☽ Moon bQ Biquintile ♃ Jupiter
144° · minor aspect · neutral · default orb ±1.5°
At 144 degrees from Jupiter, the Moon enters the fifth-harmonic aspect Kepler reserved for distinctive aptitude, joining the significator of nurture and popular feeling to the greater benefic's increase, faith, and judgment. Modern practitioners read the biquintile of this pair as generosity practiced fluently: an instinct for hospitality at scale, public sympathy, and the care of communities rather than households. Older texts tied Moon-Jupiter contacts to abundance and the favor of the people, domains the harmonic reading keeps but narrows, treating the combination as a specific and cultivated social gift rather than a promise of general fortune.
Traditional reading
The classical bond between these bodies is unusually warm: Jupiter is exalted in Cancer, the Moon's own domicile, a reception that medieval astrologers counted among the strongest marks of concord between significators. The Moon, faster by two orders of magnitude, is always the applying partner. Sect divides them mildly, the Moon ruling the night team while Jupiter serves as the day's benefic, a contrariety tradition weighed lightly for soft contacts. The 144-degree angle itself answers to Kepler rather than to any of these older authorities.
Classical reading
Twice a quintile (144°). Kepler's fifth-harmonic family. Associated with deeper creative integration than the quintile.
Modern reading
Modern reading: integrated creative expression. The two principles work together to produce a distinctive output.
The two bodies
Other Moon–Jupiter aspects
More on the Biquintile aspect in general.
Reference, not advice
This is cultural and astronomical reference, not personal prediction or advice.
Last reviewed .