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B.O.T.A. tarot deck

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TheBOTATarot(also spelled BOTA, B.o.t.A., or BotA) was created byPaul Foster Case,founder ofBuilders of the Adytum(BOTA), and artistJessie Burns Parke.Although it is based upon, and closely resembles,Arthur Edward Waite's 1909Rider-Waite deck,[1]Case changed what he said were mistakes or "blinds" on the part of Waite.[2][3][4]The BOTA Tarot is available as a standard-sized deck and a larger version containing only the Major Arcana (trump cards; often called "tarot keys" by Case) in black and white, as Case believed that every student must color in their own deck. After his death, the Major Arcana became also available in color.[5]Each of these cards has a border of a particular color associated with that according to Case. The Minor Arcana cards are illustrated with suit symbols only.

Every trump card has aHebrew letterwritten on it in the lower right corner, which is the letter that is associated with the card in the writings of Case. In contrast to some earlier occult tarot decks, which place the Fool card last in order, and associate it with the second-to-last Hebrew letter,shin(such decks order the last Hebrew letter,tav,beforeshin), the BOTA deck places the Fool card first in order, and therefore associates it with the first Hebrew letter,aleph.It also ordersshinbeforetav,in the correct order of Hebrew letters.

Differences from the Rider-Waite deck

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The BOTA tarot deck is very similar to theRider–Waite Tarotand is sometimes considered a clone.[6][7]However, all of the card illustrations differ in at least some minor way from those of the Rider-Waite deck.

The card that contrasts the most between the two decks is the Death card. In the Rider-Waite deck, the Death card depicts the personified figure of Death as an armored knight on a horse, carrying a banner; whereas in the BOTA deck, this figure is depicted as a bare skeleton with a scythe, with a red sky in the background, being based upon the Death card of theMarseille tarot deck.

In the Rider-Waite deck, the Sun card depicts a nude child on a horse, carrying a dull-red banner, whereas in the BOTA deck, the card depicts two nude children standing in a field, being again based upon the Sun card of the Marseille deck.

Various more subtle elements of symbolism also differ between various cards in the two decks.

The "tarot tableau" spread

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In his bookThe Tarot: A Key to the Wisdom of the Ages,Paul Foster Casepublished theHebrewletter attributions of the Golden Dawn for the first time. Also made public was Cases's "tarot tableau", a spread (pattern for laying out all of the tarot cards) which Case said revealed certain relationships and dissimilarities among them. This tableau was used by the American branch ofAlpha et Omegawhen Case was the "praemonstrator" (chief instructor) of that order's Thoth–Hermes lodge inChicago.The tarot tableau is an arrangement of the 22 major arcana cards into 3 horizontal rows that span across 7 vertical columns. On the top row there is only the Fool card, in the center of the row. Rows two through four consist of seven cards each, arranged in sequential order, such that cards 1 through 7 are on row two, cards 8 through 14 are on row three, and cards 15 through 21 are on row four.

Use in meditation and intuition

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Builders of the Adytum,although an organization devoted tomysticism(specificallyWestern esotericism), has repeatedly emphasized that tarot cards are primarily a tool for meditation, notfortune-telling.[citation needed]Case invented a new, non-magicaldefinition for the word "divination": "the use of spiritual intuition to find solutions to problems".[This quote needs a citation]After explaining the BOTA method for tarotdivinationin his book titledThe Tarot: A Key to the Wisdom of the Ages,Case specifically explained the differences between this particular type of divination andfortune-telling.Case then closed with the warning: "Finally, let me reiterate the thought that this is not to be used for vulgar fortune telling, or to amuse a party of friends. If you yield to the temptation so to abuse this information, you will pay for it in the loss of all power of true divination, and probably in the loss of ability to control the higher rates of psychic vibration."[8]

Correspondences to the Qabalistic Cube of Space and Tree of Life

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The Tarot: A Key to the Wisdom of the Ageswas the first published book to apply almost all of the tarot attributions to the "Cube of Space"diagram. There are 22Major Arcanatarot cards, which Case corresponded to 22 components of the Cube of Space.

TheSepher Yetzirahis the source of the link between the Cube of Space and the Hebrew letters.[9][page needed]TheSepher Yetzirah' itself does not directly mention a "cube of space", nor any kind of cube. Case based the Cube of Space upon two verses in theSepher Yetzirah:the first, in chapter 4, associates six Hebrew letters with six cardinal directions (up, down, east, west, north, south); the second, in chapter 5, associates 12 Hebrew letters with 12 diagonal directional arms or boundaries (different translations use different terms), which Case interpreted as the 12 edges of a cube.

Case associated his Cube of Space with theTree of LifeofKabbalah(Qabalah). He based that association upon paragraph 95 of theSepher Ha-Bahir.That paragraph does mention a tree, though does not specifically name it the Tree of Life; it states that a tree is inside the twelve diagonals that are mentioned in theSepher Yetzirah.Because the Tree of Life consists of 10sephiroth,Case associated the three "mother" letters (aleph,mem,shin) and seven "double" letters of theSepher Yetzirahwith ten correspondingsephiroth.

Until the publication of Case'sThe Tarot,most English-speaking occultists had never heard of Case's Cube of Space concept, nor any alleged correspondences between tarot and the Tree of Life diagram,[10]though the latter correspondence have become common in modern times (e.g., many tarot decks feature a Tree of Life diagram on the jacket of the Fool). Until the mid-1990s, there were almost no other books in print which even mentioned the Cube of Space. The ones that do (sometimes in different terms such as "the Qabalistic Cube" ) defer to Case's writings on the subject.[10][11]

References

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  1. ^White, Douglass A.;Thoth and the Tarot,pp. 13-14
  2. ^Case, Paul Foster;The Tarot: A Key to the Wisdom of the Ages.
  3. ^Case, Paul Foster;Highlights of Tarot.
  4. ^Case, Paul Foster;The Book of Tokens: Tarot Meditations.
  5. ^"Introduction to the B.O.T.A. Tarot Deck".Esoteric Meanings.RetrievedMarch 15,2019.
  6. ^Barrett, David V. (2011).A Brief Guide to Secret Religions.London: Constable & Robinson. p. 177.ISBN1849018111.
  7. ^"B.O.T.A. Tarot Reviews".Aeclectic Tarot.Retrieved14 April2023.
  8. ^Case, Paul Foster;The Tarot: A Key to the Wisdom of the Ages,p. 223.
  9. ^Kaplan, Aryeh;Sefer Yetzirah: The Book of Creation in Theory and Practice.
  10. ^abTownley, Kevin.The Cube of Space: Container of Creation
  11. ^Hulse, David Allen;New Dimensions for the Cube of Space: The Path of Initiation Revealed by the Tarot upon the Qabalistic Cube.

Bibliography

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Writings of Case and others regarding the BOTA Tarot deck:

  • Case, Paul Foster;The Book of Tokens: Tarot Meditations
  • Case, Paul Foster;The Tarot, A Key to the Wisdom of the Ages
  • Case, Paul Foster;Highlights of Tarot
  • Davies, Ann;Inspirational Thoughts on the Tarot
  • Hulse, David Allen;New Dimensions for the Cube of Space: The Path of Initiation Revealed by the Tarot upon the Qabalistic Cube
  • Jayanti, Amber;Living the Tarot
  • Lotterhand, Jason C.The Thursday Night Tarot
  • Townley, Kevin;The Cube of Space: Container of Creation
  • Townley, Kevin;Meditations on the Cube of Space
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