THE PHILOSOPHY OF ASTROLOGY IN NINETEENTH CENTURY ENGLAND: A LITERARY SURVEY, 1784-1811
by Philip Graves
Abstract:
This paper will
examine the salient points and diversity of the philosophy of astrology towards
the start of the nineteenth century English astrological revival, beginning
with the publication of Ebeneezer Sibly's
Complete Illustration of the Celestial
Science of Astrology in 1784, and concluding with Thomas White's The
Beauties of Occult Sciences Investigated in 1811. It will make close reference
to the major astrological literature published throughout this period.
About the author:
Philip
Graves has been a practising student of astrology and its history since 1995. His
website at www.astrolearn.com includes his archived articles and the meticulous
catalogue of his private library of international astrological literature,
which contains over 6850 books and 9330 issues of journals and almanacs. Graves
has digitised numerous early astrological publications and has provided
research assistance to the authors of several books on astrology. He holds a B.
A. (Hons.) in French.
Introduction
This paper will examine the philosophy of astrology as
professed by the authors of major astrological text-books published in England at
the dawn of the 19th century astrological revival between 1784 and 1811:
Ebenezer and Manoah Sibly;
C. Heydon Jun.; John Worsdale,
and Thomas White.
1. Ebenezer
and Manoah Sibly.
The Sibly brothers were
pivotal figures spearheading the resumption of astrological publishing in late
18th century England after over half a century of neglect.
Manoah Sibly was partly instrumental in bringing one of the major
Latin works of Italian 17th century astrologer Placido
de Titis, the Tabulae Primi Mobilis, which is
chiefly a nuts-and-bolts technical treatise of astrology, into print in English
for the first time. His publication in 1789[1]
of an anonymous late 18th century English translation of Placido's
work, a manuscript translation that had been procured by the scholarly
astrology enthusiast J. B. of Islington[2],
served to forge an intellectual and methodological bridge between the high
point of late Renaissance Italian astrology and the tentative footsteps of
early 19th century English astrology. Sibly's English
edition of the Tabulae Primi Mobilis was subsequently improved by the addition of Placido's original tables in the edition published by John
Cooper in 1812, that has been the standard English-language reference for Placido's work ever since.
Manoah has little
of his own to add to the translated words of Placido,
merely lamenting in florid prose in his Editor's Address the decline of
astrology at the same time as praising advances in astronomy:
It is an observation, founded on truth and experience, that the Arts and
Sciences, like Kingdoms and States, have their rise and fall. Astronomy has
ridden triumphant, ever since it was brought to that degree of accuracy it now
stands in, by the immortal Newton; yet, considered in itself, cut off from
Elementary Philosophy, its most essential part, Astronomy would appear as a
cabinet without a jewel; a mere idle speculation, possessed of no essential
requisite to recommend itself to the studious and intelligent. But when joined
to that part of the metaphysics, called Elementary Philosophy, we shall find it
replete with useful instruction, and conducive to every salutary purpose of
making mankind happier and better.[3]
Arguably of foremost influence among the Sibly brothers' collective literary endeavours was Ebenezer[4]'s
penning of a broad-based treatise on astrological and occult science extending
to over 1120 large-format pages.
Originally issued in four parts from 1784 to 1788, his
'Complete Illustration of the Celestial Science of Astrology' sold strongly.
This can be seen from the many and frequent subsequent reprintings
up to and including 1826.
In an introductory address to 'the Young Student in
Astrology', Sibly frames his philosophy of astrology
in the context of Christian religious mores, implicitly presenting astrology as
a form of 'profound and transcendent' natural knowledge that must remain
subordinate to the human duty to embody and fulfil 'divine Providence':
let no natural knowledge, however profound and transcendent soever it be, elate thy mind, or withdraw thee from thy
duty to that divine Providence, by whose all-seeing order and appointment, all
things heavenly and earthly have their constant and never-ceasing motion[5]....
After commencing on such a note of caution, he goes on
to argue that God's 'power and wisdom' is 'magnified' by the enlargement of
personal knowledge through the study of astrology:
The more thy knowledge is enlarged by this comprehensive science, the
more do thou magnify the power and wisdom of the Almighty God, and strive to preserve
thyself in his favour.[6]
Sibly is
presenting the earnest study of astrology as being in natural harmony with, and
even significantly conducive to, the leading of a worshipful religious life.
In the opening paragraphs of the main text of the
first part of his treatise, he professes that the work is aimed at:
restoring a competent knowledge of that comprehensive science, which in
all ages of the world was deemed the chief ornament of society, and the
distinguishing excellence of enlightened minds.[7]
He expresses awareness of prevailing prejudice against
and ignorance of astrology in his day, which he blames partly on 'violent
disturbances at the close of the last century' and partly on 'the too refined
notions of modern philosophers'.
Then he states as being his aim:
to remove the mote from the eyes of prejudiced men; and by just
reasoning, and fair argument... to shew them that God
is a God of order, and created nothing in vain; - that he framed the world by
number, weight, and measure, and fixed the whole system of heavenly and earthly
things upon so perfect and immutable a plan, that the whole doth work
harmoniously and sympathetically together, so as to answer all the various
purposes for which they were first ordained; - that superiors do uniformly rule
inferiors; and that celestial bodies sensibly act upon and influence all
earthly substances, whether animal, vegetable or mineral; not by chance or
accident, but by a regular inherent cause, implanted in them from the
beginning, by the omnipotence of God.[8]
At the same time, Sibly
accords with the Christian doctrine of Free Will as a test of human obedience
to God, portraying this freedom of will as acting to some extent independently
of planetary influence to shape various facets of fate:
And thus, unconstrained either by the immediate hand of God, or by the
operation of the planets, as second causes, some embrace life, and others seek
condemnation; and hence follow virtue and vice, prosperity and adversity,
sickness and health, life and death, and all the visissitudes
of Fortune.[9]
...
The Will of man, without doubt, in a variety of instances, makes great
struggles and wrestlings with the starry influences,
both in good and in evil pursuits, and often prevails over them exceedingly; -
for though a person be born under such benevolent or malignant aspects, as
shall point out his natural temper and disposition, and indicate the principal
transactions, fortunate or unfortunate, that are likely to be the
distinguishing marks of his life; yet does it depend entirely upon the free
uncontrolled will of that man, whether all those circumstances, so pointed out
in his nativity, shall come to pass, or not; beacuse
the free will in every man, when fortified by habits of virtue and wisdom,
often enable him to over-rule those evil aspects, so as to avoid the commission
of any criminal offence, and to guard him against the misfortunes or losses
impending over him; while men of a profligate and careless habit, not only lose
the advantages of a promising nativity, but, if born under malevolent aspects,
are often reduced to the last stage of distress, and perish under the very same
strokes of nature, which wiser and better men, born in the same inauspicious
moments, have endured with much ease.'[10]
Sibly reconciles
his affirmation of Free Will with his belief in the omniscience and providence of
God, opining that:
God, who ordained the course of nature, certainly foresaw the minutest turn of every man's will, and eventually contrived
his fate to correspond therewith, so as to admit its free and uncontrolled
choice[11]....
[S]uch is the infinite prescience and providence of
God, that foreseeing the desires and deserts of all wise and holy men, in their
different ages and times, he also laid their fates suiting to their actions'[12].
He adds that there are many influences of fate so
powerful that no wisdom of man can forestall them. In this category he includes
'the fatal wounds of death', as well as 'excruciating pain and sickness', and
'the high tides of prosperity and adversity'.
Sibly quotes from
the Book of Moses as evidence for the compatibility of the study of astrology
with the will of God:
God said, "Let there be lights in the firmament of heaven, to
divide the day from the night; the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser
light to rule the night; and let them be for Signs, and for Seasons, and for
days and years". - These then were the purposes for which they were
ordained, and irrevocably fixed by their great Creator.... When God saith, Let them be for Signs he must speak in reference to
man, whom he formed a rational creature, capable of distinguishing one sign
from another, and of improving by them.... [W]e are to consider them as signs
and tokens of those hidden events of futurity, which it concerns every wise and
good man to know; and which he may always foresee, by a virtuous and sober
study of these intelligent signs, placed by God for that purpose, in the
firmament of heaven.[13]
There is much more of interest to the philosophy of
astrology in Sibly's introductory argumentative
exposition, which continues to page 54 and merits a thorough reading, as well
as in later parts of his work; yet time constraints for this lecture oblige me
to move on to our next proponent.
2. C. Heydon, Jun.
C. Heydon, Jun. was the
pseudonym of an unidentified astrological writer responsible for two compact
pocket-books on astrology in the late 18th century. His pseudonym honours the
great early 17th century intellectual defender of astrology Christopher Heydon, but no evidence is known for any ancestral
connection with the real Heydon.
In his first work, 'The New Astrology' (1786), Heydon Jun. argues that many past texts on astrology have been
riddled with difficulties that were impossible to overcome, and that they were
written:
in such an ambiguous style, that many persons have been discouraged from
engaging in it; and others, from the vulgar idea that it is pregnant with
imposture, and aided by diabolical compact[14].
His declared aim is to win over these doubters by
eliminating errors and ambiguities and by demonstrating that:
every judgement on Horary Questions and Nativities is founded on strict
truth and morality, and is governed by rules and observations made from the
positions and aspects of the planets; which if duly observed, and properly
studied, it will be found an unerring Science.[15]
Heydon Jun.
professes that astrology is a natural science:
The Science of Astrology is nothing more than the study of Nature, the
knowledge of the secret virtues of the Heavens, and may be attained by common
diligence; and the more we delight in it, the more readily we do foresee the
motions of future events, and attain to the knowledge of things which are past:
and by knowing the time of our birth, we are enabled to read in the Heavens the
story of our whole lives, blessings and crosses, sickness and health,
prosperity and adversity, and time of our death[16].
He echoes Ebenezer Sibly in
quoting from the Bible to argue that the acquisition of astrological knowledge
is in keeping with the Will of God:
God has given this knowledge to the wise man, 'to know the time and the
judgement', Eccl. i. 5. 'and the number of our days, that we may be certified
how long we have to live', Psal. xxxix 5.[,] by which
we may be prepared for all states of prosperity or adversity... and learn to
support ourselves with fortitude and resignation[17]
Heydon Jun. then
goes on to quote from an English translation of Ptolemy's Tetrabiblos,
Chapter 3, in defence of the seeking of human foreknowledge:
"What can be more advantageous, either in respect of delight,
happiness, or pleasure, than such a foreknowledge, by which we understand
things both divine and human?"[18]
The pseudonymous writer initially portrays horary as a
slightly inferior substitute for natal astrology to be preferred when the exact
time of birth is unknown. But then he affirms that by horary:
almost
as much satisfaction may be given, upon many subjects of enquiry, as if his
Nativity were actually known[19].
He attempts to explain horary with reference to a
'sympathy in nature' that he attributes to the workings of a 'vegetative soul
of the world':
In these sympathies there can be no doubt but the vegetative soul of the
world invisibly carries and unites a specific virtue from the Heavens between
one thing and another, every where working those
secret effects which no mortal can fail to admire; and in the present case, who
is to determine what this soul cannot effect between the heavenly bodies and
the animal spirit of man, working such sympathies, as that a question of
importance to our welfare cannot start from the mind but in a point of time
when the planets and signs governing the person's birth are acting upon the
subject that engages his thoughts and attention? And hence the birth of the
question, like the nativity of the child, carries the story of the whole matter
on its forehead[20]
Heydon Jun.'s
second book, 'The Wisdom of Solomon in Miniature' (1792), is a compact
traditional interpretative text on nativities referencing divided into two
sections referencing firstly the Italian Renaissance astrologer Andrea Argoli and secondly Ptolemy as their primary influences.
The pseudonymous writer would appear to have studied some of the work of Argoli, and especially his writings on directions, despite
the fact that his work had not (and in 2017 incidentally still has not) been
translated into English in print.
In his introduction to 'The Wisdom of Solomon in Miniature',
at variance with his previous book, Heydon Jun. advises
considerably more caution where horary is concerned, stating:
As to horary questions, I must reject them, as arising from the doubtful
impulse of the mind, unless upon very great emergencies.[21]
Yet he continues by railing against the absurdity of
those who condemn astrology without having studied or understood it, declaring
that:
it is only the inability of those pretenders to it, which is the cause
of so many mistakes, because the wonderful extend of this most notable science
is far, very far, beyond their capacities to comprehend.[22]
He reaffirms his belief in the demonstrable truth of
the doctrine of nativities, which he seeks to account for with reference to:
a Supreme Power that superintends the affairs of men, and raises up
high, and brings down low, according to his pleasure, and does just as he
pleases in the armies of Heaven, and amongst the inhabitants of the earth.[23]
Like Sibly, however, the
pseudonymous Heydon recognises human freedom of will
and inclination as being operative within the context of these 'stupendous
designs'.
He also puts forth an intriguing argument for the
power of the Signs of the zodiac that is ostensibly neither purely tropicalist nor purely siderealist
in its philosophy, considering them to be 'Celestial Constellations of Stars' that
have:
a more powerful and obvious influence on man than any of the other fixed
stars; and the reason is, because they form the pathway of the Sun, Moon, and
Planets, in all their peregrinations, and thereby receive from them a more
powerful force and energy.[24]
3. John Worsdale
The English astrologer John Worsdale
was a significant contributor to the 19th century astrological revival in
England, producing three main works between the 1790s and 1820s. The first was
his Genethliacal Astrology (first edition 1796; expanded
second edition 1798); the second his Collection
of Remarkable Nativities (1799); and the third, the much lengthier
posthumously published Celestial
Philosophy (1828).
Despite its title, Celestial
Philosophy is essentially a practical treatise on prognostic astrology
using directions, with some philosophical commentary incorporated into the
individual detailed case studies.
Worsdale's
philosophy of astrology is expounded much more clearly in his first book. The
main text of the 1798 edition of Genethliacal Astrology
begins, after various niceties and an introductory third-party address, with a
section entitled 'A Defence of Astrology', in which Worsdale
bemoans the poor reputation astrology had acquired by this time:
Seeing the venerable science of Astrology has for a long Time groaned
under the scurrilous Reflections of divers Persons, both learned and unlearned,
who hold all the Practisers thereof in no better Estimation than cheating
Impostors, and Amusers of the ignorant and over-credulous Multitude; for while
some have considered it as no better than downright Witchcraft, others have
ranked it, if not among juggling Tricks, yet among absurd Speculations[25].
He declares it his duty to argue for the truth of
astrology.
Like Sibly, Worsdale bows to Christianity and considers the celestial
bodies to be second causes...
under God the great and first Cause, who is the alone Author of our
Being[26]....
We are obliged to believe, that all Things were made for what they are most fit
to perform; and there is nothing in Nature sufficient to change the Qualities
of earthly Bodies, but the occult and sacred Influence of the celestial World
(I mean the Sun, Moon, and Stars,). which are undoubtedly by the wise
Architecture of an immortal and All-Sufficient Being, placed in sundry
Distances, and Spheres above us, for that very purpose; for no rational Man
will deny, that God useth the Ministry of the
Heavens, and Bodies therein contained, for the ordinary Government and
Administration of this lower World.[27]
Worsdale
continues by describing the world as a model or frame, created by God, by which
all destinies were to come to pass through time. This frame consists of the
Heavens and the Earth, with the Heavens described as:
a great Workmanship of many Wheels, wrapt up
together, one within another; and the Earth, and the Air wrapt in the innermost
of them all[28].
These wheels[29]
are considered as a conduit for the motion of forces of nature, including life,
spirit, power and virtue, first into the Heavens, thence into the Earth...
and from the Earth into Man and Beast[30]
Acknowledging the existence of free will in
determining virtue and vice, Worsdale implies that
God preordained for these to be met with their just deserts[31]:
Such was the... Forecast and Providence of God; that at one View,
appearing unto him, all the several Turnings and Windings of all men's Wills,
and the total Sum and Upshot of all Virtue and Vice; He at once, so contrived
that all Fates of Prosperity and Adversity, of Reward and Punishment, should so
fall out and come to pass, as to answer the Virtues and Prayers of the
Righteous, and the Vices and Villanies of the Wicked,
each according to their Works, in due Times and Seasons[32].
However, he also recognises the variable roles of time
and chance in determining people's inclination to fortune or misfortune:
Some Men come into the World in a lucky Hour, so as whether they be wise
or foolish, yet shall they be buoyed up upon the Wings of Fate, and acquire
Wealth and Honour, while wiser and better Men, smitten by an unlucky Time of
Birth, shall be as unworthily disparaged, and in all Purposes shall be
unhappy.... And thus Time seems to mock and sport with the Men of this Life,
and scoff at all their Skill, Courage, and Agility, as if they were but meer idle Stories'[33].
Nevertheless, Worsdale
explains the operation of seeming chance in terms of human ignorance of the
'secret operations of Heaven', and adds that from God's perspective, nothing
happens by chance[34].
Worsdale departs
from a purely fatalistic reading of astrology when he professes that it is
possible for human Will to prevail over or diminish the harmful effects of the
'starry influences' when that Will is 'fortified' by wisdom, 'strength of
habit' and 'grace'[35],
professing:
But what though there be such a Thing as Fate, yet it does not follow,
that there must be therefore an absolute fatal Necessity, for there is no such
Thing, neither the Stars, nor Heaven, nor Course of Nature, any ways pretending
to force Man's Will, they only incluine in their
Courses. And here lies the Exercise of Virtue, in striving and fighting against
corrupt Inclinations.... Moreover, so effectual have been the fervent Prayers
of faithful and good Men, that they have not only turned the Edge of malignant
Inclinations to bad Qualities, but have also utterly overturned the Force of
hard Fates[36].
But Worsdale closely echoes the voice of Sibly
in attesting that:
there are some Influences so Mighty, as no Power of Man can oppose; such
as the fatal Wounds of Death...[37]
The author declares astrology to be an empirical
science more than a tradition:
This Science has been gained partly by verified Traditions, but
especially by diligent and constant Observations[38].
However, he does not believe that all branches of the
science have yet attained a similar level of perfection, professing that genethliacal astrology is:
the most certain Science, and the Master-Piece of Astrology[39].
What he calls 'State-Astrology', on the other hand, is
more fallible, being:
a Piece of Learning that consisteth much in
Conjecture, and is but partly understood; and because much of it dependeth upon great Conjunctions which bestride some Ages
of Men between them, wanteth much of Perfection.[40]
As for meterological astrology,
Worsdale argues that it is extremely difficult and
uncertain:
The Weather depending much upon the airy Operations, is swayed by meaner
Aspects than are human Matters, and therefore the Event is so much the more
various and uncertain. Unless it were possible to understand the exact Quantity
and Proportion of Weather, whether Fair or Foul, that is like to fall, and to
say expressly in what special Climate and Place it shall begin to fall, it is
utterly impossible to please all People in all Places with any predictions of
this Nature[41]
Worsdale
believes that the attainment of astrological knowledge by itself does not make
a good astrologer, arguing that that knowledge must be 'sanctified' by being
mixed with what he calls 'Heavenly or Supernatural Wisdom'[42]
that:
teacheth us to honor
Divinity or Theology in the first place, and Astrology in the second[43].
Otherwise, warns Worsdale,
the knowledge of astrology can do more harm than good and lead its
practitioners down a path of sorcery[44].
He holds that sometimes it pleases God to confound the astrologer, drawing him
into error, and that God is displeased by excessive passions for knowledge.[45]
Worsdale
holds that the Sun, Moon and Stars are not 'mere Signs', but have been invested
by God with:
an Authority and Power, to sway and rule over all Things subject unto
Day and Night[46].
He continues by arguing for the power of the Sun and
Moon based on natural observations of heat and ocean tides respectively,
stating for example of the Moon:
... that she is Mistress of this Moisture, as well as of the Night, is
apparent by the Tides, which constantly attend her Motion[47]
The stars, on the other hand, have:
a secret and an hidden Way of Rule, whereby they operate imperceptibly
in all their Agitations[48]....
Worsdale
continues by arguing that the Sun and Moon also exercise
secret and insensible Operations or Influences... over all the Sons of
Day and Night: and herein are written all those Ordinances of the Moon and
Stars, which are to be a Law unto Mankind, and to the whole Body of Mortality,
so long as the World endureth[49].
He initially expresses uncertainty regarding whether
the celestial influences act directly and materially upon the Earth or are
mediated by a spiritual agency he refers to as the Soul of the World,[50]
a notion he attributes to Platonism[51].
But then he argues more firmly for the existence of such a Soul:
... how possibly could the Sympathies and Antipathies of Nature work
such Compliances and Differences at such distances as we see they do, and that
as far as it is from Heaven unto the Earth, and that too, without any visible
or imaginible Contaction,
unless some such animal Virtue be in the World, to carry such an invisible Correspondency between Creature and Creature?[52]
In either case, he believes that the Spirit of God is
what actuates the Heavens[53],
concluding:
... the Spirit of Almighty God... filleth
Heaven and Earth with his presence, and from hence garnisheth
the Heavens and causeth the precious Virtues of the
Sun, Moon and Stars, to be carried and distributed into all Parts of the World.
And thus immediately God ruleth in the Heavens, and ruleth all the World mediately by
the Heavens[54].
4. Thomas
White
One of the legendary figures of tragedy in the history
of astrology is Thomas White, who fell victim to police entrapment as a prelude
to a successful prosecution on charges of fortune-telling. He died prematurely
after less than a year's internment in the cold, squalid conditions of an
English prison, and is consequently celebrated as a martyr to astrology.[55]
But while he was still a free man, White wrote one of
the more substantial early 19th century treatises on astrology, 'The Beauties
of Occult Science Investigated, or the Celestial Intelligencer' (1811), which
extends to 436 pages.
White begins his book with a philosophical
introduction, in which he refers to the infusion of all things with a 'Life' by
virtue of which:
the great masses are held together in their orderly courses, as well as
the minutest particles governed in their natural
motions, according to the several laws of attraction or gravity with which
every partical [sic] of matter is endowed[56].
He continues by arguing on the basis of this essentially
scientific observation for astrological influence:
Hence it may be supposed agreeably to the configuration and respective termperament of the heavenly bodies, together with the
various configurations or aspects, and influences the one upon the other, and
of course upon the individual that is born; for in proportion as these
respectively operate together, will be the bent and inclination of the person
who is born under such and such position of the celestial Stars.[57]
White goes on to explain astrology in similarly
naturalistic terms as:
the effects derived from the amazing powers of mutual attraction of the
different parts and masses (great or small) of matter, the one upon the other;
which knowledge is to be attained by study and observation of the influences
produced by the motions of the heavenly bodies; for as Astronomy hath its
origin in the motion and revolution of the Stars, so Astrology is founded on
the effects and influences of attraction or gravitation in the same bodies[58]....
Holding to his natural, physical view of astrology,
White defends it against possible religious objections on the grounds that:
Astrology cannot be repugnant to the Christian religion, unless it be a
sin to study Nature of Astronomy: on the contrary, it has a tendency to elevate
the mind to the contemplation of God the Father of all[59].
Then he argues for the utility to humans of fore-knowledge
of future events on the grounds that 'fore-warned [is] fore-armed'. He further
argues for the advantages of self-awareness in respect of the 'features or
dispositions' in the individual's nature, especially in relation to 'evil'
tendencies':
that he may thereby, when he is arrived to years of maturity, (and, let
us hope of discretion also,) make use of his reason and better judgement, as a correcter of the natural proneness to vice, which he sees
predominant in his constitution.[60]
Characterising astrology as 'the most ancient of all
the human sciences', White cites examples of celebrated ancient cultures in
which it has historically been practised and famed individuals who have
practised it, arguing on this basis that:
... finding that Astrology in all ages has been much professed and
encouraged by many eminent and exalted characters, surely then no person has
the least reason to deem this study beneath their most profound attention.[61]
He professes that astrology:
directs persons, in a natural way, how they may most fortunately manage
their affairs in the World; as by elections, to chuse
a fit time to begin any considerable enterprise; by directions of the Palnets in their nativities, and annual revolutions, to
discover the most dangerous or propitious times that are approaching to any
Native[62].
In the opening part of the first main chapter of his
book, White further reconciles his naturalistic view of astrology with the
prevailing Christianity of his time by asserting that:
Astrology comprehends every operation that proceeds from the frame of
nature, and furnishes us with a knowledge of the occult virtues of all earthly
substances, and of the nature and end of every particle of God's Creation[63].
He extends his argument for astrology as a tool for
understanding the works of God the creator by implying that God intended for
the Sun, Moon and Stars to 'communicate wisdom and happiness to mankind' by the
study of their influences[64].
Citing Biblical parables commonly interpreted as
relating to the enlightenment of the understanding of Mankind, White deduces
that it is:
the duty of every rational creature to improve by this divine example,
and to increase their imperfect knowledge in the subjects of creation[65].
Conclusion:
This survey has identified that in the early decades
of the English astrological revival, all the major literary exponents of
astrology regarded the study of astrology as being both in keeping with the
Will of God from a Christian perspective and practically beneficial from a
human perspective.
There is also broad consensus among the writers we
have studied on astrology being a natural science, with the movements of the
luminaries and planets about the celestial sphere being not merely Signs but
also causes of events on Earth, possibly mediated by a Soul of the World.
And yet, despite this acknowledged naturalistic
causality, the ultimate responsibility for the so-called 'second causes' constituted
by the motions of the celestial bodies is ascribed to the Almighty Creator. And
despite this unified system of cosmological causality, the Christian doctrine
of Free Will is upheld by all the writers, the causal agency of the celestial
bodies being held to serve as only a partly deterministic framework within
which the will of the individual is the final determinant of the moral choices
made in life.
The acknowledgement of the importance of individual
free will at this very early stage in modern astrological literature arguably
opened the way to the later development of wholly non-deterministic
astrological philosophies at variance with the partly deterministic ones that
were current at this time, and also foreshadowed astrological writings advocating
a quasi-alchemical approach to the transmutation of adverse celestial
influences, which would reach their furthest extent in the astrological
literature of the late 20th century.
References:
The Astrologer's Magazine and Philosophical
Miscellany - Vol. I
of the New Series, and Vol. III of the Work - Printed for W. Locke, No. 12, Red
Lion Street, Holborn, London, August, 1793 - January
1794
[De Titis, Placido], [tr. Anonymous],
the whole carefully revised by Sibly, Manoah ‘Astronomy and Elementary Philosophy, Translated
from the Latin of Placidus de Titus: Wherein is shewn, from Physical and Astronomical Principles, the
Nature of Atmospherical Influx, communicated to
Earthly Substances by the Motion, Aspects, and Position of the Heavenly Bodies,
in forming the whole Anima of Nature, particularly in Man, the Epitome of the
Creation! - the World in Miniature! - The whole comprehending, by these
efficient Causes and their Effects, the true Doctrine of calculating
Nativities, in so plain and simple a Method, as to be perfectly attainable by
the meanest Capacity, and in a Manner superior to any yet published in the
English Language. To which are added, Introductory Notes and Observations, With
a Concise Method of judging Horary Questions, select Aphorisms, and every other
Requisite to elucidate Elementary Agency, and to form a complete Body of Astral
Knowledge’ Printed by W. Justins, Blackfriars;
and sold by Mr. Bew, Pater-noster
Row; Mr. Richardson, under the Royal Exchange; Mr. Mathews, in the Strand; Mr. Debrett, Picadilly; Messrs. M.
and J. Sibly, Goswell-Street;
and Mr. Edmund Sibly, Brick-lane, Spitalfields,
London, 1789
[De Titis, Placido],
[tr. Anonymous], revised Sibly, Manoah
‘A Collection of Thirty Remarkable Nativities, To Illustrate the Canons, and
Prove the True Principles of Elementary Philosophy. Translated from the Latin
of Placidus de Titus. To which is prefixed, To
facilitate Astronomical Calculations, Tables of Right Ascension, Declination,
and Ascensional Difference; Tables of Double Horary
Times, Semi-diurnal and Nocturnal Arcs; Sexagenary
Tables, and Logistical Logarithms; Tables for equating the Seven Erratics; Table of Fixed Stars, &c. &c. The whole
arranged in a concise and regular Method, and exemplified with suitable Matter
to elucidate Elementary Agency, and to form an Adept in the Sideral
and Sublime Mysteries. Beautified and Embellished with Thirty-Six[66] Elegant
Engravings, And the Nativity of that wonderful Phaenomenon,
Oliver Cromwell’ Printed by W. Justins, Blackfriars; and sold by Mr. Bew,
Pater-noster Row; Mr. Richardson, under the Royal
Exchange; Mr. Mathews, in the Strand; Mr. Debrett,
Piccadilly; Messrs. M. and J. Sibly, Goswell-Street; and Mr. Edmund Sibly,
Brick-lane, Spitalfields, 1789
Heydon,
C., jun. Astro-Philo. (pseud.) Assisted by a Person
of great Professional Abilities ‘The New Astrology; or, the Art of Predicting
and Foretelling Future Events, by the Aspects, Positions, and Influences, of
the Heavenly Bodies; Founded on Scripture, Experience, and Reason; The Whole being
the Result of many Years’ intense Study and Labour;
now first made familiar and easy to any Person of ordinary Talents. In Two
Parts. Part I. contains, An easy Introduction to the Whole of this Celestial
Science, teaching how to erect a Figure of the Heavens, and to place the
Planets and Part of Fortune therein; and directs the Student how to proceed in
the Whole of this comprehensive Science. Part II. consists of, The Art of
resolving all Sorts of Horary Questions, on any Subject, with Accuracy and Pleasure,
and how to give Judgement thereon, viz. Whether the
Party enquiring shall have Riches or Poverty, Sickness or Health, Prosperous
Voyages or Journeys, Friends or Enemies, Wives or Children, Money lent, or due
for Goods sold, &c. &c. Any other Questions of Importance are solved by
this Science; with Celestial Figures; and many curious Questions answered’ The
Second Edition, with large Additions, Improvements, and an Appendix – Printed
for G. Kearsley, No. 46, Fleet-Street; T. Lovewell, Stationer, No. 158, St. John-Street; T. Wagstaffe, Brick-Lane, Spitalfields;
and W. Battersby and Son, facing Artillery-Lane, Bishopsgate-Street Without, London, 1786
Heydon,
C., Astrophilo. (pseud.) ‘Astrology. The Wisdom of
Solomon in Miniature, Being a New Doctrine of Nativities, Reduced to Accuracy
and Certainty; Or, the Art of Determining Future Events by the Only True
Method, the Radical Figure of Birth. A Science, by many years intense Study and
Labour, brought to a Degree of Perfection hitherto
unknown. The whole containing The Essence, Beauties, and Substance of all
Pieces, Ancient and Modern, conjoined; a Variety of new Matter added; the
Jargon of obsolete, and the Errors of Modern Authors expunged; and digested in
a Manner so plain, familiar, and easy, that a Person of the meanest Capacity,
may become Proficient in it. Demonstrating to a Certainty Every Person's future
Rise or Fall in the World, And shewing him whether he
is subject to have Riches, Poverty, Honour,
Dignities, Sickness, Health, Marriage, Children, Friends, Enemies. No matter
whether descended from a Prince or a Beggar. Also, a Curious Collection of
Nativities, Never Before Published’ Printed for A. Hamilton, No. 18, near
Gray’s-Inn-Gate; Holborn, London, 1792
The Horoscope, Monthly Magazine of
Science and Literature [ed. Zadkiel Tao Sze,
i.e. Morrison, Richard]: [Part I] January 1841 - No. IV, Part VI, Saturday, May
29, 1841 - William Charlton Wright, 4, Paternoster Row, Cheapside, London, 1843
(= complete set in bound reprint form)
Sibly,
Ebenezer 'A Complete Illustration of the Celestial Science of Astrology: Or,
the Art of Foretelling Future Events and Contingencies, by the Aspects,
Positions, and Influences of the heavenly Bodies. Founded on Natural
Philosophy, Scripture, Reason, and the Mathematics. In Four Parts - Embellished with Curious
Copper-Plates’ Printed for Green & Co., Mo. 176, Near Surry-Street, Strand,
London, 1788
White,
Thomas ‘The Beauties of Occult Science Investigated; Or, the Celestial
Intelligencer: In Two Parts. Part the First Containing A Plain, Easy, and
Comprehensive Introduction to Astrology, With All the Requisites for Obtaining
a Familiar and General Knowledge of the Science; A New Table of Ascensional Differences For Thirty Degrees of Declination
to the Poles of the Houses for the British Metropolis; And many other
Particulars never before published. Part the Second Containing the Method of
Calculating, Directing, and Judging Nativities, both according to the Argolian System and the Doctrine of Ptolemy: The Whole
Illustrated by the Nativities of Several Eminent Personages, viz. Lewis XVI
(late King of France), Napoleon Bonaparte; And several others never before made
public' Printed for and Published by Anne Davis, 2, Albion Buildings, Aldersgate Street; and J. S. Dickson, 18, Ivy Lane,
Paternoster Row, London, 1811
Worsdale, John, Astronomer 'Celestial Philosophy, or Genethliacal
Astronomy, Containing the Only True Method of Calculating Nativities, Made
Plain and Easy' Published by Messrs. Longman, & Co., 47 Paternoster Row,
London; and may be had of the Author, or Printer, and all Booksellers in the
United Kingdom. - M. Keyworth, Printer, Lincoln, undated[67].
Worsdale,
John ‘Genethliacal Astrology. Comprehending an
Enquiry into, and Defence of the Celestial Science:
the Rectification of Nativities, by the Trutine of
Hermes; with Proofs of the Verity of Elementary Influx and Sydereal
Affection, Exemplified in a Variety of Genitures, Investigated Agreeably to the
System of Ptolemy. To which is added, an Appendix, Containing Remarks on the
Nativity of a Gentleman Now Living, Shewing the
Different Influences of the Planets Between a Natural and a Violent Death. A
Judgment on the Figure of Heaven at the Sun’s Ingress into Aries, 1798. With
other Curious, Interesting, and Important Speculations’ Second Edition –
Printed and sold for the Author by Messrs. Ridge, Newark; Sold also by Messrs.
Robinson, Paternoster-Row, London; Drury, Lincoln; Hurst, Grantham; Thornill, Sleaford; and all other
Booksellers, 1798