The very reasonable assumption made by every scientist, myself included, understood Astrology to be an early doctrine inspired by natural astronomy and perhaps visionary inputs. There is no expectation of anything profoundly foundational to be found in an apparently empirical construct
With our new comprehension of the advanced engineering that was deployed in order to produce the Earth and the moon both and the knowledge that an advanced race of guides or teachers assisted us during the Bronze Age in particular, it becomes evident that we need to upgrade our position regarding Astrology
It may still prove impossible to set up a meaningful 'science' of astrology but we now need to look at the data and see it it can take us anywhere. This item is a good start.
I have met two individuals in my life who were born on the same day and year or close by. The closest truly represented a path not taken by myself and the other a close parallel. The closest was a gifted sculptor making it happen successfully in his market place. How many of those do we meet in a life? I remember deciding not to be a sculptor when i was twelve and had won a prize for an excellent animal carving. My friend carves animals in particular and it pleased me to know he was successful at it. It truly is uncanny and i have only recently met him perhaps to provide me with an example.
On top of that we also know that the number of unique facial looks is finite. Add in the plausibility of a spirit expressing itself many times, it is plausible to anticipate that a given unique spirit expresses itself in a million individual births at the same time or even day as the template. All this makes the underlying empiricism convincing.
These are leaps but they are no longer unimaginable. Thus a population of souls all representing different aspects of the same spirit living alternative life ways matures and reemerges on death to share experiences. Wow!
All this makes astrology worth investigating through huge statistical analysis.
.
The Secret History of Astrology
Richard Smoley,
http://www.wakingtimes.com/2015/05/08/the-secret-history-of-astrology/
The history of astrology is in many ways the history of a polemic.
The question of whether astrology works, as crucial as it is, is soon
buried under other issues, such as what this might have to say about
human free will and whether the stars and planets that govern our fates
are benign, malevolent, or neither. These issues have been debated for
thousands of years.
Before we get into them, however, we should probably begin with why
astrology is the way it is. To do this, we have to imagine what ancient
people saw and how they explained it. In the first place, they would
have found that there are seven bodies in the sky that move (or, as we
would say today, appear to move) around the earth. These are the sun and
the moon as well as five planets: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and
Saturn. The rest of the planets are invisible (except for Uranus, under
some circumstances) to the naked eye.
The number seven is significant: probably there is no other number
that has so much lore and mystery about it. But the explanations for its
importance are never very clear. Of all the reasons given for the
prominence of seven, there is only one that makes a great deal of sense.
In his magisterial History of Magic and Experimental Science,
Lynn Thorndike writes, “The number seven was undoubtedly of frequent
occurrence, of a sacred and mystic character, and virtue and perfection
were ascribed to it. And no one has succeeded in giving any satisfactory
explanation for this other than the rule of the seven planets over our
world.”
[ there are really good practical reasons to like the number seven. Three, four and five provide a natural tool for producing a perfect right angle. A rod that is seven units long is easily set up with a spare foot at each end into the necessary configuration. Seven feet is not unwieldy and can be used as a staff as well and wear on the ends will not destroy its usefulness for precission work. - arclein ]
So we have a system of seven planets, imagined as moving in
concentric spheres around the earth. Of these, the most important is the
sun; the second is the moon. Ancient humans observed that the sun
appeared to move in a tight band of the sky, known as the ecliptic.
By the time it made a full circuit, returning to the same point in the
sky, somewhat more than twelve cycles of the moon had passed. (The solar
year is 365.242 days long; the lunar year is 354.37 days.) Thus there
were slightly more than twelve moons in a solar year, making the solar
and lunar years extremely hard to reconcile. But twelve was the closest
whole number to the truth, so it seemed reasonable to make a year with
twelve months. It also made sense to divide the ecliptic into twelve
parts. These were marked out by constellations, which were given
specific names, mostly of animals. They are now the twelve signs of the
zodiac.
[ I hate to be picky, but 13 months is closest to the truth and i suspect the Bronze Age calender used this to serious effect. 13 X 4 = 52 weeks. The current system is very inconvenient and someone somewhere chose to be an idiot. - arclein]
The Evolution of Astrology in History
When did people start to make these calculations? When was this
system set up? It appears that we owe to the Egyptians the schema of a
twelve-month solar year (they added some intercalary days to the twelve
lunar months to make up the full 365). But the most common and
consistent traditions say that astrology itself came from Mesopotamia.
The time is somewhat harder to fix, but one consideration might tell us
something. Over the years the sun moves slightly in relation to the
constellations of the zodiac, and every 2,150 years the sign in which
the vernal (Spring) equinox appears will change. The full cycle, the
time the sun takes to return to the same point in the zodiac (known as a
Platonic year, because Plato was the first to mention it, in his
dialogue the Timaeus) is approximately 25,800 years.
The starting point of the zodiac is placed at the vernal equinox – 0
degrees of Aries. But at the vernal equinox (from the perspective of
the northern hemisphere, where astrology developed), the sun does not
rise with 0 degrees of Aries behind it, and it has not done so for a
long time – not, in fact, since around 2000 BCE. (Today
it rises with either Pisces or Aquarius in the background, depending
upon whom you ask). Since this is the natural starting-point of the
zodiac, we can assume that whoever set up this system must have begun
here. We can speculate that astrology as we know it arose in Mesopotamia
around 2000 BCE.
And, in fact, the earliest evidence we have for astrology does indeed
come from that part of the world. Although the Roman author Pliny the
Elder cites a claim that the Babylonians were following and recording
the stars for 490,000 years, the earliest astrological evidence we have
is from the second millennium BCE. It consists of omen lists, which
correlate various natural events, particularly the positions of the
planets, with events on earth. Here is one example: “When the Moon
occults Jupiter…, that year a king will die (or) an eclipse of the sun
and moon will take place. A great king will die. When Jupiter enters the
midst of the Moon there will be want in Abarrú” – and so on.
[ This is an interesting number and plausibly ties in to the data provided by the guides. That could well be how long they have been on Earth taking care of its terra forming. The biological emergence of modern humanity was around 200,000 years ago but then only after the guides tired of their own work and decided to change that. - arclein ]
Notice
two things about this prediction. In the first place, it focuses on
great events, like a famine or the death of a king. There was not yet
any personal astrology as we know it. In the second place, the reasoning
was inductive: when one thing happened, another thing was
going to happen. While this was not, strictly speaking, scientific
reasoning, it was like scientific reasoning in that it
attempted to correlate one thing – the relations of planets – with
another thing – events on earth. There was probably very little
theorising about causes, that is, about why one thing should affect the
other. But then, as Western philosophy has found again and again, the
concept of causation is an extremely problematic one to this day. (For
more on this, see my book The Dice Game of Shiva, chapter 4.)
It was the Greeks who made astrology into what we know today. In his History of Western Astrology,
Jim Tester contends that the twelve equal signs as we know them from
Aries to Pisces was standardised in the fifth century BCE, at the time
of Greece’s Golden Age. And it was definitely the Greeks who (at least
in the West) first came up with the concept of natal (birth) astrology
(or, to use the scholarly name, genethlialogy).
[ again i do not think that the greeks made this stuff up but may well have acquired the information by way of the Persians. arclein ]
While looking at all this, it’s important to remember that the
sciences were not distinguished as they are today. Astrology and
astronomy were the same discipline, and two of the greatest Greek
astronomers, Hipparchus of Nicaea and Claudius Ptolemy, were also
astrologers. (Astronomers also tended to be astrologers up to the
seventeenth century.) Meteorology was part of the same package, and the
planets were used to predict the weather. Aristotle in his Politics
tells of the Greek philosopher Thales, who “knew by his skill in the
stars while it was yet winter that there would be a great harvest of
olives in the coming year; so, having a little money, he gave deposits
for the use of all the olive-presses in Chios and Miletus, which he
hired at a low price because no one bid against him. When the
harvest-time came, and many were wanted all at once and of a sudden, he
let them out at any rate which he pleased, and made a quantity of money.
Thus he showed the world that philosophers can easily be rich if they
like, but that their ambition is of another sort.”
Medicine, too, had a link to astrology. The ancient and widespread
idea that the human being, the microcosm, corresponds to the universe,
the macrocosm, led the Greeks to assign the signs of the zodiac to
different parts of the body. Aries, the first sign, was assigned the
head; to Pisces, the last, were ascribed the feet. This enabled
physicians to diagnose illnesses and prescribe treatments based on the
patient’s horoscope and the positions of the planets. The connection
between astrology and medicine lasted a long time, up until the
eighteenth century. Before then, even sceptics admitted that it was
useful to consult the stars for medical purposes. And astrologers who
were attacked for the inaccuracy of their predictions retorted that the
doctors did no better.
It was natal horoscopes that gained the most ground, and they became
popular in the last centuries BCE and in the early centuries of the
Common Era. This period, which saw the rise of Hellenistic civilisation
in the Mediterranean world, was, like ours, a time of tremendous
technical and intellectual progress. It was also a time of political
consolidation: small, previously independent states were united, first
under Alexander the Great and his heirs, and later under the Roman
Empire. As in our age, the world became more integrated – and the individual occupied a smaller piece of it.
These facts may explain the tremendous rise in those centuries in
devotion to the goddess Tyche or Fortuna – Fortune – whose caprices
seemed to reflect a world where the individual was under the dominion of
powers far away. It was also the time when personal astrology
– particularly the natal horoscope – established its place in Western
culture. People began to see their fates in more deterministic ways than
they had done in previous centuries.
Planetary Spheres
In those days, as we’ve seen, the planets were believed to surround
the earth in concentric spheres. The soul taking incarnation in a birth
was thought to descend through each of these planetary spheres in turn,
assuming characteristics of that sphere as it passed. The relations of
the planets to one another, and their place in the zodiac, thus dictated
individual fate and character.
Few modern astrologers would say this is why their art works, but on
the other hand, there are also few other explanations that are much
clearer or more sensible. We can take this idea of the soul’s descent as
a metaphor for how one’s character may be fixed by the planets in the
zodiac. Like most metaphors, it casts some light on what it portrays
– and at the same time, it is only a metaphor.
[ and that is good enough. it may well reflect transitioning from one population of spirits to another and it could even be based on planets. It is now understood as plausible. arclein ]
The history of astrology, as I’ve suggested, is the history of
polemic, and just from looking at what I’ve just said above, we can see
one of the bases for this polemic. The soul descends through the realms
of the planets, and in those days the planets were gods. Plato in his Timaeus
said that it was the gods of the planets that formed human beings, not
the true, high God above (who, according to Plato, is himself perfect
and could not have formed imperfect things like humans). Plato’s pupil
Aristotle also held that the planets were subordinate gods.
If this is true, then exactly who are these gods and how are they
disposed toward us? Already in Plato the planetary gods are ambiguous
figures, responsible for both the good and the evil in our natures.
Later thinkers were to paint them in even more negative terms. The
Hermetic texts – writings of late antiquity said to preserve the wisdom of the Egyptians – portrayed
the keepers of these heavenly gates as the sources of vice in the human
character. One Hermetic text describes the liberation of the soul at
death as an ascent through the planetary spheres (as opposed to birth,
when the soul descends): “Then the human being rushes up through the
cosmic framework, at the first zone surrendering the energy of increase
and decrease; at the second, evil machination, a device now inactive,”
and so on through the seven spheres. Each sphere has a vice that is
connected with its respective planet – “energy of increase and decrease”
being connected with the moon, which waxes and wanes throughout the
month, and “evil machination” with Mercury, the god of cleverness. The
Gnostics, too, saw these intermediary planetary powers as inimical
“archons” that imprisoned humankind spiritually.
This ambiguous, or inimical, nature of the planetary gods led some to
criticise astrology. Plotinus, the Neoplatonic philosopher of the third
century CE, argued that if the planets are gods, it is absurd to
conclude they can do evil (as some planets, particularly Mars and
Saturn, are said to do). As a matter of fact Plotinus did not reject
astrology entirely, allowing that it was useful for divination, because
the planets are part of the cosmos and serve to reflect its harmony as a
whole. But then his critique was not directed at astrology as such; the
section of his Enneads discussing this matter is entitled “Are
the Stars Causes?”, indicating it was the causative aspect of the
planets that he had problems with. (Again we see how problematic the
idea of causation can be.)
Free Will Vs Fate
By contrast, Plotinus’s disciple Porphyry embraced astrology (he even
wrote a three-volume work on the subject, now lost). Dealing with the
issue of free will versus fate, Porphyry used some of Plato’s texts to
argue for a kind of mix between the two: the soul chooses its fate
before incarnation, but this fate, immutable once one is born on earth,
is reflected in the horoscope.
Origen, a third-century church father, also focuses on free will.
Like most Christian theologians, he is at pains to uphold the doctrine
of free will and opposes anything that might challenge it. Yet he too
stops short of rejecting astrology altogether, because if he did, he
would have to reject natural philosophy as a whole (into which astrology
was intricately interwoven at the time).
Origen also contends that astrologers, in order to make perfectly
accurate predictions, would have to be able to calculate horoscopes very
precisely – within four minutes or so. The technology
of the time did not allow them to do this; time was kept by sundials and
water-clocks, which were not precise enough. Nor were astronomical
observations. Hence, Origen said, astrology could not work.
If we back away and look at this issue from a distance, we can actually see that, given what we know now, astrology should
not have worked much of the time, given the limitations of the
observations of the stars (there were no telescopes), and given the fact
that the outer planets were unknown. To this we can add likely
mathematical errors made by astrologers themselves, which must have been
extremely common in all periods. In the sixteenth century, the
celebrated prophet Nostradamus was derided by his astrological peers for
his sloppiness in calculating charts.
In
any event, Christianity has always had an ambivalent, and frequently
critical, posture towards astrology. Astrology and its practitioners
were condemned when they came too close to sorcery and when they seemed
to be criticising the doctrines of free will and divine sovereignty. But
the science of the stars remained an important part of the medieval
curriculum, partly because it was an integral part of the system of the
seven “liberal arts” that the Catholic Church inherited from classical
antiquity. (There is a persistent rumour that the pope’s bathtub in the
Vatican is adorned with the signs of the zodiac, but I have not been
able to verify this.)
Although I could go into more detail about the history of astrology
from late antiquity to the present, in fundamental ways the debate has
not changed much. Some issues certainly have faded away. No one regards
the planets as gods anymore, so we do not wonder about whether they are
personally good or evil. And computers make it possible to calculate
charts with extreme accuracy, either with one of the many dedicated
software packages on the market or through many free sites on the
Internet (astrodienst.com being one of the best-known). Finally, while
the issue of free will versus determinism continues to haunt us, it does
not have quite the theological weight that it once did. We no longer
feel quite so obliged to justify the ways of God to man as people did a
couple of centuries ago.
Scientific Efforts to Validate Astrology
Nonetheless, we are still forced to ask, does astrology work? Has
there been any genuine scientific effort to test the validity of
astrology? There haven’t been terribly many. Some studies have attempted
to correlate astrological charts with the results of personality tests,
without positive results (but of course that presupposes the
personality tests themselves have anything more than a vague degree of
accuracy). One famous study, designed by Shawn Carlson at the University
of California at Berkeley and whose results were published in 1985 in
the journal Nature, concluded from such indications that there
was no validity to astrology. But a statistical reevaluation of
Carlson’s findings by Suitbert Ertel, professor of psychology at the
University of Gőttingen, that was published in the Journal of Scientific Exploration in 2009, reversed Carlson’s conclusions and argued the study validated astrology instead.
Another famous case involved the French researcher Michel Gauquelin,
who attempted to correlate planetary positions in birth charts with
success in certain professions. He calculated the charts of nearly 1,100
members of the French Academy of Medicine to see if any planetary
aspects showed up beyond the range of statistical probability. And
indeed Gauquelin found that physicians had Saturn in prominent positions
in their charts far more than could be explained by chance. A study he
conducted on athletes showed a similar “Mars effect” for them.
Gauquelin’s findings were vigorously – and viciously – attacked by the clique of “sceptical inquirers.” Some of these actually attempted to replicate Gauquelin’s findings – and
corroborated them. But then these supposedly objective scientists
changed the parameters of their own study to alter the results and make
Gauquelin look wrong, causing great scandal even in the community of
sceptics.
The heat and vitriol generated by these studies prove one thing and
one thing only: that we are a long way from any true scientific
evaluation of astrology. Astrologers – and a large
section of the public – believe in it, while sceptics mock it at every
chance. In order to have genuinely trustworthy results, those who
actually want to find out the truth would have to outnumber those who
are angling for their own pet conclusions – and I suspect that they do not.
Speaking for myself, I am not a scientist and have not done any
scientific studies on this or any other subject, but I have often been
struck by the validity of astrology, both for my personal life and for a
perspective on larger events. To take one example, in 2001 I decided to
cast a chart for the presidency of George W. Bush, based on the time of
his inauguration in Washington. I noticed that Mars was badly aspected.
“My God!” I thought. “It looks like we’re going to have a war.” (Mars
is the planet of war.) Then I told myself, “That’s ridiculous. Who are
we going to go to war with?” Events to come provided the details.
How Astrology is Supposed to Work
Another question remains. If astrology does work, how
does it work? Tradition held that the planets send out certain
vibratory influences that affect events on earth. Scoffers retort that
the gravitational pull of the planets (apart from the sun and moon) is
too small to have any influence whatsoever on us on earth. That may or
may not be the case: the old occult theory did not talk about
gravitational effects per se, and actually predated Newton’s theory of
gravity. In any event, today it’s probably more common to explain
astrology through C.G. Jung’s concept of synchronicity – which
he defined as an “acausal connecting principle” between apparently
unrelated events. In his essay “Synchronicity,” Jung discussed
astrology. He conducted a study of several hundred married couples, and
found that cases in which the husband’s sun or ascendant was conjunct
the wife’s moon (classical markers for marriage) occurred three times
more often than would be predicted by chance.
Nevertheless, Jung’s theory leaves a great deal to be desired.
Synchronicity, as he describes it, is not strictly acausal; rather it
posits a hidden cause – the psychic forces Jung called the archetypes – that underlies apparently unrelated but significant events. And so we return to that bane of sceptics – occult
causes. But then Newton’s gravity, when it first appeared, was also
derided by the sceptics of the day as an occult cause.
We are pushed toward one final, and highly disturbing, conclusion – one
that I have already hinted at in this article. The notion of cause and
effect is in itself extremely problematic. The classic critique came
from the Scottish philosopher David Hume. He said that when looking at
things that were said to be causes, he saw no property they had in
common (as, say, red or round objects do). From this he concluded that
causation was a relation, and this relation consisted of “constant
conjunction.” One event follows another (sometimes after an
interruption) on a regular basis, so we infer that the one caused the
other. The German philosopher Immanuel Kant, who said he had been roused
by Hume from his “dogmatic slumber,” went on to argue that causation
does not exist in the world as it really is, but rather is an innate
“category,” or feature, of the human mind that leads us to perceive
reality this way.
No one has ever really refuted Hume’s and Kant’s conclusions.
Science, it is true, is somewhat humbler and more furtive about
asserting causal relations than it used to be: it tends to speak in
terms of association rather than causation – “smoking was associated with lung cancer in X cases” rather than “smoking caused
cancer in X cases” – but this only points up the strength of the
philosophers’ criticisms. Whether it’s a matter of determining the
causes of cancer or of asking whether the planets can presage a war, we
are left with “constant conjunction.” In that respect, we haven’t gone
far beyond the Babylonians.
Sources:
Aristotle, The Basic Works of Aristotle, Edited by Richard McKeon, Random House, 1941
Brian P. Copenhaver, ed. and trans., Hermetica: The Greek Corpus Hermeticum and the Latin Asclepius in a New English Translation with Notes and an Introduction, Cambridge University Press, 1992
Ken McRitchie, “Reappraisal of 1985 Carlson Study Shows Support for
Astrology,” Center of the Universe at the Edge of the World website;
theworldedge.blogspot.com/2009/07/reappraisal-of-1985-carlson-study-finds.html
Claudius Ptolemy, Tetrabiblos, Translated by F.E. Robbins, Loeb Classical Library, 1940
Jim Tester, A History of Western Astrology, Boydell, 1987
Lynn Thorndike, A History of Magic and Experimental Science, vol. 1, Columbia University Press, 1923
About the Author
RICHARD SMOLEY has over thirty-five years of experience studying and practicing esoteric spirituality. His latest book is Supernatural: Writings on an Unknown History. He is also the author of Inner
Christianity: A Guide to the Esoteric Tradition; Conscious Love:
Insights from Mystical Christianity; The Dice Game of Shiva: How
Consciousness Creates the Universe; The Essential Nostradamus; Forbidden
Faith: The Secret History of Gnosticism; and Hidden Wisdom: A Guide to the Western Inner Traditions (with Jay Kinney). Smoley is the former editor of Gnosis: A Journal of the Western Inner Traditions. Currently he is editor of Quest: Journal of the Theosophical Society in America and of Quest Books.
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