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SIDEREAL ZODIAC (FIXED ZODIAC)<br />

The zodiac is <strong>the</strong> belt constituted by <strong>the</strong> 12 signs—Aries, Taurus, Gemini, Cancer,<br />

Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn, Aquarius, and Pisces. The names of<br />

<strong>the</strong> signs correspond with a belt of 12 constellations ringing our solar system that, several<br />

thousand years ago, gave <strong>the</strong>ir names to <strong>the</strong> zodiac. The sidereal zodiac, also<br />

referred to as <strong>the</strong> fixed zodiac, is located where <strong>the</strong>se constellations are actually positioned.<br />

Practitioners of Hindu <strong>astrology</strong> are <strong>the</strong> most notable users of <strong>the</strong> sidereal system.<br />

The o<strong>the</strong>r zodiac originated with Ptolemy, <strong>the</strong> great astrologer-astronomer of<br />

antiquity, who was very careful to assert that <strong>the</strong> zodiac should begin at (i.e., 0° Aries<br />

should be positioned at) <strong>the</strong> point where <strong>the</strong> Sun is located during <strong>the</strong> spring equinox.<br />

Because of <strong>the</strong> phenomenon known as <strong>the</strong> precession of equinoxes, this point very<br />

gradually moves backward every year; currently, 0° Aries is located near <strong>the</strong> beginning<br />

of <strong>the</strong> constellation Pisces. Astrologers who adhere to <strong>the</strong> Ptolemaic directive—<strong>the</strong><br />

great majority of modern Western astrologers—use <strong>the</strong> tropical zodiac (also called <strong>the</strong><br />

moving zodiac, for obvious reasons). The sidereal zodiac, however, has become<br />

increasingly popular in <strong>the</strong> West over <strong>the</strong> last decade or so.<br />

The question of which zodiac to use is more involved than might be initially<br />

imagined. When <strong>the</strong> astrological novice first encounters this issue, <strong>the</strong> initial tendency<br />

is to think that <strong>the</strong> zodiac should correspond with <strong>the</strong> constellations; why, after all,<br />

should one keep shifting <strong>the</strong> zodiac just because Ptolemy said to There is more at<br />

stake, however, than <strong>the</strong> authority of Ptolemy. For example, much seasonal symbolism<br />

is associated with <strong>the</strong> signs: Ever-youthful, pioneering Aries is <strong>the</strong> sign of spring; cold,<br />

restrictive Capricorn is <strong>the</strong> sign of winter; and so forth. In <strong>the</strong> tropical zodiac <strong>the</strong> signs<br />

are congruent with <strong>the</strong> seasons; in <strong>the</strong> sidereal zodiac <strong>the</strong>se associations are lost. A<br />

siderealist, on <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r hand, could make <strong>the</strong> observation that in <strong>the</strong> Sou<strong>the</strong>rn<br />

Hemisphere, where <strong>the</strong> seasons are reversed, <strong>the</strong>se associations are meaningless anyway<br />

(unless <strong>the</strong> zodiac is shifted 180° in sou<strong>the</strong>rn latitudes—a highly problematic but<br />

never<strong>the</strong>less logically possible response). There is thus no decisive argument favoring<br />

one system over <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r.<br />

Some attempts to resolve this problem have been made by assigning different<br />

significances to <strong>the</strong> two zodiacs: The tropical zodiac, some have argued, provides a<br />

“map” of <strong>the</strong> personality (<strong>the</strong> outer self), whereas <strong>the</strong> sidereal zodiac provides a chart<br />

of <strong>the</strong> soul (<strong>the</strong> inner self). O<strong>the</strong>r astrologers, most notably James T. Braha in his<br />

Ancient Hindu Astrology for <strong>the</strong> Modern Western Astrologer, have argued that Western,<br />

tropical <strong>astrology</strong> has better tools for analyzing <strong>the</strong> psyche, but Hindu <strong>astrology</strong> (<strong>the</strong><br />

principal form of sidereal <strong>astrology</strong>) works better in <strong>the</strong> area of predicting future conditions.<br />

Nei<strong>the</strong>r of <strong>the</strong>se attempts at reconciliation is likely to become widely accepted.<br />

Nor does it seem likely that ei<strong>the</strong>r zodiac will supplant <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r, at least not in <strong>the</strong><br />

foreseeable future.<br />

Sources:<br />

Braha, James T. Ancient Hindu Astrology for <strong>the</strong> Modern Western Astrologer. Hollywood, FL: Hermetician<br />

Press, 1986.<br />

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

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

Sidereal Zodiac (Fixed Zodiac)<br />

THE ASTROLOGY BOOK<br />

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