Lesson 4:
The Origin of Knowledge
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4.6
Science and Belief: Astrology
Most newspapers carry a column someplace, with this type of information:
Taurus (April 20-May 20) *** "Maintain a sense of humor and go with the
flow. Look for a pleasant surprise among all the confusion."
The reference to Taurus is to the constellation of stars around the
variable reddish star Algol, the bull's eye. It is slightly to the east
of the Pleiades, the "seven sisters." If you are born within the time
span given, this is your horoscope. There is nothing wrong with it (it's
always a good idea to maintain a sense of humor and to look for pleasant
surprises) except that the implication is that this advice follows from
some deep knowledge about what the stars and planets are doing to your
fate in life. Our diagnosis: pseudoscience ("pseudo", pron. sue-dough, is
Greek for "false").
Who is to say that Astrology is all wrong? Has it not captured people's
trust for thousands of years? Are we not spending a great deal of money
and time on obtaining and studying horoscopes? Did not the great
astronomer Johannes Kepler himself produce horoscopes? Well, yes. And
his discoveries regarding the motions of the planets surely improved
things in this respect. Doing astronomy costs money, and he had to
demonstrate to his prince that he was doing something useful. Ok,
Johannes, should I sign this deal? Well, it will help your treasury and
the stars are very favorable. Applied science works.
Kepler was the last one of the great astronomers to get involved in this
astrology business (and he had his doubts, expressed privately). Since
the time of Newton, astrology is no longer considered a science. When
Newton showed that the positions of the planets as seen against the
stars are completely predictable from general laws it became evident that
these positions could not carry any independent information of interest.
Yet, the belief lingered that being born at a certain constellation of
the solar system would help determine one's fate. The origins of such
beliefs is obscure, but they hark back at least to Babylonian times,
when astrology was pretty much the only "science".
It began as a straightforward planting calendar for the emerging farming
communities. During the course of a year, the Sun moves from one
constellation of stars to the next, as we see it against a different
galactic background when proceeding along Earth's orbit. So, at planting
time in early spring, the Sun can be counted on to go into the
constellation appropriate for planting. Of course, the stars surrounding
the Sun cannot be seen, so the ancient astrologists guessed the Sun's
position from observing the last visible stars that came up just before
the Sun rose over the horizon. They verified their guess by noting the
last stars setting, just before the Sun rose; these would be in the
constellation opposite the one currently occupied by the Sun.
There are 12 constellations along the path of the Sun (called the
"ecliptic"), and these 12 define the "zodiac", the zone where we find
Sol, Luna, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and every other planet in the solar
system, as well as (occasionally) the zodiacal lights which are a
reflection of sunlight from dust in the main plane of the system. Once a
month (roughly) the Sun leaves one constellation and move into the next.
So, observing the Moon also helped fix the position of the Sun against
the invisible stars around it, by remembering where it was a month
earlier.
Now let's go back to ancient Babylonian time, even before the building
of the astrological observatory known as the Tower of Babel (which
reached out to the stars and had a lot of visiting scientists speaking
in different tongues). In early spring, when it was time to plough,
Taurus the bull was "dying", that is, setting in the west in the early
evening. Going east from the dying bull, we find the twins (Gemini, a
couple of mythical heroes), then the crawfish (Cancer, found in the two
rivers defining Mesopotamia) and then the regal Lion (Leo, the symbol of
the ruler). The Lion, being 3 constellations over (90 degrees), will be
moving into the zenith at that point in time, closely followed by the
fertility goddess, announcing the imminent advent of spring (Virgo). In
the mythology of the time, the Lion kills the Bull and this celestial
sacrifice makes things ready for the new growth on Earth, under the
guardianship of the goddess.
As Earth proceeds on its orbit, the Sun moves eastward through Taurus
into Gemini. During spring equinox the Sun is in Taurus, and a few weeks
later, Taurus precedes the Sun and rises just before it, at dawn. The
Bull is "reborn" and we are (in that ancient period) in the middle of
spring with the fertility goddess reigning high in the evening sky. Time
to celebrate. (How about a Dance around a Golden Bull?) We see that
Taurus is the "anchor" of the progress of the year: the Sun is with it
in spring, when things come alive. The other key constellations (90
degrees apart) are Lion, Scorpion and Aquarius, marking summer solstice,
fall equinox and winter solstice, respectively, when the Sun occupies
them.
Now it gets complicated. The position of the Sun at spring equinox is
not strictly fixed to Taurus - it migrates all along the zodiac. Each
year, the position is found 20 minutes ahead (westward) of where it was
the previous time. This is called "precession", and we now know it is a
result of the wobbling of Earth's axis. Precession does not make much
difference in the career of an astrologist telling people when to plough
or sow. Between apprentice sky-watcher to retiring wizard his
determination will shift by half a day only, relative to true equinox.
But over several hundred years the error adds up. That's why
re-calibration is needed (such as provided by ancient observatories,
including Stonehenge).
In two-thousand years (and some) the crucial spring equinox position
shifted from Taurus to the preceding constellation Aries, and this is
when astronomy began to flourish. At that time, about 1500 BC, the key
constellations were Aries, Cancer, Libra and Capricorn. We still name
the turning points for the Sun as seen on Earth after Cancer and
Capricorn ("Tropics" of Cancer and Capricorn) even though the Sun is no
longer in these constellations when it turns. Also, even today, "first
point of Aries" refers to spring equinox, although the Sun is no longer
in Aries but has long moved on, through Pisces. It entered Pisces, in
fact, at the time of Caesar, and this has helped make the "fish" a
special symbol for the Christian era. In a few hundred years, the Sun
will move out of Pisces into Aquarius, when looked at during spring
equinox. This will begin the "Age of Aquarius." To astronomers, it will
be a non-event. They don't care where one puts the boundary between
Pisces and Aquarius; it has no reality independent from custom.
The discovery of the "precession of the equinoxes" is usually credited
to the Greek astronomer Hipparchus (fl. 146-127 B.C.), who found a shift
of the position of the stars relative to vernal equinox, when making the
first known star map and comparing his results with earlier work. It
seems inconceivable, however, that the ancient Babylonian astrologists
would have missed the fact that "the four corners" of the seasons keep
moving relative to the stars. In fact, ancient mythology suggests that
this knowledge existed well before the Greeks invented science.
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