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perhaps not everything is lost for astrology

Aquila, the most straightforward test I know for astrology would be to find 10 or so people all of whom were born within the same month or so and all in the same geographic area. The astrologer casts ten horoscopes; the subjects are asked to pick their own.

(If the ten people are not born in the same month and in the same area it may be necessary to edit the horoscopes; i.e. "You love snow" is not likely to apply to someone from a tropical climate.)

Given a test like that, how many people do you think could pick the correct horoscope? You may use as "complete" a technique as you like in casting them.
 
Aquila, the most straightforward test I know for astrology would be to find 10 or so people all of whom were born within the same month or so and all in the same geographic area. The astrologer casts ten horoscopes; the subjects are asked to pick their own.

(If the ten people are not born in the same month and in the same area it may be necessary to edit the horoscopes; i.e. "You love snow" is not likely to apply to someone from a tropical climate.)

Given a test like that, how many people do you think could pick the correct horoscope? You may use as "complete" a technique as you like in casting them.

Why would the subjects have to be born in the same month?
 
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Why would the subjects have to born in the same month?

(1) To minimize the possibility of subtle clues like "you celebrate the summers."
(2) Most people have some idea of what their sign is supposed to be like, and throwing in a few stereotypical comments like "you have a tendency to be bull-headed" will give hints.
(3) As someone (it may have been you) said above, there is a difference in the early life of babies born in the winter and in the summer and there is some evidence that these differences do effect adult life.

All of these things could be minimized by having a reviewer edit the horoscopes before they were given to the subjects. But then you might end up with not very much horoscope left, and then if the test failed, we wouldn't be able to say for certain that the test meant anything.
 
Why would the subjects have to born in the same month?
(1) To minimize the possibility of subtle clues like "you celebrate the summers."

Christine - this is already beginning to sound like a very unscientific experiment! Have you ever read a natal chart interpretation? I've never seen any professional astrologer say anything like that. I've heard James Randi saying things like that in his self-designed experiments to demonstrate the point that anyone can give a "cold reading" if they are vague enough.

If anyone is serious about designing an experiement like this, you would have to narrow down the criteria a little as to what sort of thing you are looking for in the horoscopes. It would have to be traits that both the astrologer and the skeptics agreed on beforehand, and preferably ones which were not vague, like "you love snow". For example ,physical appearance, career, number of marriages, number of children and health. The criteria would have to be areas of life that the skeptics wouldn't say were too vague afterwards.

(2) Most people have some idea of what their sign is supposed to be like, and throwing in a few stereotypical comments like "you have a tendency to be bull-headed" will give hints.

But isn't that exactly what the astrologers would be trying to prove? - that there is a difference between a Taurus and a Gemini? If the skeptics start laying down rules like you can only have subjects born in the same month, then that immediately makes the experiment wieghted. You would have to pick 10 subjects at random.

(3) As someone (it may have been you) said above, there is a difference in the early life of babies born in the winter and in the summer and there is some evidence that these differences do effect adult life.

Exactly, and if astrology is valid, then these differences should be shown in a horoscope.

All of these things could be minimized by having a reviewer edit the horoscopes before they were given to the subjects. But then you might end up with not very much horoscope left, and then if the test failed, we wouldn't be able to say for certain that the test meant anything.

ooh no, no editing! Everything has to open and honest. We are trying to do science here, or at least as near to science as we can get.

I think that the results from just testing one astrologer with 10 subjects would not show much. I think that a good astrologer could probably get 7 or more correct picks, in an experiment which was designed fairly. But to make the experiment more valid, I think you would have to have 10 astrologers having 10 subjects each, i.e. 100 subjects. And having 10 astrologers would give the different types of astrology all a good crack at the challenge, for example, Tropical, Sidereal, Vedic, the different house systems (3 or 4 that I know of) etc.

Hokulele By "complete", I was referring more to an accurate horoscope, drawn up using exact birth time and place. Sun though Pluto would be the minimum planets used, although of course there are loads more asteroids,fixed stars, Moon's nodes that some astrologers use

By the way, would this be part of the $1million challenge?

Although I know a bit about astrology I do not practice it. There are some very competent astrologers who have written books, but I don't know if they would even want to take part in an experiment like this.
 
Hokulele By "complete", I was referring more to an accurate horoscope, drawn up using exact birth time and place. Sun though Pluto would be the minimum planets used, although of course there are loads more asteroids,fixed stars, Moon's nodes that some astrologers use.


!?

Aren't the fixed stars supposed to remain in the same constellations (signs, houses, whatever)? Why would they have to be charted?

In any case, how many fixed stars do you think there are? How many of them would have to be charted? How do you know which ones to include and which to leave out?
 
Garette - please read the post above to sthomson. Your lady friend was trying to convince you about Sun sign astrology. I am not.
Please read the post of mine you are criticizing, in which I explicity say that you are referring to a different type of astrology. I understand the difference. My knowledge of astrology is not nearly the equal of several skeptics on this forum, but so far it appears equal to yours and certainly sufficient to engage in this discussion.


Aquila said:
Before criticizing astrology any more, please show me some arguments claiming that complete horoscopes , with Sun thru Pluto are rubbish.
Once again Hokulele beat me to a good response, but as you addressed it to me, I will respond.

Need we get into burden-of-proof and all that? You have come in making claims that your favored version of astrology is accurate. You have yet to show a single strand of evidence to support this claim. As Christopher Hitchens has said (from memory and possibly wrong in the details): "Claims asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence."

But I'm game, Aquila, really. Here's my offer:

Show me one complete horoscope from your favored system. Any complete horoscope for any person you choose. Tell me when it was derived and what information was available to the person composing it. Make sure it's a horscope that you, personally, think is among the best that your system has to offer.

I will gladly discuss that one horoscope with you.

Meantime, please address these comments I made in my earlier post and tell me if they are wrong. If not, then it stands as my argument that your complete horoscopes are rubbish, and it's simply a summation of how you yourself have presented it.

Garrette said:
  1. It isn't scientific
  2. It has not been shown to be better than would be predicted by chance
  3. It doesn't predict anything
  4. It does predict things
  5. It postdicts things
  6. It's for entertainment only
  7. It gives advice
  8. It has, at best, superficial correlation--recognized only in hindsight--as its evidence for validity

Edit: I'm about to head out for the weekend and likely will be unable to respond before Monday.
 
Sun sign astrology is not very useful for trying to see how the transiting or progressed planets are influencing our chart, since there are 9 other planets (sun and moon are called planets by astrologers). By "sensible" astrology, I meant the kind which examines a person's complete horoscope, the transits, progressions, solar returns, relocation maps and so forth. As Proluna explained somewhere near the beginning of this thread, when astrologers talk about Geminis receiving mail today, they are talking about the billions of Geminis all over the earth, and of course it is rubbish. Things like this are completely made up to help sell newspapers and non-astrology magazines.

Although I am not as knowledable as Hokulele, I do know the difference between sun signs and what you are calling "sensible" (ie more complicated) astrology. I agree with other posters - how do you know that it's more correct if you don't have any evidence, beyond anecdotal evidence?
 
Why would the subjects have to born in the same month?


Christine - this is already beginning to sound like a very unscientific experiment! Have you ever read a natal chart interpretation? I've never seen any professional astrologer say anything like that. I've heard James Randi saying things like that in his self-designed experiments to demonstrate the point that anyone can give a "cold reading" if they are vague enough.

You are narrowing your definition of "professional astrologers" to exclude the majority of people who receive money for astrological readings. But no mind. I was asking specifically if you or some other professional astrologer could pass the test I laid out, not some other test.

The scientific part of the experiment is not in the reading. It's in the simple fact that ten people need to pick from ten readings. The experiment could easily be done with random gibberish, and the scientific results would be that random gibberish does not tell us anything useful about test subjects.

But isn't that exactly what the astrologers would be trying to prove? - that there is a difference between a Taurus and a Gemini? If the skeptics start laying down rules like you can only have subjects born in the same month, then that immediately makes the experiment wieghted. You would have to pick 10 subjects at random.

I don't see how it possibly makes the experiment weighted. I am asking if someone could tell the difference between ten Tauruses. I explained why an experiment with people of different sun signs is not valid unless you are willing to have your readings edited.

Exactly, and if astrology is valid, then these differences should be shown in a horoscope.

These differences exist whether astrology is valid or invalid. So any test that includes persons born in different times of the year is not a scientific test for the validity of astrology, unless, as I said, you are willing to have your readings edited to remove time-of-year subjective information.

ooh no, no editing! Everything has to open and honest. We are trying to do science here, or at least as near to science as we can get.

What's unscientific about editing? Consider this possibility: a reading begins "You were born April 23, 1959..." and the person who was born April 23, 1959 picks his reading. Is the test less scientific if I edit that statement out?

If anyone is serious about designing an experiement like this, you would have to narrow down the criteria a little as to what sort of thing you are looking for in the horoscopes. It would have to be traits that both the astrologer and the skeptics agreed on beforehand, and preferably ones which were not vague, like "you love snow". For example ,physical appearance, career, number of marriages, number of children and health. The criteria would have to be areas of life that the skeptics wouldn't say were too vague afterwards.

There is nothing vague about the test I proposed, which is why I proposed it. You either get 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 or 10 matches.

But yours is a completely different test, but fine also. We could give an astrologer ten birth dates (which in this case would not all have to be of the same sign) and then have him make picks from a multiple choice list.

For example: number of children (0, 1., 1, 3, 4, 5 or more)
Career: (information technology, health care, teaching, etc.) This would be a pretty long list but it must be fixed in advance.
Height
Weight
Number of marriages (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or more)

Now unfortunately it can get tricky. We would have to deal with things like a teacher of information technology for example. And what about a women who has had 14 miscarriages and no children? And some men do not know how many children they have! But if the astrologer is will to accept these limitations we would give each subject the test and we would agree on how to deal with things like the teacher of information technology. The easiest way is to pick one primary career and stick to it. But then the astrologer cannot whine that his pick of information technology was correct when the subject himself primarily describes himself as a teacher!

I think that the results from just testing one astrologer with 10 subjects would not show much. I think that a good astrologer could probably get 7 or more correct picks, in an experiment which was designed fairly. But to make the experiment more valid, I think you would have to have 10 astrologers having 10 subjects each, i.e. 100 subjects. And having 10 astrologers would give the different types of astrology all a good crack at the challenge, for example, Tropical, Sidereal, Vedic, the different house systems (3 or 4 that I know of) etc.

There is no point whatsoever in doing this. Say tropical is useless and Vedic is great. How would you ever sort it out? This is a test you might run ten different times on ten different systems but that's a different issue. I want ONE astrologer to pass his own test.

The chance of getting 7 of 10 on a test like this by chance alone is less than one in a 100,000, sothis would be a major victory for an astrologer and it would certainly get people's attention, especially if he could do it more than once.

By the way, would this be part of the $1million challenge?

Similar tests have been used in the million dollar challenge. I have no association with the JREF. If you or an astrologer you know wants to apply for the challenge we can write a protocol for you which would be acceptable to the JREF. There are many other other issues we have to look at first, most notably the requirement for a media presence.

Although I know a bit about astrology I do not practice it. There are some very competent astrologers who have written books, but I don't know if they would even want to take part in an experiment like this.

So the short answer is that you know you yourself could not pass the test. Many astrologers have agreed to take such tests, and ALL OF THEM failed. Every single one. NO EXCEPTIONS. Most scientists no longer bother, and most smart astrologers know that they will fail and hence work very hard at NOT being tested. I consider this very strong evidence that astrology does not work. All this is aside from questions like tropicial vs. sidereal.

If there is an exception, it was Gauquelin, who as I mentioned, cheated, probably unconsciously. The cheating was so complex and so subtle that it took years to figure out how he did it. Unfortunately he continues to use the same invalid methods to argue for other astrological effects.
 
It would have to be traits that both the astrologer and the skeptics agreed on beforehand, and preferably ones which were not vague, like "you love snow". For example ,physical appearance, career, number of marriages, number of children and health. The criteria would have to be areas of life that the skeptics wouldn't say were too vague afterwards.

(...)

If the skeptics start laying down rules like you can only have subjects born in the same month, then that immediately makes the experiment wieghted. You would have to pick 10 subjects at random.

Since astrologers are so picky about birth times, it is you who are claiming that there are differences between one Taurus and another. If there is really a difference between the "influences" on a baby born at 3AM in New York vs. a baby born at 5AM in Auckland ... well, why can't we look for those differences? If there is no difference, what's all the star-chart nonsense about?

Furthermore, it is the astrologers, not the skeptics, who think that statements like "you love snow", or "you feel like you're suppressing your wild side", or "you dread disappointing people but put on a brave face." are worth reading. If those statements are useful astrology conclusions, surely they mean that the person with those statements "in their stars" will usually say "yes, that's me" and random people chosen from a hat will say usually say "no, that's not quite me". If this is how it works, we can test it as described. If this is not how it works, why bother consulting the stars before saying "you love snow" etc.? Why would you tell a sitter "you love snow" if "you love snow" isn't supposed to me more true of the sitter than of other people?
 
Dear Hokulele, ben m, Christine R, stompson, Garrette, Cuddles, Prof. Yaffle, Gord in Toronto and everyone else who has addressed my posts - Your astute critisisms of astrology have convinced me, not that astrology is rubbish, but that research into its claims is a very difficult task. Considering that the only person who showed any concrete correlation (Gauquelin) committed suicide, I think it wise, for the sake of my family, that I bow out of this discussion, at least the "proving it" side, hopefully with a bit of grace.

For anyone interested, whether they are an astrologer or a skeptic, there is a comprehensive list of resources on research here:

http://www.astrodatabank.com/Astrology_Research.htm

and I hope that others take up the proof of burden if they want to, and answer the posts that I have not addressed.

Personally, I am glad that skeptics keep astrology on its toes, so to speak, and not let the subject become another faith based belief like religion. If the astrological theory about the Precession of the Equinoxes is correct, and we really are heading into the Age Of Aquarius in a few hundred years, then astrological symbolism (drawn from occult disciplines like kaballah) suggests that the subject will be proven scientifically. Aquarius is co-ruled by Uranus and Saturn, Uranus symbolizing, among other things, astrology, and Saturn symbolizing science and the physical world.

All the best,
Aquila
 
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If the astrological theory about the Precession of the Equinoxes is correct, and we really are heading into the Age Of Aquarius in a few hundred years, then astrological symbolism (drawn from occult disciplines like kaballah) suggests that the subject will be proven scientifically. Aquarius is co-ruled by Uranus and Saturn, Uranus symbolizing, among other things, astrology, and Saturn symbolizing science and the physical world.

Can anyone make any sense out of that? :boggled:
 
You know, that's the best excuse I've ever heard for not having proof. If you find evidence that astronomy works, you'll kill yourself!

That's awesome.
 
I've just finished channeling Gauquelin's pet dog Pooquie and she tells me that Gauquelin committed suicide because he finally recognized that his life's work was nonsense.

I would not wish that happen to another human so, I too, am permanently leaving this thread. :p
 
What about doing charts from the obituaries? Might that tell us something?
Or,
get a list of babies that die in birth. That might reveal something.

I wonder if man-made satelites are messing with astrological readings?
 
Your astute critisisms of astrology have convinced me, not that astrology is rubbish, but that research into its claims is a very difficult task.

Is there anything that could possibly convince you that astrology is rubbish?

It doesn't sound so difficult at all. ChristineR described one relatively simple way of testing it.

There are other tests that can be done, depending on exactly what astrological claims you want to address. Since people who reject sun sign astrology are pretty evasive about what they're claiming, the one ChristineR suggests is a probably the best since it avoids the issue of what apparent events in the heavens are supposed to influence people and events here and how.

If you'd care to make a firm statement that correlates things in the sky with things on the ground, I'm sure we could test that claim.
 
Is there anything that could possibly convince you that astrology is rubbish?
No, at least not at this point in time.

It doesn't sound so difficult at all. ChristineR described one relatively simple way of testing it.

There are other tests that can be done, depending on exactly what astrological claims you want to address. Since people who reject sun sign astrology are pretty evasive about what they're claiming, the one ChristineR suggests is a probably the best since it avoids the issue of what apparent events in the heavens are supposed to influence people and events here and how...

The sort of tests that ChristineR and the million dollar chanllenge are suggesting seem to be more tests of the astrologer than the subject of astrology - the mere fact that there is a monetary reward and that you require media presence puts a very unobjective spin on the whole process. Science does not need TV cameras and audiences to affect its conclusions. There are some decent statistical tests mentioned at the website I posted above,
www.astrodatabank.com (go to the research section)

These were done with computers using statistics to analyze the data, with large sample sizes. They also tested just one astrological variable at a time, and they found small, but positive correlations.

If you'd care to make a firm statement that correlates things in the sky with things on the ground, I'm sure we could test that claim.

As also mentioned above, there are many non-scientific, anecdotal accounts of correlations of above and below at the astrodatabank website. There are also hundreds of similar "astro-biographies" in astrology magazines like American Astrology (now called Horoscope Guide), Dell Horoscope and The Mountain Astrologer. There is also the www.astro.com forum, which is also full of these non-scientific accounts of correlation.

If you are looking for a firm statement or hypothesis that correlates the above to the below, how about "babies born by Ceasarian Section have Pluto in their first house, or Scorpio on the ascendant".

Another statement might be "scientists have the planet Saturn on one of the angles (near the cusp of the 1st, 4th, 7th or 10th houses) of their horoscope, more often than non-scientists."

or "Psychics have the planet Neptune in a prominent angle (conjunction, square, opposition, sextile or trine) to their Moon, more often than non-psychics".

or "sportmen/women have the planet Mars near the angles of their horoscope ". (This is similar to what Gauquelin showed, but, to the surprise of many traditional astrologers, the strongest position for Mars was actually in the 12th house, where they least expected it! However, it was still near one of angles, the ascendant or 1st house cusp).

You are welcome to design an experiment which would test these statements, but please don't ask me to take part! I would not commit suicide if they were disproved, but I would cause everyone around me to go insane finding something decent to wear on T.V.
 
P.S. I am about to start a new thread in the Philosophy and Religion section called The New Religion. I hope to see some of you there. :)
 
Aquila, my tests do not require a media presence or a monetary reward. That's just the Million Dollar Challenge. These tests are similar to ones designed by Randi, but their only purpose to test whether or not astrology is useful at all. They don't get into the question of what kinds of astrology are useful. Since most people on this forum believe astrology has zero validity, that's the kind of test we'd like to see first. If someone passes such a test then by all means we would like to see more sophisticated tests.

But as I said, no one to my knowledge has ever gotten beyond the first step, so it seems kind of pointless to compare different systems that don't work. If you are interested in astrology and think you can figure out why it doesn't work most of the time, by all means do so. But so far the evidence says that none of it works, at all.
 

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