Planetary
Psychology.
Planetary
influences upon the unfolding psyche,
are as follows:
Sun:
Individual faculties; consciousness of
Ego, the Individuality as distinguished
from the Personality. The vital energy
that flows from the Sun through the
solar system, enabling life to exist and
its activities to be pursued; inspiring
men to the consciousness of a destiny to
be achieved: the sense of purpose that
is recognized by MacDougal and the
psychologists of the Purposivistic
School; ambitious, with good organizing
and executive ability. The solar
influence is reflected in an impression
of power in reserve; an outspoken and
worldly-wise counselor; a strong
individuality with an urge toward
acquisition of power. Emanates an
impression of dignity, grandeur, wisdom,
authority, will and lofty spirituality.
Restless under restraint, it operates
more through inspiration than intellect.
A strong paternal instinct. Generous,
masterful, honest, truthful and
creative; vital, forceful, sanguine,
dignified. Power, honor, fame, pride,
influence. When frustrated may become
ostentatious, despotic, ceremonious, and
fond of pomp and ritual.
Moon:
Higher
emotional faculties such as faith, hope
and charity, veneration, peace-loving.
The instinctive mind, the desire-nature
with respect to material things; the
external reactions to every-day affairs
and to those pertaining to the home and
domestic life; moods that fluctuate
between the extremes of optimism and
pessimism; ideas that are not abstract;
ingenuity applicable to concrete
purposes and practical ends; a mind that
fluctuates and that lacks the ability to
concentrate, hence easily influenced;
sympathy, not compassion; respect for
the old and regard for the young;
suavity, kindness; love for animals;
strong protective sense, and an
inclination to defend those incapable of
self-defense; acute maternal instinct
not based on sex; modesty, timidity,
economy, receptivity, imagination,
impres- sionability, changeableness;
fond of travel; personal magnetism;
psychic qualities; extra-sensory
receptivity; lymphatic, changeful,
plastic, wandering, romantic, visionary,
frivolous, capricious, fanciful,
unstable, procrastinating, lazy.
Mercury:
Concrete mental faculties: perception of
size, weight, form, color, order,
position, motion; memory, speech,
intonation, phonetic inflection;
thought, understanding, reason,
intelligence; vacillation, hesitancy to
face issues; mental waywardness;
brilliant and facile but not profound;
intellect in the abstract but not the
concrete; industrious in acquiring
knowledge for its own sake, apart from
any practical application or any
question of right or wrong; amasses
evidence and eloquently cites statistics
in support of his thesis; loves argument
and debate; cunning, crafty, subtle; a
skilled technician enjoying a
superficial proficiency; literary,
though not a ready writer. Mercury's
highest application appears to be in the
realm of "pure reason," which,
however, knows so much on both sides of
a subject it experiences difficulty in
drawing a conclusion, or in holding to a
conclusion once arrived at. From the
planet Mercury we have the word for the
element Mercury, and its derivative
effect, mercurial. Its mental direction
is largely determined by aspecting
planets. v. Aspects, planetary.
Mercury:
Active, excitable, impressionable,
nervous, gossipy, worrisome, witty,
dextrous.
Mercury
expressions: Literature,
writings, oratory, study, memory. If
frustrated may become conceited,
profane, unprincipled, tale- bearing,
forgetful, addicted to gambling.
Venus:
Physical faculties: friendship, romantic
amativeness; the affections,
particularly love and the emotions
derived therefrom; aesthetic sense, but
not analytical; responsive to beauty
whether of person, adornment, art or
environment; enjoys elegance, comfort
and pleasure; good taste; sex
sensitivity, but discriminating;
parental instinct; a youthful, almost
childlike simplicity of approach and
viewpoint; a gracious yet almost
patronizing attitude; subject to
negative moods and extremes of feeling;
given to self-pity in moments of
depression; mind highly receptive but
largely concerned with social affairs;
memory sense frequently unreliable;
gentle, amiable, pacific, graceful,
cheerful, temperate, passive. When
thwarted, inclines to extravagance in
self-indulgence; slothful, licentious,
sensual, vain, dissolute, and generally
abandoned; fond of gaudy apparel.
Evolved venusian sensibilities incline
to art, music, peace, justice, grace,
faithfulness, fruitfulness.
Mars:
The
vital faculties: combativeness,
acquisitiveness, desire, enthusiasm,
passionate amativeness, courage, ardor
in pursuit, not easily rebuffed and
seldom discouraged, indiscriminate
sexuality, haste, anger, intolerance,
fretfulness; a centre of power and
energy, whether for good or ill; acute,
penetrative mind, largely concerned with
physical accomplishment, through
direct-action methods, rather than aims,
and fitted for enterprises requiring
seer-assurance; dynamic force, whether
applied constructively or destructively;
domineering, brooks no interference and
is often ruthless in disregard of
others; fearless and unhesitating as to
hazardous undertakings and occupations;
love of family - and on a wider plane,
patriotism; ever ready to protect its
own, whether family, country or
organization; strong sense of
brotherhood with humanity at large,
though appearing to be self-centered.
Mars is forceful, active, inflammatory,
generally careless and destructive,
expert, high-spirited. Normally
synonymous with force, activity,
ambition, pluck, endurance, desire,
strife. When thwarted, Mars becomes
cruel, egotistical, sarcastic,
quarrelsome, coarse, vulgar.
Jupiter:
The
abstract and creative faculties:
comparison applied in generalizations
upon the broader aspects; idealism;
powerful sense of the dramatic, and
obsessed with the desire to be of
service to society; symbolizes a person
of sound judgment with an ample store of
common sense; optimism, order, harmony;
the principle of expansion and growth as
expressed in the accumulation of
material wealth, but without the
miserliness of a marked Saturnian trait.
Idealism generosity; a balance of
feeling and thought, of heart and mind,
that yields optimism, devotion,
benevolence, good nature, generosity,
temperateness, sociability, hopefulness;
peace-loving, law-abiding,
philosophical; usually of marked
religious tendencies, especially of a
ritu- alistic order; convinced of the
integrity of his motives and that his
judgments are tempered with mercy; love
of beauty as applied to grandeur and the
sublime, with a leaning toward art,
especially sculpture; the ability to
overcome opposition with forceful but
impersonal arguments; broad vision,
open-mindedness; listens to reason.
Jupiter
creates conditions through which these
qualities can bc expressed: health, as
physical harmony; law, as social
harmony; religion, as spiritual harmony
- not as channels of intellect, or the
means of making money. It represents
judgment, power in the benevolent sense,
profit, good fortune, honesty, dignity -
or just plain respectability.
At its
best Jupiter is generous, expansive,
genial, temperate, vital, benevolent,
respectful, self-controlled; but when
frustrated it inclines to pride,
dissipation, boastfulness, gambling,
extravagance, procrastination,
complacency, hypocrisy.
Saturn:
The concrete creative faculties:
asceticism; practical ability to achieve
the external expression of thought
forms; well ordered mind for the
technical and concrete with an emphasis
on detail; inclined toward scientific
research involving mathematics; the
conservative realist who asserts the
authority of experience; secretive,
noncommittal, noncommunicative;
cautious, inhibited and reserved;
laconic in expression; apostle of
justice meted out with a firm hand, yet
fair and impartial, a strong sense of
justice - particularly injustice; a
slave to customs and conventions, even
when railing against them; patient,
prudent, constant but jealous, yet not
easily offended. Its emphasis on the
personal ego and inability to give
outward expression to affection, tends
to separation and isolation; a serious
outlook on life; inclined to learn
everything the hard way; avoids
strenuous effort or exertion - but
generally finds more than his share of
it to do. Its strong sense of
self-preservation is deliberately
purposeful and holds the emotions in
check through the exercise of thought
and will power, more completely than
does any other planet.
Where
Uranus makes a show of strength when
freedom is threatened, and Mars when the
passions are aroused, Saturn is cold,
slow and deliberate, but inexorable when
fully aroused. Plots his way to
positions of authority, wherein he
discharges his duties with tyrannical
conservatism; generally a reactionary,
but faithful.
Normally
fearful, secretive, cautious, defensive,
binding, cold, hard, persevering,
steadfast; when frustrated Saturn
develops avarice, materialism,
ultra-conservatism, tradition-bound
narrow-mindedness, pessimism and
fatalism.
Uranus:
The iconoclastic tendency: characterized
by an aloof, offhand manner and
approach; imagination, constructive or
otherwise; reacts violently against
anything that would deprive him of his
free and conscious choice of thought and
action. Unbending will, insistent upon
independence at any price; not readily
amenable to any sort of control, much
less to arbitrary authority; strong
sense of power and authority;
assertiveness, with crushing
positiveness; self-reliant; inventive;
interest in scientific and religious
principles; unconventional, altruistic;
perseverance to cope with and conquer
material obstacles, yet subject to
sudden changes of attitude; organizer,
promoter, scientific investigator along
materialistic lines; originality, with a
tendency to break new ground, start new
occupations, advance new ideas, utilize
new methods, depart from established
customs, and hold in disdain the
arbitrary restrictions of conventional
morality; strong mechanical sense and
executive ability that leans toward
construction engineering; unerring
ability to sense people's motives, hence
often becomes a refractory spirit, more
or less alienated from his relatives;
moves spontaneously from an inner urge -
hence impulsive and generally classed as
eccentric.
Uranus is
deemed a higher octave of Mercury. often
fails to know his own mind, but is moved
by providential circumstances; often a
fatalist who considers his destiny
beyond his control.
Naturally
inclined to be variable, spasmodic,
impulsive, prophetic, and heroic, under
restriction - even that of an
inferiority complex - it becomes
eccentric, refractory, bohemian,
fanatical, anarchistic, and given to
hurling sarcastic invectives at anybody
or anything on any pretext and without
provocation. Uranus is eminently the
planet of science and invention,
particularly aviation, electricity, and
astrology.
Neptune:
The
Social Unrest; follow-the-trend illusive
and intangible emotions, of which we
know so little; entertains false hopes
and indulges in tricky schemes, yet is
highest in human sympathy; loves
mystery; acts dictated by powerful but
inexplicable motives, directed toward
invisible, intangible ends; reacts to
harmony, sympathy, symmetry, rhythm,
poetry, and the dance, which is the
poetry of motion, with a partiality for
stringed instruments; also for the
morbid and erotic.
Neptune
pertains to feeling, desire, emotion,
imagination. aesthetics, intuition, the
psychic faculties or extra-sensory
perceptions. When thwarted it becomes
psycho-neurotic, theatric, and
susceptible to flattery, the power of
suggestion, and appearances. On the
merest whim it will break a bargain or
go back on its word. It exhibits a high
regard for uniformity yet often succeeds
in enterprises that require more than
the average measure of mental effort.
Neptune is deemed a higher octave of
Venus.
Pluto.
Sociological
Urge. The organized group as the
instrument with which to amputate
parasitic growths on the body politic,
in order to reconstruct society along
more altruistic lines. Depending upon
the spiritual development they have
attained, these individuals become
leaders of eleemosynary organizations.
Foundations for the advancement of human
welfare and relations, professional
associations or trade unions through
which to achieve better social
conditions, or mere racketeers and gang
leaders. It affords incentive to great
literary or dramatic geniuses who
inculcate in their works Plutonian
doctrines calculated to bear fruit
through the succeeding generation; total
disregard for constituted authority or
vested rights, except as administered
for the good of all; and even at its
worst, more likely to be activated by a
sense of righteous indignation on behalf
of society than by personal
vindictiveness.