First off, let me offer a preemptive apology. I am not trying to be snarky or rude, but I think I will likely come off that way and probably have already. It's a combination of recent fatigue and long-time revisiting of the same topics with the same objections to the same flawed arguments. I appreciate Aquila being polite as he/she has unfailingly been and wish I could be as polite.
No, you are taking just one aspect and making assumptions about the whole of astrology.
No. I am taking both what you give me and what I know of astrology (which is not nearly what Hokulele and others know) and stating it back to you in a form that demonstrates the logical conclusions to which your arguments lead.
You have said astrology cannot predict anything, so I was right about that part.
You have also said that you (or expert astrologers) cannot take detailed information about a person's life and use it to determine time/place of birth.
You have also said that environment plays a role in determining how a person's life turns out--perhaps a greater role than astrology itself.
You have also implied and are now saying fairly clearly that astrology can look at a person's life and retroactively explain why it turned out how it did,
regardless of how it turned out. Astrology can explain every outcome. Ergo every outcome is possible regardless of the astrological birthchart. Ergo astrology is indistinguishable from non-astrology.
Aquila said:
Firstly, astrology cannot predict a person's behavior, end of argument.
Got it. I got it earlier. I said it earlier.
Aquila said:
But in hindsight, if we were to analyse the whole chart, with all the planets and aspects, plus the environmental influences, we might see why one person became a president and one a criminal.
Does it do it as well as psychologists? Forensic psychologists?
Does it do it better than a reasonably intelligent, reasonably well-educated random adult provided with all the same data except for the astrological information?
What you are saying is this:
Give me everything there is to know factually about a person and I will interpret the birthchart to account for it.
Psychologists can account for personal outcomes without resorting to the stars.
By your own admission, astrology does absolutely nothing in advance and does absolutely nothing already accomplished without resorting to astrology.
So I ask again: How is astrology distinguishable from non-astrology?
Aquila said:
For example, we might see in both charts that Jupiter (abundance) was in the person's second house (self-earned income). But one person could have a high paying job while the other could be a bank-robber. The bank robber would perhaps have other planets in aspect to Jupiter or to other significant points which would correlate with his poor or oppressive early environment which removed the possibility of getting a good education or high paying job.
Perhaps perhaps.
But a psychologist could simply look at the environmental factors you have admitted you need to account for and reach conclusions based on those.
Aquila said:
Yes, this is a serious question. Some astrologers have likened it to an "x-ray" which sees beyond surface appearances.
Give me an example of one statement made by astrology that is seeing beyond surface appearances which cannot also be made by psychologists.
Aquila said:
It adds a spiritual dimension to life.
Balderdash. If it adds anything, then it is predictive. Saying "you're a bank robber because Mars was such-and-such in regard to Saturn" isn't spiritual.
Aquila said:
To some people, astrology is the "middle ground" between atheism and religion.
Then they understand none of the three.
Aquila said:
Astrology is a spiritual discipline,
I think you need to define "spiritual" before I accept this claim.
Aquila said:
but it applies to everyone , no matter their ethnicity, economic status or gender.
Anything factual applies regardless of those factors. You have yet to demonstrate that astrology is factual.
Aquila said:
It does not have dogma like religion,
Not all religions have dogma.
Aquila said:
and although it is not a science, it is at least based on something which observable to everyone (the movement of the planets),
If I propose a discipline called JellyBeanology based on the position of the loose Jelly Beans in my desk drawer, then that discipline is based on something observable. That is a far cry from saying that the alleged link between the Jelly Beans and someone's life is observable; it isn't. Similarly, the link between astrology and someone's life is not observable, either.
Aquila said:
rather than a belief that is automatically placed on a person because of his or her ancestry.
Both religion and astrology (which, if it is spiritual as you say, is akin to religion) seem to be without evidence.