Without wanting to look too Astrodynish, I wanted to see how easy it would be to quantify something I've asserted for a while. It is: That each planet represents a tight bundle of needs that everybody has - though we have them with different strengths and priorities - and that natal analysis is substantially a process of discerning which of these needs is most important to an individual and, more generally, the "priority stack" of the ten needs.
I've been playing with the following rules set. Aside from the current task, it gives a sense of relative priorities of different chart factors. TMSA has all the numbers (% of strength) for what follows.
- No planet gets a score higher than 100% by definition.
- ANGULARITY: Start by listing the planet % strength based on angularity. (TMSA factors in both major and minor angles.)
- LUMINARY SIGNS: A planet ruling or exalted in the Sun-sign or Moon-sign automatically gets at least 90% strength (or
100%[95%] if it is dignified in both luminary signs). - HARD LUMINARY ASPECTS: Each planet conjunct, opposite, or square Sun or Moon gets at least the score of that aspect's strength. - If the planet is a luminary dignitary (that has already earned 90%), then it is at least 95% with a Class 1 luminary aspect or 92% for a Class 2 aspect (no extra points for Class 3).
SOFT LUMINARY ASPECTS: Each planet trine or sextile Sun or Moon gets at least one-half the strength score of the aspect. (No add-ons for luminary dignitaries.)- STATIONS: A stationary planets gets at least a 75% score. - If it is already 90% as a luminary dignitary, it gets at least a 95% score (5% "bump").
1. I tried lowering the luminary dignity score to 80% (90% for two). It didn't work. The planets didn't score high enough. The threshold needs to be 90% minimum.
2. I'm not adding anything for octiles. Maybe I should, but (at the very least) the math would be different and the effect would be minimal in most cases.
3. At first, I gave luminary soft aspects full strength. However, it unbalanced everything. I finally realized that - since this is not an overall planetary strength system (like Astrodynes) but, rather, an effort to determine the potency of various needs, this made sense. Hard aspects give a demand, insistence, and intensity to needs that soft aspects just don't give. They may not even be needs, in fact (having emotional force), but closer to biases (the mental equivalent of the needs). Possibly they should have no add-ons at all but, at present, I'm giving them a few points.