Zarathustra
Let Go Of Your Team
- Joined
- Oct 31, 2009
- Messages
- 8,110
Z, I used to have all sorts of pet theories as to how astrology really could work, e.g., while there is only a short window of time w/r to a few weeks where a child could be born, it would "tend" to happen at a time when certain aspects/planets/energies were in alignment. I wouldn't use gravity to explain it, but rather the earth's electromagnetic field. And so on, and so forth.
Please read and listen to the stuff by Richard Tarnas that I've posted.
In high school, I made an argument just for the sake of it in favor of astrology about electromagnetism and/or gravity as well.
I didn't believe in it, but I made it anyway.
Tarnas' view of astrology makes those kinds of arguments completely irrelevant.
And the guy is brilliant. His book on the history of western philosophy is amazing.
In the end, however, if there were something objectively true about it, it would be proven. It wouldn't be an issue of belief. However, the reason it seems true, that it feels true, is that it takes normal human dynamics, codifies them as signs and aspects, and then recites random ones to you like a fortune cookie, the only difference being that you don't get a funny joke when you end the reading with "... in bed."
All of these normal human dynamics are common to about 80-100% of people. The 1-20% where it's off can be ascribed to the natural inaccuracy of trying to describe a complete personality.
In other words, it seems true due to confirmation bias. In fact, it's a rather good case study in the concept.
I absolutely agree about confirmation bias.
But this is also Tarnas' point: that understanding astrology, actually separating truth from illusion, requires a far higher level of critical intelligence than is required for scientific understanding.
In Tarnas' view, one must be able to use critical thinking to separate confirmation bias from actual, genuine correlation.
We might not be able to verify these actual, genuine correlations via tests, but that doesn't mean they're not true.
Absence of evidence ain't evidence of absence, just cuz you didn't see it doesn't mean it didn't happen.
