How Important is Partility?
Posted: Thu May 11, 2017 7:02 pm
How important is partiality in Sidereal Mundane Astrology?
We normally count partiality - contacts of angles and aspects within 1° or less - as one of the most important factors for filtering careful timing of the biggest events. Under the broad principle that the strongest results appear when the strongest (closest) aspects occur in the strongest (most acutely angular) places, the "gold standard" in much prediction for individuals is to have partile aspects in partile contact with angles - again, meaning less than 1°.
I would like, now, to document whether this is a necessary (or at least a filtering) factor in SMA. One might assume, in theory, that it is, although we may not be in a place to find out rather than to assume. Also, there are at least some factors that suggest it might not be as important.
In mundane astrology, we want to match charts to events so that so can see the converge of time, place, and nature of event. For example, Mars on an ingress or quotidian angle for a specific location where a fire occurs confirms that (1) a Mars-like event occurred (2) during a time period covered by the particular chart (3) at the location where Mars was adequately close to the angle. This filtered isolation of type of event, location, and time underlies much of my thinking throughout all of these years of SMA research.
I came into this renewed project four years ago thinking that quotidian contacts, in particular, had to be within 1°. I had to let go of that idea. Far too much was lost by not extending it to 2°, and only the rarest item (two or three out of a thousand or so charts) seemed to slip through our fingers if we stopped there, rather than extending to 2.5° or 3°. This, then, became the working threshold for quotidian contacts and transits to angles.
Planet angularity in ingresses themselves is demonstrably effective far, far past partiality. It's easy to demonstrate that "foreground" reaches 10° or so on either side of the horizon or meridian (in PV longitude). General planetary natures are operative at that level and, most important, aspects to planets within 10° of the angles are enormously important. It's also easy to demonstrate that most of that range is too wide to foster distinctive events, and we need narrower orbs.
The longitude difference between Portland, Maine, and Portland, Oregon is 52°. That means that a range of 10° stretches a fifth the distance across the continental U.S. (or a fourth the distance from New York to Los Angeles). Obviously, predicting a particular kind of event as occurring "somewhere between Maine-to-Florida and Ohio-to-Alabama" isn't very useful and, in fact, the charts have shown us that this is far too wide. Planets in that range add subtleties, have their say, share their aspects, add nuance to the larger picture - but they are not the primary descriptors of major events.
I think my most important contribution to SMA (besides just the raw labor of keeping at it) is the discover and articulation of the ideas of dormancy and flow-through. With the possibility of a dozen concurrently operative charts (four solar ingresses, four lunar ingresses, four quotidians), this, first, gave us the means of confidently saying which charts had distinctively strong voices in a given place at a given time. Secondly, defining these terms required experimentation to find thresholds for dormancy. Observation uncovered, and subsequent experience has continually confirmed, 3° for ingress angles (2° for the minor angles) and 2° for quotidians and transits to angles, as the relevant thresholds.
What that means is this: Planets within these much tighter orbs (3° of main ingress angles, 2° of minor angles, 2° of quotidian angles) are sufficiently strong to bring a chart to life and, by themselves, mark an event. I think knowing this one fact is enormously important to us.
And that's kind of where it has stayed. It's always nice to see closer orbs, always creates an ooh and an ahh when Saturn is 0°08' from an angle (or whatever) for an earthquake, but... once a planet is within that 3° window of an ingress angle, or a 2° window of a quotidian angle, it's good enough. We have a live chart. We have something happening that we can characterize. It will mark a particular character to a particular place at a particular time.
Which leaves the question, though... Does partility (as in every other main context we know in astrology) really matter, or is 2-3° our "new partile." If I answered in theory, I'd say, "Sure, of course it matters. That's the stronger stuff, the really big deal." But I've also seen thousands of ingresses and quotidians that had strong < 2°-3° showings, that were utterly expressive, that totally nailed the event.
So... here is what I'm hoping. I'm hoping partility lets us filter the really big events from other events. The acts of war from throwing a tantrum, the mega-flood rather than unusually greater rain, etc. I'm wondering if, within the whole stack of charts already describing the basic tone of a place and time, a certain threshold of partile contact is required to push it over the edge of mega-event. If we're this lucky... if it happens to be true... then we will, perhaps, have solved one of the great remaining problems, which is, how to have proportionate perspective on how big a deal a given chart might really be in the scope of things.
So... I'm off to look. I'm not recalculating all the charts, I'm just citing what I can tell from the text of Sidereal Mundane Astrology where, I think, I probably have mentioned all the partile contacts when they occur (and surely have mentioned most of them).
We normally count partiality - contacts of angles and aspects within 1° or less - as one of the most important factors for filtering careful timing of the biggest events. Under the broad principle that the strongest results appear when the strongest (closest) aspects occur in the strongest (most acutely angular) places, the "gold standard" in much prediction for individuals is to have partile aspects in partile contact with angles - again, meaning less than 1°.
I would like, now, to document whether this is a necessary (or at least a filtering) factor in SMA. One might assume, in theory, that it is, although we may not be in a place to find out rather than to assume. Also, there are at least some factors that suggest it might not be as important.
In mundane astrology, we want to match charts to events so that so can see the converge of time, place, and nature of event. For example, Mars on an ingress or quotidian angle for a specific location where a fire occurs confirms that (1) a Mars-like event occurred (2) during a time period covered by the particular chart (3) at the location where Mars was adequately close to the angle. This filtered isolation of type of event, location, and time underlies much of my thinking throughout all of these years of SMA research.
I came into this renewed project four years ago thinking that quotidian contacts, in particular, had to be within 1°. I had to let go of that idea. Far too much was lost by not extending it to 2°, and only the rarest item (two or three out of a thousand or so charts) seemed to slip through our fingers if we stopped there, rather than extending to 2.5° or 3°. This, then, became the working threshold for quotidian contacts and transits to angles.
Planet angularity in ingresses themselves is demonstrably effective far, far past partiality. It's easy to demonstrate that "foreground" reaches 10° or so on either side of the horizon or meridian (in PV longitude). General planetary natures are operative at that level and, most important, aspects to planets within 10° of the angles are enormously important. It's also easy to demonstrate that most of that range is too wide to foster distinctive events, and we need narrower orbs.
The longitude difference between Portland, Maine, and Portland, Oregon is 52°. That means that a range of 10° stretches a fifth the distance across the continental U.S. (or a fourth the distance from New York to Los Angeles). Obviously, predicting a particular kind of event as occurring "somewhere between Maine-to-Florida and Ohio-to-Alabama" isn't very useful and, in fact, the charts have shown us that this is far too wide. Planets in that range add subtleties, have their say, share their aspects, add nuance to the larger picture - but they are not the primary descriptors of major events.
I think my most important contribution to SMA (besides just the raw labor of keeping at it) is the discover and articulation of the ideas of dormancy and flow-through. With the possibility of a dozen concurrently operative charts (four solar ingresses, four lunar ingresses, four quotidians), this, first, gave us the means of confidently saying which charts had distinctively strong voices in a given place at a given time. Secondly, defining these terms required experimentation to find thresholds for dormancy. Observation uncovered, and subsequent experience has continually confirmed, 3° for ingress angles (2° for the minor angles) and 2° for quotidians and transits to angles, as the relevant thresholds.
What that means is this: Planets within these much tighter orbs (3° of main ingress angles, 2° of minor angles, 2° of quotidian angles) are sufficiently strong to bring a chart to life and, by themselves, mark an event. I think knowing this one fact is enormously important to us.
And that's kind of where it has stayed. It's always nice to see closer orbs, always creates an ooh and an ahh when Saturn is 0°08' from an angle (or whatever) for an earthquake, but... once a planet is within that 3° window of an ingress angle, or a 2° window of a quotidian angle, it's good enough. We have a live chart. We have something happening that we can characterize. It will mark a particular character to a particular place at a particular time.
Which leaves the question, though... Does partility (as in every other main context we know in astrology) really matter, or is 2-3° our "new partile." If I answered in theory, I'd say, "Sure, of course it matters. That's the stronger stuff, the really big deal." But I've also seen thousands of ingresses and quotidians that had strong < 2°-3° showings, that were utterly expressive, that totally nailed the event.
So... here is what I'm hoping. I'm hoping partility lets us filter the really big events from other events. The acts of war from throwing a tantrum, the mega-flood rather than unusually greater rain, etc. I'm wondering if, within the whole stack of charts already describing the basic tone of a place and time, a certain threshold of partile contact is required to push it over the edge of mega-event. If we're this lucky... if it happens to be true... then we will, perhaps, have solved one of the great remaining problems, which is, how to have proportionate perspective on how big a deal a given chart might really be in the scope of things.
So... I'm off to look. I'm not recalculating all the charts, I'm just citing what I can tell from the text of Sidereal Mundane Astrology where, I think, I probably have mentioned all the partile contacts when they occur (and surely have mentioned most of them).