Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Star-crossed Science

2/18/07 – 2/24/07
by C. Zaitz

I recently had a conversation with high school students about astrology. Astronomy and astrology have been around for thousands of years, but the science of astronomy only broke with the art of astrology a few hundred years ago. Astronomia was the old word for the scholars who undertook the duties of observing and predicting sky motions, interpreting them and applying them to earthly events. In fact, the observatories and salaries needed for observing and predicting (astronomy) were often paid for by the profits made by interpreting and applying (astrology).

Most of the great astronomers we can think of were also astrologers. There was no shame in casting horoscopes. In fact, it was quite a lucrative business for some. Johannes Kepler, known to scientists for his three Laws of Planetary Motion, was a prolific astrologer while he wasn’t trying to figure out the nature of things. When his paycheck didn’t arrive from his day job as a mathematician and astronomer, as it often didn’t, he resorted to casting natal charts and predicting events to feed his family. Kepler sometimes balked at mundane astrological duties, thinking that most common folk were too superstitious and ignorant to understand the true beauty of astrology. To him it was art married to science, it was real, and it meant something. It was a taste of the divine. Galileo, a contemporary of Kepler and famous for first gazing at the heavens through the newly developed telescope, also shared Kepler’s use of astrology. In fact, though some use Galileo as an example of one of the first scientists divorced from superstition, it’s much more likely that Galileo, like his contemporaries, viewed astrology as an aspect of religion and world view, where what happens above happens below, and that the heavens are reflected on earth. He cast horoscopes and charts like his contemporaries, when he wasn’t spying on the rings of Saturn or the moons of Jupiter.

The idea that earth is a reflection of the machinations of heaven is a beautiful thought, so it’s no wonder the notion has been around so long. But it began to lose favor in the mid 18th century. Why did astrology and astronomy split up? Perhaps because science and scientific methods became so important by making life better and for improving technology that people no longer wanted to rely on an “unscientific” form of prediction. Astrology became known as an occult or superstitious science, and the Age of Reason did not leave room for superstition. However, it didn’t go away completely, it just moved to the realm of divination.

Does that leave astrology without a foot hold in modern society? Many of us read our horoscopes in the newspaper for amusement, and some of us take it a bit more seriously. When I questioned the students about astrology, the vocal ones indicated that they thought it was somewhat silly. But the silent ones may have had different feelings that they were embarrassed to express in a science class. Nowadays it’s considered almost ignorant to believe in astrology. Yet, I don’t think humans will ever stop trying to make connections between what happens “below” and what might be happening “above.” And what better way than to watch the beautiful stars and planets? I almost admire people who find connections between the planets and their lives. I have never been able to, but wouldn’t it be fun to think that everything could be explained by looking at the stars?

Until next week, my friends, enjoy the view.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

what was the general consensus of the kids? Do they believe in astrology or not?

Once, I was in the same position, talking to kids about astrology. None of the kids knew the astrological sign under which theyw ere born. For some reason, I was saddened by this: they didn't even have enough scientific spark to be interested in a pseudoscience!

czaitz said...

Yeah- but then again, HS kids have a general level of apathy until they find something that sparks them, and you can't expect astrology to spark them since it's treated as a joke by most folks.

I didn't get a sense of their beliefs- I didn't have time to get too deeply into it, and it's not really in the curriculum anyway...I just feel it's good to have some sort of historical sense of things.

Anonymous said...

"The fault, dear Brutus, is not in the stars, but in ourselves..."

I always read my horoscope on my birthday, because it always says something like, "If you were born this date you are stalwart, true, eyes of blue, admired by men, loved by women, and your worst fault is your excessive modesty." What can I say--that's me all over.

And I'm sorry to say that back when people would open conversations by asking your sign, I'd respond with either "Year of the Rat" or "My sign? Take two and then bunt."

Eric said...

Did you ever notice what happens on our planet during a full moon? or as Jim Morrison once said about astrology "its all a bunch of b.s."