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Astrological fun and games

*sigh* To play devil's advocate, just to clear up some misinformation and show how someone can believe in astrology without being an idiot, I'm going to respond to all these.

First Tricky there is a difference in practical application and understanding how something works. Many people would argue astrology is already being applied practically--it works well enough for people to use it to guide their lives. You are moving the bar, you were talking about how long it took for the mechanism of electricity to be understood after electrical experiments became the hobby of the upper middle class--that took atomic theory. And yes of course once the mechanism of a thing (like disease) is thoroughly understood then real advances can be made. You are arguing my side of the debate there.

As to all the complicated permutations of astrology, yes, of course. That's why many of the automatically generated natal horoscopes, say at astrology.com are so contradictory. They don't weight anything; nothing is ranked according to importance. However I believe this is easily rectified, the software just hasn't achieved that sophistication. There are well-defined rules for ranking importance of natal chart elements--tightness of angles, big formations like grand trines, singletons by element and location, total lack of an element, and then the standard--sun, moon, rising sign. For example, the Charles Manson chart that was given to me--the obvious thing about that chart was the 12th house Aries Uranus singleton. Now yes, the nuances of his personality were expressed in the rest of his chart, but that singleton is the most obvious thing. If you looked at his sun sign it wouldn't say anything about him being a serial killer--obviously not, that would make one-twelfth of the population serial killers.

I'm pretty sure the astrologers, at least some of them, had a solar-centric view of the the solar system, with the Earth as round. But it's a moot point--your main point, that the ancients believed in gods that acted according to where things were in the sky--that is still believed by people who believe in astrology, just substitute the word "forces" for "gods." I think it may actually have been the other way around, the idea of specific gods interacting and determining the lives of men may have arisen from astrological practices. At any rate, this belief of Jungian archetypal forces interacting ("as above, so below") is almost a requirement for a belief in astrology. For example, my horoscope for today--the transit with the heaviest weight is Mercury trining my natal midheaven, which will be exact today.

"Valid during several weeks: This is a good time for mental work. You plan very effectively, with a clear objective perception of the facts, and you think very carefully, paying close attention to detail. Your mind easily resolves a difficult and complex issue into its component parts so that you can handle each part separately and come to a valid conclusion. This is a good time for talking with others. Your objectivity will impress other people, and they will not worry that you might try to force them into a position that they do not want to take. You will establish an environment in which any subject can be brought up and discussed. Therefore this is also a good time for business negotiations. You know what you want, and you will listen to what others want and arrive at a satisfactory compromise. "

It made more sense that the planets actually were gods in the worldview, absolutely. Knowing that planets are oversized rocks doesn't fit in very well.
 
Prustage, I need to know the clocktime when you born, not Greenwich Mean Time. Manchester is in a different time zone than Greenwich.

I will say one of the coincidences that made me think astrology was right. I did Marlon Brando's chart and it was off. Didn't fit him at all. Went and looked and found I had mistyped the date. The correct chart fit him well. But I can see that could have also been produced by the subconscious realization that I mistyped.
 
Manchester is in a different time zone than Greenwich.
When did this happen? I always though England was all in the same time zone. I don't normally have to change my watch when I drive up to Manchester.
 
Whoops. Must have misread the software, seemed like it was saying Manchester was off an hour.

I did misread the software, thank you for that--plugged in Greenwich and it gave the same reading.

Okay, onto the chart.
 
Mmmm November 17, 1948, Copenhagen 11:30pm, male.

(I haven't read the whole thread, have you explained why you need gender?)

Hans

Edited to add: Took a look at your webpage. Material there for a whole new thread ;).
 
Re: Re: Astrological fun and games

Tricky said:
October 10, 1952. Birmingham, Alabama.

My dearest Tricky you are a Libra that's why you are so sweet!!!!! I bet that my Moon conjucts your Sun!!!! That explains our affection.





:p
Oh I forgot! I could use a reading.

Cleopatra( female), May 18 1970 Jerusalem Israel, 12:45 PM.
 
MRC_Hans said:
(I haven't read the whole thread, have you explained why you need gender?)

Hans

Because an astrological chart can reveal everything but the gender of the individual that belongs to.... and it helps the reading if the astrologer knows the gender.... what a question.
 
Prustage, you have a very unusual chart. Very unusual.

Capricorn rising, which explains why you're here. But that's hardly primary on this chart. Also the heavy ninth house--house of higher education that I've been seeing on everyone's chart.

I'm going to stop trying to impress with concrete predictions, and just tell you what your chart says. Singleton Mercury, planet of communications in your 8th house, house of sex, life and death, regeneration and other people's money, in Virgo, sign of service, health and healing, perfectionism, attention to detail, and criticism and neurotic tendencies. If astrology were true and I were psychic, I could accurately predict how that would manifest in your life, but neither is.

Saturn is conjuncting your midheaven, point of fame. It's not aspected enough to make you automatically world famous, but it's close enough to make you famous (or infamous) within your circle. Saturn--planet of bad luck, tradition, good timing, conservative values and discrimination, in the sign of Scorpio, sign of sex, life and death and regeneration, mystery and uncovering secrets. Your fame has something to do with that.

You've also got a Chiron singleton in your first house, which generally indicates you work in a healing profession or you appear sickly, possibly are sickly. Something other people can notice.

Another unusual thing is the incredible stellium you have in your seventh house. This is also going to have a big weight on your chart. You've got your Sun, Mars, Pluto, Venus, Jupiter and Uranus all in your house of marriage and partnerships. The first four are conjuncting, and all but Uranus are in Leo. This has got to make you very attractive to the opposite sex. You may not be handsome, but having Mars, Venus and Pluto all conjuncting your Sun must make you an incredibly sexual person, and in Leo, so you get noticed.

This is an extreme chart, another good one for disproving astrology. If Prustrage is someone no one notices, who can't get women interested in him, it's another nail in the coffin for astrology.
 
Hans, I don't need gender for predictions, but rather for comments about sex and love, less cumbersome than writing he/she. Of course the person could be gay--there is actually something in the chart that indicates that, but I'm trying to avoid potentially embarrassing topics as much as possible in the chart readings.

Actually already a thread on my diet, "Ashles, non-paranormal challenge," if you are interested.

Your chart--Virgo rising, that is why you are here. You also have a strong Capricorn flavor because Saturn is in your first house. This makes you a very practical person, perhaps seeming a bit dour and pessimistic, but also focused and ambitious.

Your chart is very balanced, hard to say something dramatic about you like I did about Prustage. One odd thing that sticks out, at least compared to everyone else here who has given me their charts; your house of higher education is empty. Doesn't mean you didn't go to college, but philosophy and higher education are less important to you than others here.

Moon and Uranus in house of career, both in Gemini. Gemini is the sign of communications, multi-tasking, being mentally agile and au courant. Uranus is the planet of the unusual, also the modern. Moon gives it weight (and also fluctuation). This placement would most likely indicate someone involved in computer work of some kind--programming, etc., but of course it could be almost anything.

Your Scorpio sun is in your fourth house, house of home and emotions. This placement should make you an intensely private person about your family, home, and private life. Your Gemini moon would outweigh any paranoid tendencies and would smooth out the Scorpio love of mystery, but privacy yes.

One other thing, I think with your chart ruler Mercury also being in Scorpio, you love a mystery, you love finding secrets. A secret is an automatic lure for you.
 
Cleopatra, if I were a cold reader I could tell much about you just from your two posts. Will mind my astrological p's and q's since you know what you are talking about.

Your chart, which it sounds like you already know--you've got a Water singleton. A NEPTUNE water singleton, in Scorpio, in your third house so you love to talk about woo-woo things. In many ways you are like a Pisces. You've got a powerful spiritual vibe. Throw in the fact you have Pluto, planet of sex and life and death, and Uranus, planet of the freaky and unusual, in your first house, house of self--you are not a woman who "blends."

Interesting thing about this is that underneath all that, you're a Taurus Sun with Virgo rising, so your feet are definitely on the ground. Must be as uncomfortable a fit for you as my Capricorn Sun with Pisces rising and my freaky tight Sun-Neptune-Jupiter yod throwing its weight around in unpredictable ways in my life.

Heavy ninth house, Sun is there along with Saturn conjuncting your chart ruler Mercury--academia is your home (unless you're a world traveller, which I'm guessing you are from your birthplace, so it could be both or either).

Career involving Mars and Venus in Gemini--more talking. I'm not sure how you can have a career talking about love and sex, but it could be beauty too, I suppose. Excellent chart for a clothing designer, with your Libra Moon in the second house, house of things. Taurus Sun also has an instinctive appreciation for the tactile. Very Venusian chart.

Moon in the second house means fluctuating finances, but you've got lucky Jupiter there too, also in Libra.

BTW, if you are a believer--best love match IMHO, Aries moon in less than three degree opposition. Of course also good angles in synastry.
 
Marrena said:
*sigh* To play devil's advocate, just to clear up some misinformation and show how someone can believe in astrology without being an idiot, I'm going to respond to all these.
For which we are all very grateful. Thank you.
Marrena said:
First Tricky there is a difference in practical application and understanding how something works.
Yes, there is, but once you know how something works, the practical applications skyrocket, as I have given examples.

Marrena said:
Many people would argue astrology is already being applied practically--it works well enough for people to use it to guide their lives.
Yes, many people would argue that, however, your own experience here shows is very questionable. Also, many of the people who would argue that astrology is being applied to their lives are the ones who read those daily things in the newspaper. As your web link points out, those things are total rubbish, and no serious astrologer would trust them. Yet how many average people even know the difference?

The applications of electricity and medicine to our daily lives are unambiguous (unless your a Luddite or a Christian Scientist :D ). the application of astrology to our daily lives is very much ambiguous. A person could apply the wisdom found in alphabet soup to their lives, but it wouldn't necessarily mean that "soup scrying" is a valid technique.

Marrena said:
You are moving the bar, you were talking about how long it took for the mechanism of electricity to be understood after electrical experiments became the hobby of the upper middle class--that took atomic theory.
I am unsure what you mean by this. I am referring to the time gap between the formulation of a theory, such as the theory of germ disease, and the practical application of that theory. This is the test of how good a theory is.

Like homeopathy, the mere fact that a lot of people swear by it does not mean it is a practical application. If it cannot stand up to rigorous testing (and you see by your experiments here that astrology cannot), then it does not have practical applications. But don't feel that is because you are no good at astrology. I promise you that the most experienced astrologers in the world could do no better than you, except that some might be better cold-readers than you.

Marrena said:
And yes of course once the mechanism of a thing (like disease) is thoroughly understood then real advances can be made. You are arguing my side of the debate there.
No I am not arguing your side (or more correctly, Marks' side, since you have not given us your personal opinion on this.) Marks admits that the mechanism is not understood, yet he does not call upon all astrologers to work on finding the mechanism. He is content to run his calculations, but seems completely unperturbed by the fact that there is no part of the theory that addresses why these calculations are valid.

If I were you, Marrena, I would be horrified by the intellectual laziness of such "expert" astrologers who seem to care so little about the reputation of their field of expertise that they are uninterested in investigating the most basic of questions.
 
Re: Re: Re: Astrological fun and games

Cleopatra said:
My dearest Tricky you are a Libra that's why you are so sweet!!!!! I bet that my Moon conjucts your Sun!!!! That explains our affection.
What affection? Quit following me around like a lovesick teenager, Your Wackiness. I don't want to contract lunar conjunctivitis.
 
I wouldn't care a hoot about the validity of astrology if people really only used it for personal entertainment. What scares me is when people use to make decisions that affect others. A certain Danish astrologer we know proposes using "business astrology" to make decisions about people's careers or business strategy. You have suggested using it to make decisions about relationships.

When there are so many permutations and so much is open to interpretation how can you ever be sure that a decision was the right decision? Or that your interpretation was truly objective and not influenced by what you "wanted" to be true?

To give astrology its due it was originally a "science" but that part of it parted company around the time of Kepler and has been diverging further and faster ever since. I would be interested in seeing more truly objective tests rather than just "statistics" gleaned by people trying to prove a point.
 
Marrena said:
Piscivore's chart from another thread:

Holy moley, you have the same birthdate as my ex-husband! This should be interesting.

Hmm, but you have a different rising sign. Yours is a case where exact time is pretty crucial. You have a Saturn singleton in Aries right on your ascendant, which means that could be in the first house, or it could be in the 12th house. *cough* Very very different chart depending on exactly where that planet falls. In any case I'm going to be extremely polite with you.

Found my birth certificate:
12/01/1967, 1436, Maricopa County, Arizona (near Phoenix)


ETA: Heh, don't feel you have to spare my feelings. :D
 
To answer you--I agree with Marks that obviously if astrology is true, whatever natural force is causing it is so far outside of what our scientific capability can currrently measure, that's it's quite silly to hunt for an explanation as to why it works, much like someone in the 17th century trying to look at the structure of the atom or neurotransmitter levels in the brain. Atoms and neurotransmitters exist, but neither could be detected with scientific instruments 400 years ago. It's a fruitless exercise. So enough about that please.

Obviously I'm not doing cold readings, although I suspect I'd be pretty good at it. Actually that would be an interesting test of astrology--Pisces rising would be the optimal configuration for a cold reader. Cold readers ask for feedback and then go on to make "astounding" predictions. If I don't get it in the first stab, it doesn't count in this thread, although later feedback has been edifying for me personally, and of course has convinced me that astrology is just an elaborate game.

Speaking of which, my children are returning tomorrow so it is back to the dull grind so these are the last natal charts I'm doing. Must get errands done. I must say I'm kind of disappointed with Mr. NIH Man in the other thread getting me all excited and the leaving me hanging. But thank you everyone for your encouragement.

Piscivore: Are you sure? You do in fact have an Aries 12th house Saturn singleton. Very strong indication of at some point going to jail for violent crime. Quite tight quincunx between your Saturn and lucky Jupiter. Quincunx is angle of obsession. Lucky Jupiter might keep you out of jail, but still very strong indication of violent crime. Jupiter is in your fifth house, may have something to do with romance or children. You are charming as hell, being a double Sagittarius, and a natural alpha male, Aries rising. You've got a loaded 8th house, the sex house. Your sun, moon, Neptune and Mercury are all there. Women are attracted to you because you are dangerous, and did I mention charming? You have a phobia of not being in charge, in control, and that's where you get dangerous. Chiron in Pisces in the 12th house, also reinforcing the idea of hidden mental unbalance.

Mars is your chart ruler, career very important; you are very ambitious and probably successful simply from your focus.

Sorry. I've got a sucky chart like this too--I've got a loaded 12th house. So there is free will, etc., it's not predestination.
 
To answer you--I agree with Marks that obviously if astrology is true, whatever natural force is causing it is so far outside of what our scientific capability can currrently measure, that's it's quite silly to hunt for an explanation as to why it works, much like someone in the 17th century trying to look at the structure of the atom or neurotransmitter levels in the brain. Atoms and neurotransmitters exist, but neither could be detected with scientific instruments 400 years ago. It's a fruitless exercise. So enough about that please.
But this is all back to front. No-one in the 17th century would suddenly out of nowhere decide to search for neurotransmitters.
The effect is observed first, then the theories are produced, not the other way around. Research into atomic structure or neurotransmitters would be at the end of a long history of observations, experiments, tests etc.
But the effect of astrolgy has NOT been observed so trying to come up with explanations is pointless.
I could claim that all goldfish turn into chocolate for short periods of time when they are not being observed. Would you then start to generate theories about how this happened? No. you would say, I want a little evidence of this. I don't believe it happens and I don't see how it COULD happen. I then say that it happens by scientific methods that are too advanced for us to understand and I can't show it happening because it only happens when we're not looking.
The difference between this and astrology is that astrologists claim their effect CAN be demonstrated, yet it isn't.

Making up 'scientific' explanations for something that hasn't been shown to exist seems a bit pointless. And it just isn't how scientific methodology works.

I really don't get how you seem to understand scientific experimentation really clearly on one thread, then not at all on another one.
 
Tricky said:

I am unsure what you mean by this. I am referring to the time gap between the formulation of a theory, such as the theory of germ disease, and the practical application of that theory. This is the test of how good a theory is.

Like homeopathy, the mere fact that a lot of people swear by it does not mean it is a practical application. If it cannot stand up to rigorous testing (and you see by your experiments here that astrology cannot), then it does not have practical applications.

In some regards, you're being unfair to astrology (and astrologers here). You are using the measure of time between the development of a theory and the practical applications of a theory -- but there isn't a theory of astrology yet. Of course there won't be any useful, practical, theory-driven applications when there's no theory to drive them. And there won't be a theory to drive them until there's a large enough body of observations for such a theory to make sense.

The "theory" of electricity was hammered out in the 19th century, but the Greeks were aware of the phenomenon before the birth of Christ. The Greeks also had an external combustion engine well before the development of thermodynamics -- and, of course, the concept of the 'atom' dates back to Democritus. But without experimental evidence to develop a theory (and without a practical tradition of collecting such evidence), these all languished literally for millenia.

I don't think it's fair to criticise astrologers for not having a unified theory of how astrology works. I do think it's fair to criticise astrologers for not having any evidence that it works. But a "scientific" investigation of astrology, at this point, should not be concentrating on mechanisms ("In fact, it is almost intuitive that if astrology worked, it would have something to do with gravity" isn't science, but unfounded and unsupported assertion), but on finding evidence regarding what sort of predictions can and cannot be made (reliably).

If, on the basis of astrology, I could tell you whether or not you have "a certain internal toughness and compassion for the sufferings of others" (quoting Marrena), and I can get that right, then there's an effect there to be explained. And, still making the assumption that I get it right -- hell, yes, if the laws of physics say I can't do something, and I do it, then the laws of physics are wrong. If the laws of physics tell me that bumblebees can't fly, then the thing to be fixed are the laws of physics, not the bumblebees.


And, furthermore, the people to fix the laws of physics are the physicists, not the entymologists. In this regard, your criticism


Marks admits that the mechanism is not understood, yet he does not call upon all astrologers to work on finding the mechanism. He is content to run his calculations, but seems completely unperturbed by the fact that there is no part of the theory that addresses why these calculations are valid.

is entirely off-base. If his calculations are valid, he doesn't need a theory to tell him why. If someone else needs such a theory, let them find it.....

What astrology needs more of is the sort of hard-nosed investigation of the sort that Marrena has so kindly been participating in. Investigating whether there's a phenomenon there at all, not coming up with causal explanations based on badly-understood science for a phenomenon that doesn't exist.

I'm willing to believe (given evidence) that there are some kinds of predictions that can be made using astrological methods -- for example, birth month (and therefore sun sign) is very strongly related to month-of-conception. Seasonal changes in a woman's diet and behavior ("never eat oysters in a month without an R in it") could have a strong effect on the developing fetus, including physical and mental effects that persist into adulthood.

But this isn't science. First show me that sun sign predicts behavior, and then we can discuss (and test) whether the effect is gravitational or nutritional.....
 
Keneke--last chart.

You've got a yod, a really tight yod. With the added convenience of having your Sun smack dab on the activation spot of the thing, in your 12th house. And the pointer of the yod is also a singleton, Saturn in Gemini in the sixth house..

Yods are are completely unpredictable but you personally should certainly be able to feel it. The fact that Meaty Curtains has one and couldn't once more proves that astrology is wrong. As I said, yods are called the finger of God. The best way to describe it is that often your life feels like a movie, a movie where the screenwriter had a very sharp and ironic sense of humor. You are also a completely obsessed person and will have trouble functioning with day-to-day living, because your obsessions take up all your extra time. If you try to suppress your obsessions, you will become chronically ill in some way.

As to the specific nature of how a yod will manifest in a person's life, the thing about yods is that they are totally unpredictable. Marlon Brando had a yod. I've got a book on yods, one of the examples in it was a person who founded a school for clowns. There's a special and bizarre purpose to your life, and looking back you will see how even casual hobbies may have had an influence in manifesting it. You can't force it, it will come in a predestined sort of way.

All very vague and handwaving, but I'm not trying to prove anything any more so it doesn't matter. To give you an idea of how your yod will manifest, the point is Saturn in Gemini in the sixth house. Unfortunately this gives a high probability of the yod manifesting as chronic illness. Sixth house is the house of health, service to others and daily work (as opposed to career). The house of the employee. Gemini is the sign of communication, agile wit, interest in the news. The other corners are your first house Moon in Capricorn. First house is house of the self and how others perceive you. Capricorn is the sign of the skeptic, ambitious, very intense but dour. It's your Moon, planet of emotions. So emotionally cool, but it's vibrating on your yod, so I'm not sure how one can say emotionally cool yet obsessive. Certainly not a sentimental personality. Other corner Venus in Scorpio in your tenth house, house of career. Venus is how you love, what you find beautiful, also the type of woman you are attracted to. Scorpio is the sign of sex, mystery, life and death and uncovering secrets.

I suppose I should also mention your Sun, sitting on the activation point of your yod. You are a Sagittarius, but it's hidden in your 12th house. Underneath you have a wanderlust and cheerfulness and optimism, but it's quite buried. Sagittarians have robust health generally, which is a good thing with that Saturn singleton yod point weighing you down to chronic illness. 12th house is the catch-all house--mysticism, spirituality, dreams, the subconscious, insanity, hospitals, imprisonment.

Have no idea what it means, but having a yod myself I know it's a pain in the ass.
 

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