Orione
As Babalon Jones (great name!) says, the backs already reveal which cards are upside down when shuffling. Usually reversed cards have a more negative message in readings, so if you are a person with a sunny disposition, you are more likely to 'correct' the cards before a reading. (Yes. Been there, done that, got the upside-down t-shirt...)
But I think mostly all of the cards in the Thoth deck - depending on their context in the reading - can be negative or possitive or both. (Some a little more so then others - I'm looking at you, nine of swords - but still.) I find the Thoth is more 'flexible' than the other decks in that sense. Cards that are not reversed can still mean their 'reversed self' in certain contexts.
Lastly, I think that the initiation systems that this deck is associated with teach you about non-duality or more-possibilities-than-duality or however you want to phrase it. Speaking for myself: whenever I find myself caring about a card being either reversed or not, I stop my reading, because then I'm trying to force answers instead of letting the cards speak to me. Then I know what I want the cards to say, instead of actually listening to the cards.
But I think mostly all of the cards in the Thoth deck - depending on their context in the reading - can be negative or possitive or both. (Some a little more so then others - I'm looking at you, nine of swords - but still.) I find the Thoth is more 'flexible' than the other decks in that sense. Cards that are not reversed can still mean their 'reversed self' in certain contexts.
Lastly, I think that the initiation systems that this deck is associated with teach you about non-duality or more-possibilities-than-duality or however you want to phrase it. Speaking for myself: whenever I find myself caring about a card being either reversed or not, I stop my reading, because then I'm trying to force answers instead of letting the cards speak to me. Then I know what I want the cards to say, instead of actually listening to the cards.