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Bernadette Brady Predictive Astrology Pdf Books카테고리 없음 2020. 2. 15. 21:23
Review:Bernadette Brady has a gift for expressing the mathematically complex in poetic terms that turn angles and orbits into a celestial ballet. Predictive Astrology covers all the basics-transits, progressions, and houses-while unlocking the bewildering secrets of eclipses. In a seamless dialogue of logic and intuition, Brady encourages us to look beyond the basic blueprint of the natal chart and peek into the future. Her view of fate doesn't condemn a person to a set path in life, allowing the astrologer who carefully balances logic and intuition to better prepare her clients for the challenges fate has in store.Brian Patterson From the Back Cover:'ONCE UPON A TIME there was a lark who was renowned for her beautiful song.' Are the opening words for this comprehensive textbook of predictive astrology. This ground-breaking book, with its many new techniques and concepts, brings predictive astrology into a world of its own.
Time maps encompass the author's approach to fate and transits, and new methods are suggested for calibrating and filtering progressions, returns of all kinds, eclipses, and planetary arcs. As you blend all of these techniques, the author promises you can reveal the future and put various aspects of life into perspective.A totally new technique - the delineation of eclipses - removes their mystery and apparent random effects in the world of prediction. The eclipse data section, along with Saros Cycles, midpoint trees, and zodiacal degree listings will interest any serious astrologer.' About this title' may belong to another edition of this title.
PREDICTIVEASTROLOGYThe Eagle and the LarkBERNADETTE BRADYFirst published in 1999 byRed Wheel/Weiser, LLCWith offices at500 Third Street, Suite 230San Francisco, CA 94107www.redwheelweiser.comCopyright © 1992 Bernadette BradyAll rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced ortransmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,including photocopying, recording, or by any information storageand retrieval system, without permission in writing from Red Wheel/Weiser. Reviewers may quote brief passages.Reviewers may quote brief passages.Previously published by Samuel Weiser in 1992 asThe Eagle and the Lark.Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication DataISBN: 978-1-57863-112-4Brady, BernadetteEagle and the larkPredictive astrology: the eagle and the lark / Bernadette Brady,p.
Cm.Includes bibliographical references and index.ISBN 1-57863-112-2 (pbk.: alk. Predictive astrology. Title.BF1720.5B73 1999133.5—dc2198-42896CIPCover illustration by Valerie Cooper, copyright © 1992.Used by kind permissionCharts calculated by Astro Computing Services, San Diego, CA.Cover design by Kathryn Sky-PeckPrinted in the United States of AmericaMG10 9 8 7 6 5The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of theAmerican National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence ofPaper for Printed Library Materials Z.To my fatherwho gave me the Eagleand my motherwho gave me the Lark. ACKNOWLEDGMENTSTo write a book takes a large amount of support, encouragement and patience. For providing this, as well as endless editing, my deep thanks go to Darrelyn Gunzburg.For the making of gallons of tea, while endlessly proofreading, my thanks go to Ysha De Donna.And thanks to my white-haired old friend Robert. CONTENTSList of ChartsThe Fable of the Eagle and the Lark1. The AlphabetPlanets in Predictive WorkAngles in Predictive WorkPlanetary CyclesDynamic AspectsHouses in Predictive Astrology2.
Working With TransitsPrinciples of TransitsA Case Study of TransitsGrading TransitsRetrograde Motion of TransitsOrbs for TransitsFeedback on Failure3. Secondary ProgressionsUnique Features of ProgressionsNon-Chart-Related ProgressionsChart-Related ProgressionsOrbs for ProgressionsInterpreting Progressed Planets4. Time MapsSetting Up a Time MapThe Art of StorytellingCase Studies of Time MapsA Quick Guide for Using Time Maps5. Eclipses and the Saros CycleEclipesThe NodesEclipse Orbs for New or Full MoonsFrequency of Eclipses and Eclipse SeasonsThe Saros CyclesThe Nature of an Individual SeriesWorking With Saros SeriesPractical Questions about EclipsesA Case Study of EclipsesBorn on an Eclipse6. Older SystemsPredictive SystemsThe Failed EagleReturns (Planets or Luminaries)Personal Planet ReturnsOuter Planet ReturnsLuminary and Planetary Arcs7.
Once the Lark Sings (Conclusion)AppendicesAppendix 1: Calculating Secondary ProgressionsAppendix 2: Calculating of ReturnsAppendix 3: Planetary ArcsAppendix 4: Planetary Conjuctions (1900-2050)Appendix 5: Outer Planet ConjunctionsAppendix 6: The Saros CyclesAppendix 7: Eclipses (1900-2050)Appendix 8: Eclipses in Zodiac OrderBibliographyIndexAbout the Author LIST OF CHARTS1. Joan of Arc2.
Thomas Edison3. Thomas Edison (Rectified)4. Joan of Arc (Placidus)5. Joan of Arc (Koch)6.
Galileo Galilei7. Leonardo da Vinci8. Vincent van Gogh9. Marie Curie10. Napoleon Bonaparte11. Queen Elizabeth I12.
King Edward VIII13. Elizabeth Barrett Browning14. Marie Curie with Eclipses15.
Napoleon I with Eclipses16. Case Study of Eclipses17. Prince William18. Steven—Solar Return19. Abraham Lincoln—Solar Return20.
Marie Curie—Solar Return21. Queen Elizabeth I—Lunar Return22. Queen Elizabeth I—Personal New Moon Return23. Marie Curie—Lunar Return24. Marie Curie—Personal New Moon Return25. Edward VIII—Lunar Phase Return26. George Bernard Shaw—Mercury Return27.
Elizabeth Barrett—Venus Return for Meeting with Browning28. Elizabeth Barrett Browning—Venus Return for Marriage29. Joan of Arc—Mars Return30. Queen Victoria—Jupiter Return31. Queen Victoria—Saturn Return THE FABLE OF THE EAGLE AND THE LARKOnce upon a time there was a lark who was renowned for her beautiful singing. Her song was judged by all who heard her to be the sweetest sound on earth.
From dawn to dusk she would sing her song and as she sang, the beginnings of a desire grew. The desire was to sing for the gods.She realized that if she could fly high enough the gods would be able to hear her.
So the lark leapt into the air and flew as high as she could, but her wings tired and although she sang, she knew that the gods could not hear her. Determined now more than ever, she decided that she would climb the highest mountain and then fly from the peak.
But even this could not get her high enough to be heard in heaven.One day she saw an eagle soaring high in the sky, far higher then she had ever flown and she knew with unbounded certainty that if she could fly as high as the eagle, the gods would hear her beautiful song. So she watched the eagle and when he landed, she approached the huge bird. The small but brave lark explained her dilemma to the great eagle and asked if he would carry her on his back so that, together, they could entertain the gods.Now the eagle was aware of the gods because he could fly in their domain and yet, ashamed of his raucous voice, he never had the courage to contact them. Eagerly he agreed to carry the tiny lark.Tentatively she climbed onto his back and with a stretch and a flap of his mighty wings, he set aloft.
Higher and higher they soared. The lark was almost too scared to look down and yet onward still they flew. The lark had never been this high. She could see the whole world spread out beneath her. And then, all of a sudden, they were there. The tiny lark knew that now it was her turn, the eagle having done his part.
Firmly she stood up on the eagle's back and, filling her lungs with air, began to sing. Heaven was filled with her glorious music. The gods were astonished at the power of the eagle and enthralled by the beauty of the lark's song. The eagle was no longer ashamed and the lark was filled with joy.
Together, as a team, they had brought music to the gods.Since time began, the human race has quested the future. Whether it be the knowledge of a successful hunt, the weather patterns, the movement of the enemy or the outcome of a journey, to know the future was to have an advantage.
This need was so great that every tribe or clan had its own seer, sage, shaman or priest. This person's role was to explain the unexplainable and give meanings and patterns to seemingly random events, thereby reducing fear and creating greater stability. If the tribe's seer died, then the tribe would find or project these skills onto another individual.The human race has come along way since those first early scratchings on cave walls. But the need for the seer has not changed. In our modern world there is still the unexplained, the uncertain future and the need in the community for some individuals to see ahead of time.
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So the modern community seeks out individuals who, willingly or unwillingly, will take on the role of the seer.There are many pathways which lend themselves to the ancient projection of seership. Scientists predicting outcomes, the bureau of meteorology predicting weather, election forecasters predicting results, and the economists predicting the economy are seers on the side of the establishment. Clairvoyants, psychics, tarot readers, numerologists, tealeaf readers and astrologers are, in the public's eye, the seers of the non-establishment.Thus as we decide to study astrology to fulfill our own needs, all too often, within a few weeks of commencing study, the student's friends will not only want to know about themselves but also want the student to be their seer. The student's personal quest for truth and meaning in life thus becomes burdened by the community's ancient longing for a seer.Predictive work in astrology is also enmeshed with the collective's need for mystery, wonder and spirituality.