Family conflict over horopscopes

  • Thread starter Mephisto
  • Start date
In summary, the conversation was about a disagreement between the speaker and their sister about the validity of horoscopes and how they could possibly affect our lives. The speaker's argument was that the constellations of stars in outer space can only affect us through gravitation and electromagnetic radiation, and that the effects would be constant throughout the year. The speaker's family did not understand their argument and now think they are weird. The conversation also touched on the idea that horoscopes are often just generalized statements that can apply to anyone, and that astrology was once considered a legitimate science. In conclusion, the conversation did not result in a resolution about the validity of horoscopes.
  • #36
Shoshana, I am Taurus, but I've been told that my rising sign overpowers my sun sign. Taking into consideration how much sun signs have changed in the past two thousand years what sign would a Taurus actually be born under, since obviously it is no longer Taurus.
 
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  • #37
If any of that is true, then why is the girl I really like and very similar to born a few months earlier than me? EXACTLY! One word for your sis


B O G U S
 
  • #38
Shoshana said:
"Article 7 - General.

Astrologers consider Scorpios to be energetic, passionate, deep, intuitive, and secretive, with a great deal of self-control. They also believe that Scorpios can be willful, stubborn, and easily made jealous. Scorpios are thought to be keen observers of people, and potentially calculating and manipulative. Seeing more of people's deepest motivations than others do, they have a tendency to be cynical. They are sensitive and never forget a hurt or a slight. For the typical Scorpio, forgiveness can be difficult.

Astrologers consider Scorpio perhaps the most extreme of all signs. The intensity and focus of Scorpios gives them great ability to see a project through despite all obstacles. Their strong leadership qualities, incisive analytic abilities, energy, and desire for financial security can make them motivated career people. Many Scorpios also like to flirt with danger and push themselves and those close to them to their limits. Professions traditionally associated with Scorpio include forensics, law enforcement or detective work, the military, medicine, psychology, big business, and recycling."
http://www.scorpiosite69.freeserve.co.uk/Scorpio2.html#art2

And I might add it's easy enough to P-ss one off!~ Well enough that you wish you had not ever started up with one.
{yawn}

I am a Scorpio and of course some of the traits listed apply to me. Others are very far from my personality.
That is the beauty of bogus theories. Selective thinking make believers to cling to what applies and forget what does not. A satisfied customer is not proof of a theory.
 
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  • #39
Well at least we know who a lot of the darling little Scorpio's are around here and how UNpassionate they are about things, hahahahahahahaha TA!~
I have to go study Scorpio now cause not only do I also have a sun and other planets in Scorpio but a a North Node in Scorpio and now a days the focus is on the north node.
Been fun...
 
  • #40
Actually the OP's sister is quite right, your time of birth does affect your life. For a start the Earth shields you from some of the radiation from the core of the galaxy. So the amount you get exposed to varies according to your orientation, and that will have a significant annual component.
It is not enough to merely call religious people ignorant, and feel smug. To counter their argument you need facts, reason, and most importantly experimental evidence.
A simple way of refuting astrology is to read out each of the predictions made yesterday, and ask her which apply to her. If she does not much better than 1/12 then it's coincidence.
Indeed, you should be able to see how to make money out of this.
As for religion you might judge it's utility in society by taking some objective measure of quality (like infant mortality or murder rates), and notice that countries like the USA which have high religious observance rates have high murder rates and truly dreadful infant mortality. Indeed the child death/religious curve is quite remarkably good. But even that is not enough. It cold be coincidence that a rich country like the USA has huge numbers of the faithful, but the same child mortality rate of countries that have people living in mud huts.
So research other correlations. For instance religious observance vsliteracy (also negative).
But the best way is to do it blind. Ask someone who advocates religion to describe (say) 3 "good" measure for a society, and see if there is any correlation. Actually, you can drive them mad that way, since it's damned hard to find any, except maybe one.
Religious countries seem on average to be richer. To be sure their children die more often, or are raped by priests (or both), and they are less likely to be able read & understand the word of their local God, but are more likely to be able to afford a big TV. I doubt if that is a correlation religious people feel proud of.
 
  • #41
Ivan Seeking said:
So you are saying that socially redeeming qualities can supercede the requirement for scientific evidence in order to logically justify belief? Or are you speaking more to the social value of living the philosophy of Christianity, for example, rather than actual belief?

Yes. I choose to believe in G-d because I believe I am better off by that belief. I deliberately suspend any skepticism about whether a supernatural entity exists; that doesn't mean I buy into stories about Joshua blowing down the walls of Jericho with horns or other such allegories that have little to do with religion.

I live in a Judaeo-Christian, western culture and so I believe in the god of the Hebrew Bible. If I lived in SE Asia, I would believe as fervently, and calculatedly, in Buddha. The essential thing to me is that we somehow find an intrinsic worth to life and civilization so that we don't end up like the Nazis or embroiled in a nuclear holocaust.
 
  • #42
TVP45 said:
Yes. I choose to believe in G-d because I believe I am better off by that belief. I deliberately suspend any skepticism about whether a supernatural entity exists; that doesn't mean I buy into stories about Joshua blowing down the walls of Jericho with horns or other such allegories that have little to do with religion.

I live in a Judaeo-Christian, western culture and so I believe in the god of the Hebrew Bible. If I lived in SE Asia, I would believe as fervently, and calculatedly, in Buddha. The essential thing to me is that we somehow find an intrinsic worth to life and civilization so that we don't end up like the Nazis or embroiled in a nuclear holocaust.

Remember that Hitler was a catholic. Suicide bombers are Muslims. Several Christian missionaries have perpetrated crimes against Native Americans and Africans.
Faith in a deity is not a guaranty of good deeds.
 
  • #43
CEL said:
Remember that Hitler was a catholic. Suicide bombers are Muslims. Several Christian missionaries have perpetrated crimes against Native Americans and Africans.
Faith in a deity is not a guaranty of good deeds.

In my earlier post, I said that faith coupled with adherence to basic values (no-kill, no-steal, no-lie, etc) was what made it worthwhile to me to suspend skeptical disbelief. BTW, I think Hitler was born a Catholic but was certainly not in good standing at the time of the war (Can you imagine him going to confession? "Forgive me father, for I have killed seventeen million people.")

In any event, I strongly differentiate between blind lip-service to religion and actual practice of religion.
 
  • #44
DominicConnor said:
Actually the OP's sister is quite right, your time of birth does affect your life. For a start the Earth shields you from some of the radiation from the core of the galaxy. So the amount you get exposed to varies according to your orientation, and that will have a significant annual component.
It is not enough to merely call religious people ignorant, and feel smug. To counter their argument you need facts, reason, and most importantly experimental evidence.
A simple way of refuting astrology is to read out each of the predictions made yesterday, and ask her which apply to her. If she does not much better than 1/12 then it's coincidence.
Indeed, you should be able to see how to make money out of this.
As for religion you might judge it's utility in society by taking some objective measure of quality (like infant mortality or murder rates), and notice that countries like the USA which have high religious observance rates have high murder rates and truly dreadful infant mortality. Indeed the child death/religious curve is quite remarkably good. But even that is not enough. It cold be coincidence that a rich country like the USA has huge numbers of the faithful, but the same child mortality rate of countries that have people living in mud huts.
So research other correlations. For instance religious observance vsliteracy (also negative).
But the best way is to do it blind. Ask someone who advocates religion to describe (say) 3 "good" measure for a society, and see if there is any correlation. Actually, you can drive them mad that way, since it's damned hard to find any, except maybe one.
Religious countries seem on average to be richer. To be sure their children die more often, or are raped by priests (or both), and they are less likely to be able read & understand the word of their local God, but are more likely to be able to afford a big TV. I doubt if that is a correlation religious people feel proud of.

I quite agree that there is probably no correlation between piety and social utility. I do, however, think that the honest practice of any value system, whether religious or secular, that is similar to Mosaic law, leads to a better society. How else could I explain the events at Nickel Mines, PA over the past year and a half?
 
  • #45
Almost everyone believes that they are following a value system, even members of organised crime gangs. They will regard certain acts as unthinkably bad, and other actions as their duty under a code.
I don't think a human being can long function if he genuinely believes what he is doing is wrong. It's not a case of good/evil simply a matter of rationalising your position.

Indeed I would go further, and assert that the problem is not that one set of values is "better" or worse than another, but comes from "value-based" morality.
Most of the bad consequences of religion do not come from belief in God, which is simply just another model of reality but from the idea that values are more important than people, and so often these values are more important thanother people.

That of course is not restricted to religion, but neatly unifies religion, socialism and fascism all of which have killed terrible numbers of people in pursuit of "values".
Most Nazis genuinely believed in their values, and were prepared to die for them, indeed many kept on fighting for a while after Hitler had died, and most of Germany was occupied.
Many Russians and Chinese still genuinely believe socialism was a good thing, with both Stalin and Mao having millions of followers.
When confronted with their senior clergy admitting openly that they helped the rape of thousands of children, Christians find a way of continuing to support them without any obvious problems with their values.
 
  • #46
Okay, we are waaaaaay off topic now. This thread is about horoscopes.
 
  • #47
LONDON, England (AP) -- Desperate for a glimpse into Adolf Hitler's unpredictable mind, British spies hired an astrologer during World War II to write horoscopes for him and other Nazi leaders, documents declassified Tuesday show.

They soon regretted it.

The file released to Britain's National Archives catalogs the frustrations of MI5 handlers as they tried to prevent the astrologer, Louis de Wohl, from publicly embarrassing high-ranking intelligence and military officers.

"I have never liked Louis de Wohl -- he strikes me as a charlatan and an imposter," reads the first line in the astrologer's file. The letter is typical and appeared to be signed by Dick White, who went on to become the head of Britain's domestic spy agency, MI5, in the 1950s. [continued]
http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/europe/03/03/hitler.horoscope.ap/
 
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  • #48
is there some physical phenomena that could explain horoscope?
Explain what about them?

One counter-argument invalidates the pseudotheory.
Counter argument: brothers born in the same day may live totally different lives.
There.

You might want to check these out:

 
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  • #49
Apparently I'm a freaking badass supersleuth genius porno star. And I'm twice as passionate as any other sign:

Scorpio:

* Passionate • Powerful • Penetrating
* Intense • Determined • Compelling
* Purposeful • Keenly perceptive • Brave
* Deep • Complex • Analytical
* Inquisitive • Sensual • Mysterious
* Resourceful • Ambitious • Magnetic
* Hypnotic • Creative • Intriguing
* Profound • Loyal • Supportive
* Protective • Generous • Compassionate
* Humble • Quiet • Encompassing.
* Self-critical • Investigative • Passionate
* Caring • Tenacious • Dynamic
* Probing • Emotional • Concerned
* Shock-proof • Intense concentration • Understanding of their failings. [7]

When frustrated or unhappy, Scorpios can be:

* Self-destructive • Ruthless • Overbearing • Suspicious • Obsessive
* Jealous • Possessive • Dangerous • Quick-tempered
* Obstinate • Moody • Sadistic • Insulting • Violent • Hateful
* Secretive • Sensitive • Intolerant • Cunning • Vengeful • Vindictive.
* resentful • Devious • Agressive • Death wish • Gloomy
 
  • #50
SO many Scorpios in this thread!
 
  • #51
I share my sign with Hitler, says it all really. I'm on the cusp though, so that means I'm sort of a mix between Taurus and Aries, which fits' in with my lifestyle as I'm only a fascist megalomaniac on week days excluding Friday.

Horoscopes are no more reliable than me writing a load of vague and unsubstantiated twaddle that's bound to fit 90% of people 50% of the time. And works on the hit and miss technique in the same way cold reading does.
 
  • #52
perhaps the whole thing is off by 9 months
as I cannot see the birth date being the key
but maybe at the time of conception
there is a small chance of some effect?

A STUDY OF PREMATURE BIRTHS may be interesting
in how far off the astro predictions are vs expected normal birth dates

when I was younger I learned to do birth charts
and found the info in them to be very good
weird people have weird charts
and nice normal people balanced charts
is every thing in a chart true NO
but the whole thing is a big clue to something
but the sun sign is only a part of the chart
and the whole chart is more about balance or lack there of
then the exact signs the bodys are in
 
  • #53
Folks: Maybe I missed something and this is a running joke and I missed the punch line, but I thought this was a science site. An now I am reading about people who are describing their astrological characteristics. Science can't disprove astrology, but it can and has been put it to the test. When astrology's predictions are tested, astrology fails and fails badly. If I missed something and am out of place, I apologize. But to be blunt, astrology is baloney and should have been ditched centuries ago.
Vince
 
  • #54
Pythagorean said:
Apparently I'm a freaking badass supersleuth genius porno star. And I'm twice as passionate as any other sign:

Scorpio:

* Passionate • Powerful • Penetrating
* Intense • Determined • Compelling
* Purposeful • Keenly perceptive • Brave
* Deep • Complex • Analytical
* Inquisitive • Sensual • Mysterious
* Resourceful • Ambitious • Magnetic
* Hypnotic • Creative • Intriguing
* Profound • Loyal • Supportive
* Protective • Generous • Compassionate
* Humble • Quiet • Encompassing.
* Self-critical • Investigative • Passionate
* Caring • Tenacious • Dynamic
* Probing • Emotional • Concerned
* Shock-proof • Intense concentration • Understanding of their failings. [7]

When frustrated or unhappy, Scorpios can be:

* Self-destructive • Ruthless • Overbearing • Suspicious • Obsessive
* Jealous • Possessive • Dangerous • Quick-tempered
* Obstinate • Moody • Sadistic • Insulting • Violent • Hateful
* Secretive • Sensitive • Intolerant • Cunning • Vengeful • Vindictive.
* resentful • Devious • Agressive • Death wish • Gloomy

PM me your first availability to meet.
 
  • #55
Shoshana said:
PM me your first availability to meet.

I know, even my 'frustrated' and 'unhappy' characteristics are hot.

vmaier said:
Folks: Maybe I missed something and this is a running joke and I missed the punch line, but I thought this was a science site. An now I am reading about people who are describing their astrological characteristics. Science can't disprove astrology, but it can and has been put it to the test. When astrology's predictions are tested, astrology fails and fails badly. If I missed something and am out of place, I apologize. But to be blunt, astrology is baloney and should have been ditched centuries ago.
Vince

I don't necessarily believe in horoscopes, but I wouldn't be surprised if fall babies were more susceptible to this behavior or summer babies are more susceptible to that behavior. Up here were I live, people get SAD (seasonal affective disorder) and get all depressed when there's no sunlight for months at a time. There's definitely a biological clock tuned to our sun and it's intensity, and it's intensity is observed by us based on the season, especially Up North (and Down South I'd imagine). So that there's absolutely no effect of birthdate on personality I can't immediately assert. The idea of far-off planetary alignment, however, I'm skeptical of.

_Mayday_ said:
SO many Scorpios in this thread!

I'd like to see a histogram of astrological signs of scientists (and science majors) around the world. It would be interesting if Scorpios were high on that list. I continue to dismiss it as coincidence for now, but I have noticed a lot of people I socialize with are Scorpios.
 
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  • #56
I get SAD rather severely in fact, I have to be medicated for six months of the year. That said its a simple chemical imbalance. Exactly what the imbalance is and exactly how it is caused is a mystery, but it seems certain areas of the brain do have unusual physiology, and it appears to be somewhat genetic.

I read a really good debunking of astrology (like anyone needed to) It explained everything in terms of physics, it was quite interesting I'll see if I can fish it out later.
 
  • #57
Schrodinger's Dog said:
I get SAD rather severely in fact, I have to be medicated for six months of the year. That said its a simple chemical imbalance. Exactly what the imbalance is and exactly how it is caused is a mystery, but it seems certain areas of the brain do have unusual physiology, and it appears to be somewhat genetic.

I read a really good debunking of astrology (like anyone needed to) It explained everything in terms of physics, it was quite interesting I'll see if I can fish it out later.

Perhaps it is this one:
http://www.badastronomy.com/bad/misc/astrology.html
 
  • #58
That's the one, thanks. :smile:
 
  • #59
_Mayday_ said:
I think it would be interesting, to mix up the star signs, but keep the description, or prediction. It would be interesting to see how many people still felt they were accurate. i think it would be quite difficult to set it up though, as people would probably get what the experiment was about, so the results may not prove accurate.

from http://www.astrosociety.org/education/astro/act3/astrology3.html#defense
To overcome the objections of astrologers who feel that the Sun sign alone is not enough for a reading, physicist Shawn Carlson of the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory carried out an ingenious experiment. Groups of volunteers were asked to provide information necessary for casting a full horoscope and to fill out the California Personality Inventory, a standard psychologists' questionnaire that uses just the sorts of broad, general, descriptive terms astrologers use.

A "respected" astrological organization constructed horoscopes for the volunteers, and 28 professional astrologers who had approved the procedure in advance were each sent one horoscope and three personality profiles, one of which belonged to the subject of the horoscope. Their task was to interpret the horoscope and select which of the three profiles it matched.

Although the astrologers had predicted that they would score better than 50 percent correct, their actual score in 116 trials was only 34 percent correct - just what you would expect by guessing! Carlson published his results in the December 5, 1985, issue of Nature, much to the embarrassment of the astrological community.
 
  • #60
I think modern astrology is a hoax, no horoscopes predicted the 9/11 attacks or 2004 tsunami. What fascinates me is the ancient astrologers studied the skies well enough to understand precession and other advanced topics. For more info, see cpakonline.com
 
  • #61
The amazing thing is that even though I don't believe in them, I still read them almost everysingle day!:redface:

Does this apply to anyone else?
 
  • #62
malty said:
The amazing thing is that even though I don't believe in them, I still read them almost everysingle day!:redface:

Does this apply to anyone else?

I haven't read them in a while, but I used to. It is just something fun...I read the comics at the same time as the horoscopes. I also read the fortunes in fortune cookies. To me, there's nothing wrong with enjoying them all for entertainment, it's when you start taking these vague predictions seriously that there's a problem.
 
  • #63
I will never forget the most profound fortune cookie I ever got was at the Happy Buddha Japanese restaurant.

It was blank. I had no future.

You know those series of numbers that are on the back of some fortunes? When my older daughter was about 5, she read her fortune, then flipped it over and said "and the chances of this happening are" then she rattled off the numbers. I just about choked it was so funny.
 
  • #64
Evo said:
I will never forget the most profound fortune cookie I ever got was at the Happy Buddha Japanese restaurant.

It was blank. I had no future.

You know those series of numbers that are on the back of some fortunes? When my older daughter was about 5, she read her fortune, then flipped it over and said "and the chances of this happening are" then she rattled off the numbers. I just about choked it was so funny.

:rofl:

I think they have different cookies for different customers though. Often I get very boring ones, but if I go to a Chinese restaurant with a guy, suddenly I get really fun ones. The best one I ever got was the first time I dated my current boyfriend (oh, about 15 years ago...geez, that makes me feel old)...it said, "One who loves you greatly is right in front of your eyes." :biggrin: They HAD to have had ones just for couples (then again, I guess that would work for a kid with their family, or best friends too).
 
  • #65
A blank fortune cookie means death
 
  • #66
himynameismar said:
A blank fortune cookie means death

Actually it doesn't literally mean death but could mean the end of something, or the beginning of a new phase in your life. :wink:
 
  • #67
A blank fortune cookie means someone in Shanghai forgot to put the little slip of paper inside, but to stay on the topic of astrology debunking, here's some info from the Skeptic's Dictionary on how astrologers today aren't smart enough to factor in the Earth's precession:

"...In fact, there should be 13 signs, not 12. Precession of the equinox is caused by the fact that the axis of the Earth's rotation (which causes day and night) and the axis of the Earth's revolution around the sun (which marks the passage of each year) are not parallel. They are 23 l/2 degrees away from lining up; that is, the Earth's axis of rotation is tilted. This tilt also causes our seasons, a fact that Ptolemy did understand but that many people do not understand even today. Ptolemy understood that the rotation axis of the Earth was slowly precessing, or moving in a circle, with an angular radius of 23 1/2 degrees with a period of around 26,000 years. He deduced this from comparisons of data taken by the ancient Sumerians 2,000 years before his time. He did not understand what was pushing the precession, but he did understand the motion. We now realize that the sun is rotating with a period of around 30 days and that this causes the sun to bulge at the equator, which causes a torque to be exerted on the top like motion of the Earth's day and night cycle. There is also a small 18.6-year variation caused by the moon's orbit around the earth, and the moon also has a small effect on precession; however, the sun's equatorial bulge is the main cause of the precession of the equinox, which is why your sign listed in the newspaper, in most cases is removed by one sign from the modern, actual position of the sun at your birth..."
If anyone is interested, look it up online at the Skeptic's Dictionary website.

As for me, I personally have been fascinated by astronomy ever since I got a telescope for my 5th birthday. I'm fortunate to live 2 miles from the Fernbank Science Center near Atlanta. The Fernbank Observatory houses a 0.9 meter Cassegrain reflector beneath a 10 meter dome. This is the largest telescope in the southeastern United States and one of the largest instruments ever dedicated to education and public viewing. Free public observing open houses are offered every Thursday and Friday evening from 8:00 pm (or dark) until 10:30 pm, with an astronomer available to position the telescope and answer questions. If anyone lives relatively close to Atlanta and is interested in astronomy, it's worth the visit(s)!

Lastly, if anyone actually believes in astrology, send me an email, I have several real estate and investment opportunities to sell you, I'll make you a great deal!
 
  • #68
I believe in it
 
  • #69
Engima said:
I believe in it
OK, I'm open minded. Why do you believe in it and what makes astrology work? I mean how does planetary alignment affect your birth and other events?
 
  • #70
We are not interested in theories, only evidence.
 

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