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Revision as of 09:13, 10 August 2002 view sourceHeron (talk | contribs)Administrators29,249 editsm mentioned inaccurate use of term "star sign" in newspapers← Previous edit Revision as of 11:57, 14 August 2002 view source 68.52.130.7 (talk)No edit summaryNext edit →
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Astrology originated in Mesopotamia in the second millennium B.C.E., whence it spread to much of the world. In medieval Europe before the ] was better understood, there was no distinction between astrology and ], and those who studied the sky were often called upon as counselors to make astrological predictions, or to determine the best times to take important actions. Today, astrology is seen as ], and is practised primarily for personal counselling. Astrology originated in Mesopotamia in the second millennium B.C.E., whence it spread to much of the world. In medieval Europe before the ] was better understood, there was no distinction between astrology and ], and those who studied the sky were often called upon as counselors to make astrological predictions, or to determine the best times to take important actions. Today, astrology is seen as ], and is practised primarily for personal counselling.


Astrological charts or ] based on a person's birth will show where the stars and planets were in relation to each other at the moment of birth, and the person's specific ] and ] at that time. The most prominent of these features is the position of the sun in relation to the signs of the ]. From these planetary positions some people believe that certain conclusions can be made about the person. Similarly, a horoscope may be prepared to reflect circumstances of an event. Astrological charts or ] based on a person's birth will show where the stars and planets were in relation to each other at the moment of birth, and the person's specific ] and ] at that time. The most prominent of these features is the position of the sun in relation to the signs of the ]. From these planetary positions some people believe that certain conclusions can be made about the person. Similarly, a horoscope may be prepared to reflect circumstances of an event.


Newspapers often print astrology columns, but these are a highly generalized presentation of astrology. They purport to provide guidance on what challenges might be found in a day, as determined by where planets and stars are on that day, in relation to the sign of the zodiac that included the sun when the person was born. This is correctly known as the "sun sign", but is often incorrectly referred to as the "star sign" in such newspapers. Typically these predictions, an innovation of ] newspapers, are so vague or general as to be useless even to most practising astrologers. People presented with randomly-chosen newspaper column report the same degree of accuracy as those given specifically prepared ones. Newspapers often print astrology columns, but these are a highly generalized presentation of astrology. They purport to provide guidance on what challenges might be found in a day, as determined by where planets and stars are on that day, in relation to the sign of the zodiac that included the sun when the person was born. This is correctly known as the "sun sign", but is often incorrectly referred to as the "star sign" in such newspapers. Typically these predictions, an innovation of ] newspapers, are so vague or general as to be useless even to most practising astrologers. People presented with randomly-chosen newspaper column report the same degree of accuracy as those given specifically prepared ones.

Revision as of 11:57, 14 August 2002

Astrology is a traditional practice of tracking the positions of the Sun, Moon, stars, and planets, and, on the premise that these have some relationship to human affairs, attempting to determine and apply that relationship for the benefit of the subject.

Astrology originated in Mesopotamia in the second millennium B.C.E., whence it spread to much of the world. In medieval Europe before the scientific method was better understood, there was no distinction between astrology and astronomy, and those who studied the sky were often called upon as counselors to make astrological predictions, or to determine the best times to take important actions. Today, astrology is seen as pseudoscience, and is practised primarily for personal counselling.

Astrological charts or horoscopes based on a person's birth will show where the stars and planets were in relation to each other at the moment of birth, and the person's specific latitude and longitude at that time. The most prominent of these features is the position of the sun in relation to the signs of the zodiac. From these planetary positions some people believe that certain conclusions can be made about the person. Similarly, a horoscope may be prepared to reflect circumstances of an event.

Newspapers often print astrology columns, but these are a highly generalized presentation of astrology. They purport to provide guidance on what challenges might be found in a day, as determined by where planets and stars are on that day, in relation to the sign of the zodiac that included the sun when the person was born. This is correctly known as the "sun sign", but is often incorrectly referred to as the "star sign" in such newspapers. Typically these predictions, an innovation of 20th century newspapers, are so vague or general as to be useless even to most practising astrologers. People presented with randomly-chosen newspaper column report the same degree of accuracy as those given specifically prepared ones.

There are two camps of thought among astrologers about the "starting point", 0 degrees Aries, in the Zodiac. Sidereal Astrology accepts that the starting point is at a particular fixed position in the background of stars, while Tropical Astrology (which is adopted by most astrologers) accepts that the starting point is the position in the background of stars where the Sun appears in the sky at the vernal equinox (when the Sun appears to cross over from the southern hemisphere to the northern hemisphere) each year.

As the Earth spins on its axis, it "wobbles" like a top, causing the vernal equinox to move gradually backwards against the star background, (a phenomenon known as the Precession of the equinoxes) at a rate of about 30 degrees (one Zodiacal sign length) every 2160 years. Thus the two Zodiacs are aligned only once every 26,000 years, with the most recent alignment being about 2000 years ago when the zodiac was principally established. This phenomenon gives us the conceptual basis for the Age of Aquarius, whose "dawning" coincides with the movement of the vernal equinox across the cusp from Pisces to Aquarius in the star background.

Since the discovery of Fractal phenomena in nature, some astrologers suspect that astrological phenomena have the same basis, and that larger-scale patterns of the solar system are repeated in smaller-scale activity on Earth, with the vernal equinox featuring largely in more obvious seasonal variations, as well as less obvious human behaviours.

Astrological symbols (most of these will not display correctly in many browsers):