the</strong> experienced<br />

environment constitutes karmic feedback to activate, correct, and refine a person’s<br />

innate character, however long and painful this process may be. As noted in an article<br />

by J. Segal and H. Yahres in <strong>the</strong> November 1978 issue of Psychology Today, some studies<br />

indicate <strong>the</strong> child has as much effect on <strong>the</strong> parent as <strong>the</strong> parent has on <strong>the</strong> child,<br />

thus <strong>the</strong> parent-child relationship is reciprocal. Likewise, recent developments in<br />

past-lives <strong>the</strong>rapy suggest that a given life may be but a single chapter in a long and<br />

ongoing evolutionary process, as noted in such <strong>book</strong>s as Coming Back: A Psychiatrist<br />

Explores Past-Life Journeys (Moody), Many Lives, Many Masters, (Weiss), and O<strong>the</strong>r<br />

Lives, O<strong>the</strong>r Selves (Woolger).<br />

Psychological <strong>astrology</strong> emphasizes character over fate and does so for a simple<br />

reason: human beings have more control over character than fate, thus character<br />

deserves <strong>the</strong> greater emphasis. As far as fate is concerned, early childhood conditions<br />

signify <strong>the</strong> first and thus prototypical event pattern that reflects psychic structure.<br />

This, however, does not mean that <strong>the</strong> environment is merely <strong>the</strong> effect of how it is<br />

perceived (constructivism). The constructivist position that one constructs a reality<br />

on <strong>the</strong> basis of meaning attributions is only relatively valid. It is valid in <strong>the</strong> sense that<br />

how a person interprets events is going to shape his subsequent experience. His interpretations<br />

will influence his feelings and behavior (subjective reality), and <strong>the</strong>se, in<br />

turn, will tend to influence subsequent responses from o<strong>the</strong>rs (objective reality). In<br />

this sense, each person does construct a reality that conforms to his or her subjective<br />

world. That subjective world, however, may derive initially from an objective fate that<br />

has been earned on <strong>the</strong> basis of past actions in past lives, and which was internalized<br />

at an early age in <strong>the</strong> form of emotionally significant childhood experiences—<strong>the</strong> prototype<br />

event pattern. These formative experiences become part of psychic structure,<br />

i.e., mental habits, beliefs, expectations, and images of self and o<strong>the</strong>r, all of which are<br />

symbolized by <strong>the</strong> horoscope.<br />

This formulation is consistent with Jung’s <strong>the</strong>ory of synchronicity and his definition<br />

of archetypes as having a psychoid factor, meaning <strong>the</strong>y shape matter as well as<br />

mind. A basic tenet of Jungian psychology (and psychological <strong>astrology</strong>) is that archetypes/planets<br />

are nonlocal; <strong>the</strong>y do not reside solely within <strong>the</strong> psyche as structural elements,<br />

but ra<strong>the</strong>r are inherent in nature as a whole. Archetypes are imminent and<br />

thus infinitely diffused throughout nature. It is precisely this psychoid quality of <strong>the</strong><br />

Psychological Astrology<br />

THE ASTROLOGY BOOK<br />

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