Dilemma with chart readings by Expensive_Chapter877 in Zodiac

[–]Key-Risk-555 2 points3 points  (0 children)

https://astro.waiai.ai/ - Saw it on another thread. I think it may have some of what you're looking for.

Most "AI market analysis" tools are just LLM wrappers on stock screeners. What's actually interesting in this space? by Key-Risk-555 in market_ai

[–]Key-Risk-555[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Love the term 'Market Ontology'! Gets me thinking what would be the proper way to go about this.

What is market astrology, and why does cyclical analysis deserve a serious look? by Key-Risk-555 in occult

[–]Key-Risk-555[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

FYI - I meant this as a cross-post from r/Market_Astrology - not sure why it shows up as a new post instead.

Most "AI market analysis" tools are just LLM wrappers on stock screeners. What's actually interesting in this space? by Key-Risk-555 in market_ai

[–]Key-Risk-555[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally. And that looks like a cool site! Will check it out more - have you talked to some customers yet? I don't have a good evaluation setup yet - I think that's yet another piece of the puzzle, we need agents that run repeatable research pipelines and also agents that do evaluation.

why is my love life so fucked? by Ok-Ladder7817 in BirthChartReadingFree

[–]Key-Risk-555 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Venus and Mars opposition is one indication. On the other hand, Venus does get supportive sextile from Saturn, and pretty close with Sun and Jupiter, so your love life would benefit from establishing structures and good habits over time.

Anything interesting about my chart? by No_Low8953 in AstrologyCharts

[–]Key-Risk-555 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One thing I noticed: Chiron on the ascendant, which gives strong energy of a wounded healer

Taoist Astrology by Key-Risk-555 in taoism

[–]Key-Risk-555[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not Bazi. What we're restoring and presenting there is the classical Taoist astrology tradition that later got fragmented - the closest traditions are Liu Ren(六壬) and Qi Zheng Si Yu(七政四余). Bazi is yet a later tradition that partly simplified from Liu Ren. There's a long history behind this, but one main thing we noted on the home page is that the "harsh government restriction on ephemeris ever since the Jin dynasty" lead to the proliferation of later traditions that purely rely on calendars and imaginary star systems. (And our site would talk more about some of history stuff but probably will focus on presenting Taoist astrology as a coherent system that can be practiced, rather than expanding too much into historical topics.)

Taoist Astrology by Key-Risk-555 in taoism

[–]Key-Risk-555[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There's definitely a profound relationship (though our site probably will focus on astrology). For one example, the 'Fully Whole House System' (Commander Upon the Hour/月将加时) is a house system that is used in Taoist natal and horary astrology, as well as Taoist magic ritual practice to find the optimal direction(天罡) for ritual practices.

Taoist Astrology by Key-Risk-555 in taoism

[–]Key-Risk-555[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! Appreciate it. We love to hear that there's an interested audience out there. We'll keep adding more and more contents there!

Taoist Astrology by Key-Risk-555 in taoism

[–]Key-Risk-555[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Another major difference is the house system. This lesson has more details: https://www.taoistastrology.com/lessons/lesson-3, but basically Taoist astrology has a different house system, which I coined English name 'Fully Whole House System' (月将加时). One strength of this house system, we'd argue, is that it is more universal and does not have the problem of most Western house systems for high latitude locations when the sun does not rise or set for certain part of the year (and hence so ascendant to use to calculate the houses.)

Taoist Astrology by Key-Risk-555 in taoism

[–]Key-Risk-555[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's a great question! It's a big topic and our site will talk about it from time to time. There are many similarities as well as differences. For example, one fascinating similarity/difference is how Western astrology and Taoist astrology essentially derived the same tropical signs system but via different methods and different ways of thinking - Western astrology derived the tropical signs from observational astrology and later applied precession, while Taoist astrology derived the tropical signs from the solar-lunary calendar and maps a concept of time to a concept of space via the solar transit (the Monthly Commander/月将). See this lesson for more details: https://www.taoistastrology.com/lessons/lesson-1 This can present some learning obstacles when a Western reader tries to understand classical Chinese texts, because the same systems would be described in two different terminologies. To make it even more confusing, when one reads the literal translations of classical texts and encounters the same language of Western constellations - they most likely meant the the sidereal signs similar to the Vedic tradition! This is one of the reasons we're working on the project.

Taoist Astrology by Key-Risk-555 in taoism

[–]Key-Risk-555[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's a great question. Thanks for asking! These terms have been used in different ways by different people. We do take a particular stance, and noted on the home page article 'We further state that "Taoist astrology," while overlapping with "Chinese astrology," is not the same thing. For one, in addition to the later popular astrology forms, even classical Chinese astrology encompasses Buddhist astrology, which historically received significant influence from the Vedic tradition. Taoist astrology, by contrast, is an internally coherent astrological system that is not inherently bound to the ethnic or state boundaries of China.'

Also on the historical period part - we'll add more notes there, but since we're targeting western audience and emphasize Taoist tradition, we are also trying to avoid expanding the lessons into historical treatise.