I've studied all that, too, of course. My question was narrower: You offered as proof that this contact was important because specific transits and directions to it marked specific points in your life. I asked how you can tell the midpoint was a factor since the same transits and directions to your natal Neptune would produce the same results and occurred at essentially the same times.SteveS wrote: Sat Mar 23, 2024 8:23 am Jim, the reason you can’t distinguish it the way I can: it is by my understanding of the German schools teachings and others about the symbolism of the AS/MC itself which I have studied relative to my own individual life.
Aside from the theory of what the midpoint might mean or be, how can you tell it was an active factor when your Neptune - the real descriptor of these times - occurred at the same time?
You are surely the best expert about your own chartJim I realize you and have had our disagreements about this issue but like I said before: I am the only one who has lived my life and I think I can distinguish what is more important in my own horoscope, after 40 years of living it.
However, we can't say that an astrological factor is or isn't valid by only judging our own chart. That's where everyone of us starts is thinking about an astrological theory, but it can't be the end of it.
Tell you what... I'll take the time to tabulate A/M partile contacts in my nearly a thousand well-timed public figures charts, then start another thread to list them. I'm extremely skeptical that the A/M midpoint is valid at all but don't have tabulated data to show one way or the other. We can then look at the list of famous people and see if there are any conclusions to draw about their characters and the basic nature of their lives. There won't be a lot: For a partile conjunction, opposition, or square of A/M (i.e., of A/M, M/D, D/I, and I/A) there are only 2° out of every 90°, or one chance in 45 of a contact. With ten planets that means that, on average, about two out of every nine people would have a planet in one of these four spots.