What he writes about
His work here sticks to one rule. Every claim should trace back to something real, a clay tablet, a Greek text, a measurable fact about the sky, rather than to vibes. The point isn't to sell certainty about the future. It's to show that the people who built astrology were careful observers, and that their system is far stranger and more interesting than either its fans or its critics usually allow.
He covers two main areas. The first is the working mechanics of a birth chart, the kind of plain-English explanation that turns a confusing wheel into something readable. The second is the long history behind it, the Babylonian scribes, the Hellenistic geometers, and the astronomers who measured the sky with water clocks and sharp eyes.
Start with these
The whole wheel in plain English: planets, signs, houses, and where to start.
Learn · All guidesEvery guide, from the big three to the zodiac signs and the mechanics of the chart.
History · The full seriesFrom Babylonian clay tablets to Kepler's ellipses. The real science behind the charts.