T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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151.1 | 23-Sep-1960 | VAXUUM::DYER | Banish Bigotry | Thu Jun 19 1986 09:10 | 3 |
| Huh? I was born in 1960. A Libra even. Am I part of
this Libra generation?
<_Jym_>
|
151.2 | I was using astrological jargon ... sorry ... | CYCLPS::BAHN | I love it when a plan comes together... | Thu Jun 19 1986 21:40 | 24 |
| Astrologically, the term "generation" is often used in reference to sign changes
of either Neptune or, more commonly, Pluto. I was refering to Plutonian
generations. As I recall, the Leo generation started sometime in 1943 and
continued until sometime in 1956 (although some people born in 1957 are members
of the Leo generation ... Pluto went retrograde back into Leo). The Virgo
generation lasted only 13 years (1969).
When Pluto was discovered, statistical astrologers concluded (from studying
historical figures and trends) that much of its "influence" is upon people as
groups. (This relates to Pluto's correlation with the subconscious.)
For example (and exaggerating negative traits is always the easiest), the Leo
generation (mine) spent most of their "coming of age" years (the Sixties) trying
to tell everyone else how to run their lives and then grew up to be Yuppies.
The Virgoens are starting their careers now and exhibiting typical Virgo caution
and conservativism. The kids, the Librans, will find a balance that their Virgo
older siblings, Leo parents, and Cancer grandparents could not.
It's been predicted/speculated that when the Libra generation attains power (and
remember, we baby-boom Leos are still pretty much in charge of world trends),
their sense of order and balance will be the influence that brings about the
global village.
Terry
|
151.3 | can we speed that up? | CSMADM::SAWYER | | Tue Jun 24 1986 13:16 | 8 |
| Thank the gods... I can't wait....
a 60's person who didn't become a yuppie and still tells people
how to live.....cuz...as a libra on the cusp of scorpio...or
vice verca....I KNOW what's best for EVERYONE.....!
such a gift....
|
151.4 | Nah | VAXUUM::DYER | Banish Bigotry | Wed Jun 25 1986 02:19 | 6 |
| [RE .2]: Bah. As a Virgo/Libra cuspoid born in the Virgo
generation, I'm not at all into "typical Virgo caution and con-
servativism."
Also, the Punk movement was started by this Virgo genera-
tion.
<_Jym_>
|
151.5 | Don't forget Neptune . . . | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Wed Jun 25 1986 16:46 | 61 |
| The Punk movement, I think, is more of an expression of Neptune
in Scorpio. Pluto and Neptune really should be studied together
for their effects on generations. Also, the way an individual's
own chart is set up can have a profound effect on the way that person
expresses the energies of the collective. The observations in the
base note are good starting points, but require more careful study
for individual interpretations.
Pluto has to do with the "inner power source" for people, and how
they tend to express power. It also has to do with the transformative
energy in a person. Neptune is about the spiritual urge, the longing
to be one with all. It represents ego-transcendent energy, and
often ties in with what we idealize.
These two planets have been in a sextile (60 degrees) aspect
relationship for the past 40-odd years (don't have my ephemeris
with me, so I can't look up exact dates--sorry). So it seems that
in generational (as well as personal) influences, the energies play
off each other--the urge to penetrate to the core, and the urge
to dissolve into the infinite. Quite a pair, there. While Pluto
is trying to get to the root for the primal power source, Neptune
is drifting out to the ether. This can make for some confusing
manifestations of an individual's "transpersonal" self.
So looking back at the recent generations, you have the Leo/Libra
group, the Virgo/Scorpio group, the Libra/Saggitarius group, and
now the Scorpio/Capricorn group. I am of the Leo/Libra group, and
I recognize that in my own small way I have been obsessed (Pluto)
with personal power (Leo), while at the same time yearning towards
an almost mystical ideal (Neptune) in relationships (Libra). (Remember
Free Love?) Sound conflicting? At times, definitely. It is always
interesting to see how others have experienced the same energies
when I read their charts.
The Virgo/Scorpio group comprises many charts that I read today.
Many of these individuals focus their power (Pluto) on Virgoan issues,
which include health & hygiene (sp?), work, analytical thought,
and service. Even the punks are not exactly spontaneous goofs--their
costumes are _calculated_ to shock and anger, and to express their
own shock and anger. At the same time many seem to have an almost
mystical regard for Plutonian power (Neptune in Scorpio), penetration
and transformation. And so the punks virtually wear their guts
outside to show the rest of us just how ugly everything is, and other
people study how to become powerful, how to wield power, struggle
to discover the sources of power, physical, mental, emotional,
spiritual and sexual. This is a very probing combination that has
delved into and exposed things we wish were not true. Remember
how casually and even joyfully the 60's treated drugs? How ugly
they were revealed to be in the years that followed.
The Libra/Saggitarius group, whose charts I've not yet had the pleasure
to study much yet, shifts the focus of power and ideals to relating
and freedom. It will be interesting to see what individuals report
as time goes by. But one thing that I still hear today is that
_balance_ (Libra) of power (Pluto)_ is a key to successful functioning.
And Neptune in Saggitarius carries some of the same connotations
that Jupiter in Pisces does--an ideal of enlightened compassion.
I offer this as food for thought and welcome your comments.
Marcia
|
151.6 | Parent and child? | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Jun 25 1986 17:21 | 15 |
| I find an astrological coupling between Neptune and Pluto of special
interest because of an interesting *astronomical* coupling.
Pluto has the most elliptical (least circular) orbit of all the planets
in the solar system. It is so flattened that part of its path is
inside the orbit of Neptune -- the orbits cross.
This has lead to speculations that Pluto is an escaped moon of Neptune.
This is as I said *only* a speculation, there is no real evidence for
it. But it would explain a number of things which are otherwise
unconnected.
And perhaps it says something astrological as well.
Topher
|
151.7 | | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Wed Jun 25 1986 17:29 | 9 |
| True, astrologers (at least the more scientifically minded of them)
like to speculate on the meaning of the astronomy. Pluto might
be an escaped moon of Neptune; another theory I've heard advanced
is that it's an escapee from Someplace Else--perhaps another galaxy
we had a close brush with. It is an interesting anomaly in an
otherwise pretty coherent system (even if Uranus _does_ rotate on
its side so that it looks like a ball rolling around the sun).
Marcia
|
151.8 | However | INK::KALLIS | | Wed Jun 25 1986 17:42 | 15 |
| re .6, .7:
things get stranger yet. Latest astronomical observations, plus
the presence of Pluto's _very_ large moon, Charon, indicate that
it's _not_ an escasped moon of Neptune.
Neptune, itself, however, is strange, since its axis is tipped 97
degrees from the plane of the ecliptic and its largest moons have
highly elliptical orbits.
Something strange seems to have happened at the outer reaches of
our Solar System.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
151.9 | Other fun stuff | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Thu Jun 26 1986 09:32 | 9 |
| Almost seems like a brush with another system makes sense, doesn't
it? (I said galaxy before; I meant another system--blush).
The other thing astrologers love to speculate about is the asteroid
belt. Was it or wasn't it once a planet? And if it was, what sign
did it rule? I've not read up much on latest astronomical theories
about the asteroid belt--anybody out there a fount of information?
Marcia
|
151.10 | Funnier and Funnier! | INK::KALLIS | | Thu Jun 26 1986 12:28 | 31 |
| re .9:
I'm not exactly an expert in this field, but I did once discover
something interesting. If we assume that there was a planet in
the fifth position [not ballet :-)], and if you assume it to be
between 4 and 5 lunar masses; and if it had some metastability that
caused it to explode [yes, an awful lot of "if"s, but bear with
me], and if the explosion drove two equally sized masses along a
line tangent to the orbit of the fifth planet, one mass would have
reached Neptune's orbit; the other, the orbit of the Earth. If
the mass near the earth had been equivalently stressed so that _it_
exploded into two roughly equal masses, one would have reached solar
escape velocity and the other would have taken up orbit around the
earth.
I worked all the math out for this many years ago for a friend who
writes a monthly science column in a magazine that publishes both
science fiction and fantasy. He gave me credit in the magazine,
but a slightly altered version appears in his collection of science
essays, _Only a Trillion_.
Did it happen? (The asteroid belt would be that portion of the debris
that "stayed behind"; this is somewhat more credible because of
the "male" or "rogue" asteroids, which have highly elliptical orbits.)
Possibly, but not probably. However, it _is_ interesting that the
orbital mechanics fit within one percent and that Neptune has a
rather odd moon system, where its star members have strongly elliptical
orbits.
Steve Kasllis, Jr.
.
|
151.11 | This and that on planetary billiards. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Jun 30 1986 15:06 | 59 |
| RE: .8
Yup. That Pluto has a moon makes it *much* less likely that it itself
was a moon of Neptune. The dynamics of such things are such that a
moon cannot have a moon for any length of time.
I haven't seen any calculations yet for the possibilities that Pluto
acquired a moon (either by "fusion" or by "fission" so to speak) during
the hypothetical event which "knocked" it out of Neptunian orbit.
It's clear that this is unlikely, but I'm not sure *how* unlikely it
is.
RE: .9
I don't know whether I qualify as a "fount" but I think I can answer
your question about the asteroid belt.
It now seems *very* much more likely that the asteroid belt is a planet
which never formed, rather than a planet which came apart. The "fifth
planet" hypothesis fails to explain an awful lot of what is now known
about the asteroids and the formation of the solar system, while the
"unformed planet" hypothesis seems to explain more the more is learned.
The astrological connection is interesting, however. It might be
possible to check for an unexplained influence with the "right" period.
At a wild guess, how about something like "unrealized potential". I
don't remember the period off hand, but if anyone is interested it
would literally take me only a couple of minutes to look it up when I
get home.
RE: .10
Very interesting idea.
I did some quick "back-of-the-envelope" checks on the first part (5th
planet --> Earth orbit + Neptune orbit) of your scenario. (Actually,
in this case, the quotes are unnecessary, I really did them on the
back of an envelope :-).
It works, but it is rather sensitive as to where in the present
asteroid belt you put the original planet. The necessary position is
well within the belt but pretty far from the "center" of it. This
doesn't invalidate the results, of course, but people trying to figure
out how outrageous a coincidence it is should be aware of this "extra"
degree of freedom in the scenario.
There is also a real problem with the forces required. They are, let
us say, "astronomical" in size. I can't think of any process which we
know about which would come close to causing a body of 4 or 5 lunar
masses to spontaneously split. A massive collision might do it, but
once we introduce an extra body with arbitrary momentum, we can get any
results we want to out of it.
Of course, it goes without saying, (though I'm saying it) that there
are many processes that we *don't* know about, or which *I* don't know
about, or, even, that I just haven't thought of. So, once again, this
problem is not fatal.
Topher
|
151.12 | More Details | INK::KALLIS | | Mon Jun 30 1986 17:09 | 16 |
| re .11:
The orbit of Charon is fairly circular, so it'd have to be fission,
if anything; however, that would bring out all the old problems
associated with the two Roche limits. More likely that a "fission"
moon would just have ended up as another planertary ring.
Also, my calxculations were made on the basis of two complementary
Hohmann transfer ellipses and something a bit more than 4.5 Moon
masses. The location was assumed to be at the fifth Bode-Titius
position, and the delta-v difference was about 1% off nominal.
I'm
dubious that it actually happened, but the mechanics are fascinating.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
151.13 | Watch for falling rocks | RAJA::BROOMHEAD | Ann A. Broomhead, no phone | Tue Jul 01 1986 13:56 | 9 |
| Oh, pooh. I really "liked" one result of a breakup of the
fifth planet. I had read somewhere (I've no idea where) that
it had been definitely proved that that planet had broken up a
measly five million years ago. And that the orbital period of
one set of rocks blown off by that was -- five million years.
Look out below!
Ann B.
|
151.14 | Neptune and Pluto: taking it personally | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Fri Jul 11 1986 10:34 | 70 |
| It is an accepted idea that the midlife crisis years are part of
the adult life, from perhaps age 35 - 45. These years of
re-evaluation, crisis and even starting over have a strong astrological
correlation with a person's transits of Neptune and Pluto. Bolstered
by accompanying transits from Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus, it can
feel like one of the most stressful times in a person's life _even
if outside circumstances remain calm_. Here is quick summary map
of what goes on in those years astrologically.
Pluto: orbital cycle = 248 years
Obviously none of us live long enough to see a complete Pluto return.
But we do live through Pluto squaring Pluto and some of us see our
Pluto opposition. One would think that the first Pluto square would
occur at around 60-62, but this is not case for people born in the
middle of this century. Because of its extreme orbit, Pluto spends
less time in the signs of the zodiac from Virgo to Saggitarius than
in the signs on the other side of the zodiac. It spends the least
time, usually in its own sign, Scorpio. Because of this, many of
us experience our Pluto square anywhere from age 38 - 45. I am
of the Pluto-in-Leo generation, I am 35 now, and I will have my
Pluto square before I'm 40.
Pluto by transit asks one to die to the past in some way, to let
go of outworn habits, attitudes and expressions to really come into
our true power of our inner self. The Pluto square brings this
developmental need (which we all have) to a head. If one resists
the need to change and be reborn, the mundane effects may not be
all that nice; spouses leave, jobs disappear, the joy feels gone
from life, old values suddenly can feel worthless. Even if nothing
"goes wrong" in the physical events of your life, you can still
feel as if everything is stirred up and unsettled. The important
thing to realize is that _this is natural_. The people I know who
have seemed to suffer the most trauma about the need for change
are those who cry "But nothing is wrong! What is the matter with
me that I don't feel good anymore?" You may feel bad from time
to time, but don't feel guilty; what you're going through is as
necessary as the turmoils of adolescence were.
Neptune: orbital cycle = 165 years
This is another planet we're not likely to live to see its return
in our charts. So the transiting square and opposition to its natal
placement are important, as are Pluto's. The square comes at about
age 41-42. If this is coinciding with your first Pluto square,
it can feel very difficult. Neptune by transit has to do with the
expression of our spiritual urge and its expression, and asks us
to elevate the mundane circumstances of life so that they are invested
with some spiritual value, and make us feel at one with all. But
the first thing many people experience at the beginning of any Neptune
transit is a sense of confusion; they know that something is lacking,
but have no idea what it is, or how to go about figuring out what
it and then _doing_ something about it. So at the same time that
one feels pieces of one's "old self" dying off (Pluto) one can have
no idea of what will eventually take their place (Neptune). To
live in this state of uncertainty certainly requires tremendous
courage and faith - in one's self, in God, in whatever.
Considering these two things together, it seems wonderful that anyone
gets through this period intact. But one can readily spot the ones
who have made it through to the other side and are fresh, exalted,
reborn. There are two things one learns from these transits, I
think: one, specific lessons about specific areas of life represented
by the houses being transited in your own birth chart, and two,
that you are strong enough to survive. The vigor of my older friends
who have learned that they can come through critical situations
is impressive to see. One can truly believe in one's self after
that.
Marcia
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