【占星四书】《第一书_10》四季和四轴之影响_Of the Effect of the Seasons&
(2013-06-27 12:00:00)
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【占星四书】《第一书_10》四季和四轴之影响
10. Of the Effect of the Seasons and of the Four Angles.
Of the four seasons of the year, spring, summer, autumn, and
winter, spring exceeds in moisture on account of its diffusion
after the cold has passed and warmth is setting in; the summer, in
heat, because of the nearness of the sun to the zenith; autumn more
in dryness, because of the sucking up of the moisture during the
hot season just past; and winter exceeds in cold, because the sun
is farthest away from the zenith. For this reason, although there
is no natural beginning of the zodiac, since it is a circle, they
assume that the sign which begins with the vernal equinox, that of
Aries, is the startingpoint of them all, making the excessive
moisture of the spring the first part of the zodiac as though it
were a living creature, and taking next in order the remaining
seasons, because in all creatures the earliest ages, like the
spring, have a larger share of moisture and are tender and still
delicate. The second age, up to the prime of life, exceeds in heat,
like summer; the third, which is now past the prime and on the
verge of decline, has an excess of dryness, like autumn; and the
last, which approaches dissolution, exceeds in its coldness, like
winter.
Similarly, too, of the four regions and angles of the horizon, from
which originate the winds from the cardinal points, the eastern one
likewise excels in dryness because, when the sun is in that region,
whatever has been moistened by the night then first begins to be
dried; and the winds which blow from it, which we call in general
Apeliotes, are without moisture and drying in effect. The region to
the south is hottest because of the fiery heat of the sun's
passages through mid-heaven and because these passages, on account
of the inclination of our inhabited world, diverge more to the
south; and the winds which blow thence and are called by the
general name Notus are hot and rarefying. The region to the west is
itself moist, because when the sun is therein the things dried out
during the day then first begin to become moistened; likewise the
winds which blow from this part, which we call by the general name
Zephyrus, are fresh and moist. The region to the north is the
coldest, because through our inhabited world's inclination it is
too far removed from the causes of heat arising from the sun's
culmination, as it is also when the sun is at its lower
culmination; and the winds which blow thence, which are called by
the general name Boreas, are cold and condensing in effect.
The knowledge of these facts is useful to enable One to form a
complete judgement of temperatures in individual instances. For it
is easily recognizable that, together with such conditions as
these, of seasons, ages, or angles, there is a corresponding
variation in the potency of the stars' faculties, and that in the
conditions akin to them their quality is purer and their
effectiveness stronger, those that are heating by nature, for
instance, in heat, and those that are moistening in the moist,
while under opposite conditions their power is adulterated and
weaker. Thus the heating stars in the cold periods and the
moistening stars in the dry periods are weaker, and similarly in
the other cases, according to the quality produced by the
mixture.

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