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Paperback
First published January 1, 1964
It is Saturn who leads the mind to the contemplation of higher and more hidden matters.
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He is the lord of secret contemplation, foreign to all public affairs . . .—Agrippa, Occulta philosophia
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Significantly, in astrological literature since late antiquity, Kronos, like his Roman counterpart Saturn, was also recognised by many different faces; for Tycho Brahe as for Burton after him, he was still the ruler of melancholy. This god, punished by his own son, brings misfortune to the “children of Saturn”, that is, those born under his sign. At the same time, in the platonic tradition Saturn is—as the highest planet—the god of philosophers. Furthermore, because he was identified with Chronos, he is also “Time”, who devours his children. Finally, in the astrological tradition that goes back to the end of Hellenism and is later strengthened by the Arabs, he becomes, because of his ominous characteristics, the patron of the infirm and of highwaymen, and yet sometimes also, of the deep thinker (bathyphrōn). —Klibansky, Preface to the German Edition