Steven Howard
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Nov 16, 2004
- Messages
- 1,797
Often when trying to design tests for astrology (as seen, for example, in this thread) we find that the astrologer wants an exact time of birth, often down to the minute. Obviously this is problematic for a number of reasons, mainly that there's no commonly accepted definition of the exact minute that a person is born, nor any reason to suppose that the person recording the birth will note that exact time on the birth certificate. But I digress.
What I'm wondering is, why? I mean, these people are using methods that they claim to be centuries, if not millennia, old. Much older, anyway, than the use of minutes and seconds to tell time, which as far as I can tell didn't really take off until the mechanical clock became widespread in the 16th Century. If you need the time of birth down to the minute for an accurate reading, how did people get the idea that astrology worked before the hour was even divided into minutes? Or, you know, before the hour was even a standard length of time (as opposed to "approximately 1/12 of the time from sunrise to sunset")?
And anyway, isn't astrology supposed to be based on the position of stars and planets and so forth? I wonder what would happen if you were to ask one of these astrologers who insist that they can't give an accurate reading without an exact time of birth to go outside one night, find a star or a planet that has some meaning in their system, then look at it again a minute later and see if its position in the sky has changed.
And even if the exact time of birth were somehow significant, why would it be necessary in a test where you're preparing a whole bunch of horoscopes blind and asking people to pick their own out of the list? Consider three horoscopes, all for people born in the same city*. Andy was born October 30, 1980, at 9:20 am. Bob was born five minutes later that same day. Charles was born March 1, 1989, at 10:15pm. Are they really saying that if you showed Bob two horoscopes, one written for Andy and the other for Charles, that he wouldn't think Andy's matched his own life and personality considerably more than Charles's did? (Yeah, sure, that's what I'd say, but I don't believe in astrology.)
I mean (he said, disingenuously) it can't just be that they're making excuses in advance for when they fail the test, can it? "Oh, well, without the exact time of birth, the reading won't be accurate."
*Which brings up another point. If they need the time of birth down to the second, why do they only need to know what city you were born in? Shouldn't they be asking for the exact street address, or latitude and longitude or something?
What I'm wondering is, why? I mean, these people are using methods that they claim to be centuries, if not millennia, old. Much older, anyway, than the use of minutes and seconds to tell time, which as far as I can tell didn't really take off until the mechanical clock became widespread in the 16th Century. If you need the time of birth down to the minute for an accurate reading, how did people get the idea that astrology worked before the hour was even divided into minutes? Or, you know, before the hour was even a standard length of time (as opposed to "approximately 1/12 of the time from sunrise to sunset")?
And anyway, isn't astrology supposed to be based on the position of stars and planets and so forth? I wonder what would happen if you were to ask one of these astrologers who insist that they can't give an accurate reading without an exact time of birth to go outside one night, find a star or a planet that has some meaning in their system, then look at it again a minute later and see if its position in the sky has changed.
And even if the exact time of birth were somehow significant, why would it be necessary in a test where you're preparing a whole bunch of horoscopes blind and asking people to pick their own out of the list? Consider three horoscopes, all for people born in the same city*. Andy was born October 30, 1980, at 9:20 am. Bob was born five minutes later that same day. Charles was born March 1, 1989, at 10:15pm. Are they really saying that if you showed Bob two horoscopes, one written for Andy and the other for Charles, that he wouldn't think Andy's matched his own life and personality considerably more than Charles's did? (Yeah, sure, that's what I'd say, but I don't believe in astrology.)
I mean (he said, disingenuously) it can't just be that they're making excuses in advance for when they fail the test, can it? "Oh, well, without the exact time of birth, the reading won't be accurate."
*Which brings up another point. If they need the time of birth down to the second, why do they only need to know what city you were born in? Shouldn't they be asking for the exact street address, or latitude and longitude or something?
