Face. There is so much contradictory testimony
with reference to this term that the entire subject has been ignored by many
modern authorities.
(1) As employed by Ptolemy, a planet in a
House that is distant counter-clockwise from the Moon, or clockwise from the
Sun by the same number of Houses as the Sign, is in its Face. This means that
Mercury is in its Face when in a House preceding that of the Moon, or following
that of the Sun; Venus, when two Houses preceding or following; Mars, three
Houses; Jupiter, four Houses; or Saturn, five Houses - duplicating in Houses
from the actual Sun and Moon positions, the scheme of Sign-Rulership from
Cancer and Leo, around to Capricorn and Aquarius.
(2) James Wilson gives a series of 10° Faces
which are merely the scheme of Decanates with their Rulers according to one of
the ancient Systems. Since this is only a distinction of terms without a
difference in meaning, the employment of the term Face in this sense is
confusing and unnecessary.
(3) Alan Leo defines a Face as one of
a series of 5° subdivisions of a Sign. His fondness for symbolism is reflected
in the interpretations which he applies to those who have a rising Degree in
each of the 72 arcs in this series of what might better be called demi-Decans. v.
Signs, Subdivisions of.
Fall. A planet in the Sign opposite
that in which it is said to be Exalted. v. Dignity.
False
Angle; False Arc. v. Directions.
Familiarity. A term used by Ptolemy to
indicate an aspect or parallel between two bodies; or their mutual disposition,
as when each is in the other's Sign or House.
Fate. The belief that astrological
influences determine Man's fate, that the issues of all events is
predetermined, and that no effort can avail him to alter it, is an extreme view
to which few modern astrologers subscribe, since it would deprive his active
will and effort of mind of any effective part in determining the events of his
life. The doctrine of Fate should therefore be regarded as somewhat misleading
on the ground that it is in conflict with the modern concept of Man as a free
moral agent. v. Free Will.
Feminine
Signs. The
even-numbered signs: Taurus, Cancer, Virgo, Scorpio, Capricorn, and Pisces. (v.
Signs.)
Feral. A wild or undomesticated animal.
A term anciently employed whereby inference was made to the bestial nature of
those with an Ascendant in Leo or the latter half of Sagittarius; also those
with either Luminary so placed and with the malefics in Angles. The Moon was
said to be feral when void of course (q.v.).
Figure. An astrological or Celestial
Figure, variously called Geniture, Map, Scheme, Chart, Theme, Mirror of Heaven,
Nativity or Horoscope, as cast, erected or drawn by modern astrologers,
consists of a circle of the heavens, representing the 360° of the Earth's
orbit, divided into twelve arcs - resembling a wheel of twelve spokes. These
arcs may represent Signs of 30° each beginning at the Spring equinoctial point,
or Houses of an indeterminate number of degrees beginning at an ascending
degree. A Solar Figure, used where a specific moment of birth is not known,
employs the Sun's degree as the point of beginning, or Ascendant. The Houses or
geo-arcs, based upon the degree rising in the east at the specific moment for
which the Figure is cast, supposedly represent the number of degrees which pass
over the horizon in two hours from that particular longitude and latitude and
on that day. The Sign-divisions, or heliarcs, are thus subdivisions of the
Earth's annual orbit round the Sun, while the House-divisions, or geo-arcs, are
subdivisions of the daily orbit of a particular point on the Earth's surface
around the Earth's axis.
Most of the difficulties
concerning astrological terminology result from the fact that this circle
represents the celestial sphere, subdivided according to three different
systems at one and the same time. This paradox ceases to baffle only when the
one who employs the map learns to read and interpret it in each of the three
ways, consecutively rather than simultaneously.
With the Earth as a center of reference,
its annual orbit extends impersonally from the point of the Vernal Equinox, in
successive 30° arcs, each corresponding to one sign of the zodiac. Therefore,
if for a given day, month and year, the planets are placed in certain degrees
of certain signs, this placement remains valid no matter at what point on the
earth the observer is located.
If now we confine ourself to a
given individual located at a given point on the Earth, and erect a map showing
the Sun at the sunrise point, choosing the Sun as the point of commencement of
a circle or experience, because it is a permanently powerful center of energy
radiation, our twelve 30° arcs will be measured from the degree the Sun
occupied on that day. Such a set of arcs would be applicable to any one born
with the Sun in the same degree; but when the places of the remaining planets
are inserted it will apply only to one born also on the same day of the same
year. If the different planetary reflectors of solar energy, as they appear
over the horizon at irregular intervals throughout that first day of life,
stimulate a certain growth, there must result a cycle of sensitive degrees or
points of receptivity. On successive days the actual places of these planets
will advance, but the point of receptivity or expectancy remains - resulting in
the "human time clock" to which physiologists frequently refer.
If now these twelve divisions of
the circle are to be based on the diurnal rotation of the Earth on its axis,
the twelve arcs must represent subdivisions of the Equator instead of the
Ecliptic. Furthermore, this involves the question of time of day, and Latitude
as well as Longitude of place. Such arcs are measured from the degree of the
Horizon that is rising at that moment of time from that particular Longitude
and Latitude of place; and are measured in two-hour units along the Horizon
instead of 30° units along the Ecliptic.
Since the Inclination of the
Earth's axis introduces another factor, the degrees of arc that cross the
horizon in two hours, vary with the Latitude and with the time of year. This
expanding and contracting of the degrees encompassed in two hours throughout
the year, is also doubtless involved in the factor of orbs. (q.v.)
Therefore, the map of a nativity
is a combination of three maps: (1) Of Signs, 30º subdivisions of a
horizon, at right angles to a line between a Zenith and a Nadir (v. Celestial
Sphere); (2) of Solar House, 30° subdivisions of the Ecliptic, at right angles
to a line between the North and South poles of the Ecliptic; and (3) Of Houses,
two-hour subdivisions of the Equator, at right angles to a line between the
North and South Celestial Poles.
For this reason some modern
scientific astrologers utilize the map in a method somewhat altered from the
traditional method. The divisions of the printed design are the Signs, with 0°
Aries at the left. A colored line is drawn through the Sun position to the
opposite point in the orbit, and another at right angles thereto, indicating
the solar houses. On the outside of the circle are placed the degrees of the
cusps of the Geocentric Houses as measured from the Rising Degree, thus showing
at a glance the unequal arcs that pass over the horizon in equal periods of
time. In reading such a map, the design is read upright, or successively rotated
to place at the left the Sun degree or the Rising Degree.
This explains the use of the
terms Midheaven and Ascendant, as indicating the points at the top or at the
left of the map, which terms are not synonymous with Zenith or Nadir. (v.
Celestial Sphere.)
Fire
Signs. The
inspirational signs: Aries, Leo, Sagittarius. v. Signs.
First point. 0º Aries; from which point
Longitude is reckoned along the Ecliptic, and right ascension along the
Celestial Equator.
Fixed
Signs. Taurus,
Leo, Scorpio and Aquarius, constituing the Fixed Quadruplicity. v. Signs,
Qualities.
Fixed
Stars. v.
Stars.
Flexed. An alternate term for the
mutable signs, preferred by some modern authorities.
Fortified. Strongly placed; either
elevated, in a congenial Sign, or well-aspected.
Fortitude. An ancient term indicating a
quality or strength possessed by a planet when posited in its own sign or that
of its exaltation.
Fortuna. Pars Fortuna. The Part of Fortune. One of the Arabian Points (q.v.). A
point that bears the same relation to the Rising Degree that the Moon bears to
the Sun. It occupies the same House-position in a Figure based on a
birth-moment, that the Moon tenants in a Solar Figure. Its symbol, a cross
within a circle ED, is that utilized by astronomers to represent the Earth. It
is the ancient Chinese symbol Tien, a field; used by the Egyptians to signify territory.
It is generally considered that the House position of Fortuna is an indication
of the department of life that will most readily contribute to the financial
welfare of the native. If so it tends to lend emphasis to the theory that one
succeeds best at that which one likes best; that congeniality of occupation is
a contributing factor to success therein. v. Arabian Points.
Fortunate
Signs. A positive
Sign, especially on the Ascendant, is sometimes so characterized; but, unless
the Ruler thereof is well aspected, this ought not to be taken too literally,
for too often it is overbalanced by other considerations.
Fortunes. The benefic planets: Jupiter, the
'Greater Fortune"; and Venus, the "Lesser Fortune". The Sun and
Mercury, or by some authorities the Moon and Mercury, when well placed and
aspected, particularly if by Jupiter or Venus, are sometimes so classed.
Simmonite in his "Arcana of Astrology" says: "If Jupiter be with
the Part of Fortune in good aspect with the Moon and angular, especially in the
First House, the native will become rich".
Four-footed Signs. Aries, Taurus, Leo, Sagittarius
and Capricorn, sometimes termed "animal Signs." One whose Ascendant
is posited in one of these Signs was anciently presumed to possess some of the
qualities of that particular animal; as bold as the Lion, lustful as a goat,
and so on.
Fourth
Dimension. The
interrelationship of space and time, as developed by contemporary physicists,
makes Time the Fourth Dimension of Space. The concept has no immediate
application to Astrology, but its comprehension makes more understandable the
factors upon which all astrological considerations are based. In occult
terminology the Fourth Dimension has to do with internal qualities that when
seen in the astral light become visible. It is defined as "the sum of the
other three" dimensions; also as "Man's expanding sense of
time." In another sense Astrology is the Fourth Dimension of Psychology,
in that it alone takes cognizance of the added factor of time.
Free-Will. A doctrine that applies to the
exercise of the will in overcoming the obstacles of terrestrial environment and
cosmic influences, whereby so to control and direct cosmic forces operating at
a given time, as to transmute them into power under control. It is opposed to
any such yielding to an influence as that which is called Fate. According to
this concept the hour and place of birth, and the planets thereby located in the
Figure, represent the tools with which the individual is enabled to work out
his destiny. How he uses them, how he applies his individual gifts, is in his
own hands by virtue of the divine gift of Free Will. This philosophy thus
removes from astrological teachings the fatalistic doctrine which is repugnant
to all who believe that Man's control of his ultimate destiny is in his own
hands.
Friendly planets. Ptolemy appeared to believe that
those planets which have rulership, exaltation or triplicity in each other's
Signs should be classed as friendly planets. Other authorities class them as
follows:
Sun - unfriendly only to Saturn.
Moon - unfriendly only to Mars
and Saturn.
Venus - unfriendly only to
Saturn.
Mars - friendly with Venus only.
Jupiter - unfriendly only to
Mars.
Saturn - friendly only to the
Sun, Mercury and Jupiter.
Just how
Saturn can be friendly to the Sun when the latter is unfriendly to him is
nowhere explained, and James Wilson says the entire concept is nonsense.
However, a little thought will discern its basic truth when the qualities of
the various vibrations are considered, and as regards the Sun-Saturn objection
what Ptolemy probably meant was Saturn's application in beneficent aspect to
the solar orb, for no one can deny that a sextile or trine from Saturn to the
Sun mightily strengthens the latter and agrees with its purpose.
Fruitful
Signs. Cancer,
Scorpio and Pisces. The Water Signs. In Horary Questions the Ascendant, Moon,
or Lord of the Ascendant, if strongly placed in any one of these Signs, become
symbols of children. Some deem this equally applicable to the Natal Figure, and
that the 5th or its Lord in a fruitful Sign is a symbol of children. v.
Signs.
Frustration. A term used in Horary Astrology
when one planet is applying to an aspect of another, which aspect would tend to
signify some event; but before such aspect culminates, a third planet, by its
swifter motion, interposes to anticipate the culmination of the forming aspect
by completing one of its own. It is said to produce an Abscission of Light that
will frustrate the promised effect of the slower-moving aspect, constituting a
prohibition (q.v.) against its operation. The indication is that the
matter thus subjected to the prohibition will be retarded or utterly prevented,
through influences connected with the House of which the frustrating planet is
Ruler, or in which it was posited at birth. In his "Arcana of
Astrology" Simmonite gives this illustration of its application to an
Horary Figure: "If Venus, Lady of the Ascendant, were hastening to the
trine of Mars, Lord of the Seventh, in a question of marriage, it might denote
that the match would take place; but if Mercury were to form an opposition to
Mars before Venus reached her trine of that planet, it would be a frustration
and would show that the hopes of the querent would be cut off, and if he were
Lord of the Twelfth, it might denote that it would be done by a private enemy;
if Lord of the 3rd, by means of relations, and so on."