How do I use JigSaw to find if charts have a planet or an angle on a particular midpoint via the 8th harmonic?
Follow these steps:
- Select the project that you are working on.
- Go to Research "Add a Point".
- Select the Jup/Pluto midpoint (or any other you want to look at).
- click OK.
- Open the Research module.
- Select "Harmonic aspect and Phases".
- In the Harmonic Select section at the lower left part of the screen type in "8".
- Select the orb that you wish to use in the "Aspect Orb" box.
- Select the Planet or Angle that you wish to check out and by using
the Control key also scroll to the end of the list and you will see the
Jup/Pluto midpoint. (or any other midpoints that you have selected in
the "add extra pts" in step 2).
Use the Control key and select this midpoint (the Control key
allows for multiple selection of points).
- Click "Start".
- Go to Table view.
You
will see the numbers of charts that have this planet on that midpoint
as well as the type of aspect. If you want to bunch them all together
into a separate file, you will need to use the Filtering option (see
the JigSaw manual) and filter them one at a time and then merge the
files into one. Depending on exactly what you want to do, you may be
able to short-cut this. So in the tables (or polar graphs or bar
graphs) you will get the number of charts, but you will need to Filter
these in the Table view if you want to know which charts. We are
currently selling Jigsaw Version 2 which will make this type of
exercise quicker.
4. What does the Harmonic components selection in Jigsaw do?
Consider that we have a group of 500 actors. We could create a circle
label with the 360 degrees of the Zodiac. For each of our actors we
could plot the positions of their Moons (or any other point). For each
Moon we could place a dot at its place in the 360 dial. After doing
this for all 500 of our charts we may notice that there was a wave
pattern showing. If there was a wave with four peaks, then we are
looking at a fourth harmonic - in
zodiac position - implying that the set of actors had a harmonic
tendency to have their Moons in one of four particular places in the
zodiac which were all in a fourth harmonic relationship. We can also do
this in the diurnal circle. Addey found that his 1095 scientists had a
tendency to have Saturn in one of four places in
the diurnal circle and that those places were all square to each other.
So when you run a group through the Harmonic components in Jigsaw -
whether diurnal or zodiacal - you are asking Jigsaw to
take every point you have selected and plot them on a circle (diurnal
or zodiacal), examine the harmonics 1 to 60, and tell you the amplitude
of every harmonic. For example, in the above example, the column at the
number 4 in the bar graph would be high, indicating that that
particular wave pattern was strong. So you should look at these bar
graphs, looking for height of column and the number of the column. This
tells you which harmonic is
strong with that point or planet for that group. It does not tell you
how many planets are at that point but rather its amplitude. The phase
part of the program is then for you to determine WHERE in the zodiacal
or diurnal circle the peaks are of this particular amplitude occurring.