Inside the Box: Quaternary vs. Quinary Synthesis*

AUTHOR'S NOTE: I've been loosely using the term "quintessence" to describe the numerical conflation of any quantity of tarot cards in a spread, but traditionalists have criticized that assumption as being inconsistent with the historical meaning of the word as the symbolic fifth iteration (or "quinary essence") of a four-card "tirage on croix" (French Cross) … Continue reading Inside the Box: Quaternary vs. Quinary Synthesis*

Two Approaches to Tarot Triangulation: The Quintessence and the Midpoint

AUTHOR'S NOTE: There is a technique used in navigation and surveying called "triangulation," the technical definition for which, in its simplest form, is "the process of determining the location of a point by forming triangles to the point from known points." While navigation encompasses distance as well as direction and position and surveying only defines … Continue reading Two Approaches to Tarot Triangulation: The Quintessence and the Midpoint

The Lover Departs (or “Squeezing the Grape”)

AUTHOR'S NOTE: I recently came across an unusual interpretation of the Tarot de Marseille "Lover" card that I find quite engaging. It inspired me to present a pair of amusing anecdotes that convey a serious message. (I've already covered this subject from the Chariot's perspective in much the same language; see my previous essay, linked … Continue reading The Lover Departs (or “Squeezing the Grape”)

Divinatory Syncretism: Synthesizing vs. Particularizing*

*Syncretism: The union of different practices whose features may be synchronized to good effect. AUTHOR'S NOTE: Before I get into my subject, I should acknowledge that I sympathize (that is, I agree in principle) with Ronald Decker's criticism of the Golden Dawn's application of "Chaldean" astrology (which I understand does not signify a geographic region … Continue reading Divinatory Syncretism: Synthesizing vs. Particularizing*

Mistaking Etteilla: An Insult to Hairdressers

AUTHOR'S NOTE: It seems I was justified in my belief that I would find fresh insight regarding the life and work of Jean-Baptiste Alliette (known to cartomancers as "Etteilla") in the closing chapters of Ronald Decker's esoteric tarot history book, The Esoteric Tarot: Ancient Sources Rediscovered in Hermeticism and Cabalah. As an admittedly biased admirer … Continue reading Mistaking Etteilla: An Insult to Hairdressers

“Highest in Red, Lowest in Black” (or Not)

AUTHOR'S NOTE: Occasionally, playing cards and tarot cards converge in unlikely ways, as they do here. When my brother and I were kids learning to play "trick-taking" cards games from our grandmother (who was an old-school cartomancer, although she would never read for us or even talk about it), her oft-repeated mantra was "Highest in … Continue reading “Highest in Red, Lowest in Black” (or Not)

The Case Against Qabalistic Trumps

AUTHOR'S NOTE: In his occult tarot history, The Esoteric Tarot . . . etc. (I get tired of typing the whole title), Ronald Decker theorizes that when the primordial tarot-as-we-know-it was developing in Renaissance Italy, there were only 14 numbered trump cards ending with Temperance (the unnumbered Fool was a thing apart) and they were … Continue reading The Case Against Qabalistic Trumps