Is Pluto too small to be considered an Astrological-planet?
dwarf planets are so named because the word dwarf relates to smallnessIs Pluto too small to be considered an Astrological-planet?
Dwarf planet Eris then has same potencyOnly Rudhyar explained it so eloquently
that Pluto represents the seed of the solar system,
thus retains much potency in its small size
It's questionable if the size of a planet would matter so much, once no one would suggest that Jupiter has more importance than the small Mercury, for example - and yet, fellow Jupiter, you wouldn't be written here if it wouldn't be with the aid of the tiny and winged Hermes!
If we think about "functions" we could perhaps being fooled by the Universe when thinking about sizes - and the new planet Chiron smashes us with his truth: we know for experience that small keys can open immense gates...
I believe, though, that the modern "rulership" of planets is somewhat questionable with the discovery of so many beyond Neptune planets... Specially the modern rulership of Scorpio being assigned to Pluto becomes more questionable.
From experience, I see that Pluto is about power, and has an immense effect on Earth, but perhaps the other TNO's (and subNO's) also have?
I wouldn't question for an instant the immense influence of Pluto, and this by experience, but when it comes to sign's rulerships, things get confusing...
Pluto's huge atmosphere, ten times bigger than the solid center that most people take for the planet means it is much bigger than we thought it was.
Behold;
Can any of your other dwarf planets boast such a bodacious atmosphere?
Pluto's sky is way thicker than Earth's, it must be terrifying to stand there and look up.
A planet's atmosphere accounts for its size, also Pluto's seems to trail behind it like a comet would, which is spectacular.
From all this I conclude Pluto is most definitely a planet.
Poor Pluto; the black sheep of the family.
Dwarf planet orbits are slightly different from those of the planets relative to the zodiac. The latitude of Pluto can go double the amount of the Traveller (the Moon). Traditionally some people have defined the zodiac as somewhere extending to the maximum latitude of the Moon. Thus, Pluto is often outside the ''zodiacal belt'' (defined by classical tropical astrologers).
https://i.stack.imgur.com/IavIQ.jpg
dwarf planetoid pluto’s distance from the Sun is 5.9 BILLION km
You sure about that? If you're talking about a planet being Out of Bounds relative to Earth's Inclination,
Mars can go farthest out, and the Moon goes farther out than Pluto.
Puck Fluto, ya heard.
Don't talk to me or my Sun again!