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Phillipson interview of researchers

Dean, Ertel, Kelly, Mather, and Smit

 

An expanded version of the interview in Chapters 9 and 10 of

Astrology in the Year Zero.

Phillipson G (Ed). Flare, London, September 2000. ISBN 0-9530261-9-1

 

Abstract -- Garry Phillipson grills a team of five prominent

researchers (Geoffrey Dean, Suitbert Ertel, Ivan Kelly, Arthur

Mather, Rudolf Smit) with more than 150 questions covering the main

issues of scientific research into astrology, to which they reply

collectively. It took an entire year to establish the questions (and

the questions raised by questions) and to ensure that the answers

are concise, readable and complete. Issues normally evaded by

astrologers are tackled head on. The five researchers have been

investigating astrology for at least twenty years. Two have been

full-time practising astrologers, two are university professors, and

all have had numerous articles published in the astrological and

scientific literature, their collective total in astrology being

over 200 articles and several books. Part 1 (background) covers

research methods, tests, what researchers investigate, whether

astrology needs to be true, reasoning errors and their disastrous

effects, intuition, unconscious processes, ESP. Part 2 (research

results) covers Gauquelin, sun signs, the whole chart, isolated vs

multiple factors, time twins, open-mindedness, influence of world

views, reactions of astrologers to research outcomes, white crows,

prestige, whether the dismal outcomes to date might improve,

resources, parallels between astrology and poetry, credibility

problems, education, critical thinking skills, whether modern

science supports astrology, our inability to cope with complexity,

how reasoning errors make mind/reality/etc issues premature, sources

of research information, prospects for the researcher, questions to

ask oneself. To help retrieval there is a list of topics and an

index with over 700 entries. Figures have been updated to December

2005. Conclusion The researchers conclude that astrology is neither

science nor magic, and is more likely to be a delusion arising from

pervasive artifacts. The interview is nontechnical, easy to

understand, and cross referenced. Much of the information is not

readily available, especially in astrology books. For new readers it

is the best available overview of research into astrology on this

website. Don't get involved in astrology without reading this

interview first.

 

The book version contains about 90 questions. This expanded version

contains a further 65 questions, cross-references, and many new

headings to aid retrieval. To find the new material, see start of

Index. Each question is numbered. Comments (or new questions) are

invited, especially if they correct errors or add significantly to

the dialogue.

 

To find the topic you want

 

Check the section headings below (21 entries, second figure = number

of items), or the index (over 700 entries) given at the end.

 

Part 1. Background to scientific research into astrology.

01. Introduction by Garry Phillipson

02. How the researchers got involved in astrology (5 questions)

03. Research methods and topics (8)

04. Subjective and objective -- two views of astrology (7)

05. Do researchers differ from astrologers? (4)

06. Reasoning errors and their disastrous effects (14)

07. Intuition, unconscious processes, ESP (15)

 

Part 2. Results of scientific research into astrology.

08. The picture emerging from research (4 questions)

09. Gauquelin, sun signs, whole chart (8)

10. Isolated vs multiple factors, time twins (8)

11. Open-mindedness, influence of world views (7)

12. Reactions of astrologers to research outcomes (7)

13. White crows, prestige, resources, could results improve? (12)

14. Parallels between astrology and poetry (5)

15. Credibility problems, education, critical thinking skills (9)

16. Does modern science support astrology? (5)

17. Our inability to cope with complexity (6)

18. Mind, reality, divination: are such issues relevant? (21*)

19. Sources of research information (1)

20. Summing up (4)

21. Index (725 entries)

 

* Provides a more thorough discussion of the book's final topic

(What is Astrology -- Science or Magic?), which in the book was

inconclusive. Here the researchers conclude that astrology is

neither science nor magic, and is more likely to be a delusion due

to reasoning errors and other artifacts.

 

Part 1. Background to scientific research into astrology

 

1. Introduction by Garry Phillipson

 

OQQ1.1

In contemporary western society science is commonly seen as the

final arbiter between reality and illusion, and this book would be

incomplete if it did not represent the scientific view-point on

astrology. I chose to approach Geoffrey Dean -- an experienced

researcher who is well-versed in scientific methodology, astrology,

and what happens when the two collide. Dean suggested that he

recruit others to help out, and the upshot was that I interviewed by

email a team of five prominent researchers scattered across the

globe. Their collective answers led to further questions, and also

to changes and clarifications. To meet size constraints, we then

collectively edited the entire interview down to the version that

appears in Chapters 9 and 10 of Astrology in the Year Zero.

 

We have tried, in this interview, to cover the main issues which

have arisen between astrology and science. Trying to accomplish this

in a finite number of words made compromise inevitable -- in the

questions asked and not asked, the amount of discussion and

illustration possible for any given topic. The researchers have

asked me to point out that, although they are similar in their

scientific approach, this does not mean they are incapable of

disagreement. They report that some of my questions led to

differences of opinion (for example on the relevance of religion to

astrology), but that once these differences were explored they

tended to disappear. These explorations do not appear in the

interview, whose hard-won unanimity may therefore be deceptive. My

sincere thanks and gratitude go to each researcher, and particularly

to Geoffrey Dean for collating their input.

 

2. How the researchers got involved in astrology

 

OQQ2.1

It seems rare for scientists like yourselves to be involved with

astrology. How did it happen?

 

Researchers: We were intrigued by astrological claims, and by the

depth and complexity of the subject. Was astrology true? Could the

stars really correlate with human affairs? How could it work?

Scientists love challenges like that. The problem was the lack of

evidence whether for or against (a situation no longer true). So we

set out to explore the claims in depth. That was how our research

started. Along the way some of us became practising astrologers, so

we were able to approach the subject from both the inside and

outside.

 

OQQ2.2

How did the astrologers become astrologers, and what effect did your

researches have on your astrological practices?

 

Researchers: One of us (Mather) was a self-taught student of

astrology and was sufficiently impressed by results to become

Research Co-ordinator for the Astrological Association 1971-1978.

Two of us (Dean, Smit) were full-time practising astrologers and

teachers of astrology. Dean was the founding president of the

Federation of Australian Astrologers WA branch. Smit was the founder

of NGPA, at the time the only Dutch society for professional

astrologers, and while in Australia was the distributor for Matrix

Astrological Software. Both of us have lectured at international

astrology conferences, and in 1988 we both received an AMR

Commemorative Bi-Centennial Award for contributions to astrology,

specifically for our work in research. (AMR = the Sydney-based

Astrological Monthly Review. The Award was an international one, for

example other recipients included Doris Chase Doane, Liz Greene,

Robert Hand, Alan Oken, and Lois Rodden.)

 

We started in much the same way as any astrologer starts -- we

calculated charts, saw that they seemed to work, and were hooked.

Astrology became our passion. Every spare moment became devoted to

it. We read more and more books, we did more and more charts for

more and more people, we went to meetings and talked to more and

more astrologers (whose experience was much the same as ours), and

we became more and more convinced that astrology worked. Nothing we

saw or experienced told us otherwise. Astrologers were generally

nice people, they seemed intelligent and well-educated, they spoke

from the heart, and they based everything on practical experience.

Other than sun sign columns, which most of them rejected, there

seemed to be nothing for anyone to complain about. We did not

understand why some people should be so hostile to astrology.

Nevertheless problems remained, for example chart readings still

seemed to fit when by accident the wrong chart was used.

 

OQQ2.3

So what happened next?

 

Researchers: Those were the days when scientific tests of astrology

were hard to come by. So we began to make our own tests. That is, we

controlled for artifacts and other sources of error, something

astrologers rarely did. (An artifact is something spurious that

mimics a genuine effect, for example the varying number of days per

month will mimic a dependence on month unless we adjust the

arithmetic.)

 

We were dismayed to find that artifacts and errors seemed to explain

everything. At which point our beautiful world of astrology began to

collapse. For example when Mather used the data for 900 major

earthquakes to test the claim that they tended to occur when Uranus

was on the MC or IC, the claim could not be confirmed (95

earthquakes fitted but so did 91 out of 900 non-earthquakes). When

Dean used volunteer clients to test charts that, unknown to the

clients, had been altered to reverse their meaning, the reversed

charts were accepted as readily as authentic charts. When Smit

tested the main predictive techniques on people who had died an

accidental death (nothing ambiguous here), the claims in astrology

books could not be confirmed.

 

Ultimately we took heed of the mounting evidence and ceased actual

practice, as did a few rare astrologers like David Hamblin (a former

chairman of the Astrological Association), Terry Dwyer (a former

tutor for the Mayo School of Astrology), and Jan Kampherbeek (a

former editor of the Dutch magazine Spica). As Aristotle might have

said, astrology is dear to us, but dearer still is truth. But we did

not lose our interest in astrology.

 

Of course such U-turns can be personally traumatic. For example Smit

was originally an amateur astronomer highly skeptical of astrology,

so his conversion to astrologer was of momentous personal

significance, making his unconversion even more so. When he realised

that astrology seemed to have no basis in scientific fact, and

probably never would, his rich and rewarding astrological life

suddenly lost its meaning. He fell into a mental depression that

lasted several years, and which was perhaps the main reason for the

breakup of his marriage at the time. Even today he finds it painful

to realise his initial skepticism of astrology had been justified,

albeit for reasons more valid than those given in astronomy books,

and that for over a decade he had been neglecting his original

interests in favour of astrological ones. If nothing else, his

experience illustrates the passion that astrologers can have for

astrology. To dismiss them as frauds (as some skeptics do) is to

miss the point.

 

OQQ2.4

How did the non-astrologers become involved?

 

Researchers: We had long been interested in related matters, namely

solar effects on people (Ertel) and lunar effects on people (Kelly),

so in due course we also became interested in how astrologers

conceive of relationships between heavenly bodies and people.

 

OQQ2.5

How did this new interest affect you?

 

As with the others, we experienced a kind of conversion, not from

science to astrology or vice versa, but from bad closed-minded

science to good open-minded science. By forcing us to be neither

believers nor disbelievers, astrology has helped us to be genuinely

open-minded, so it is easier to be open-minded in other areas. In

short, astrology has made us better able to observe the spirit of

science, which ironically seems quite the opposite to its effect on

astrologers.

 

3. Research methods and topics

 

OQQ3.1

How would you define scientific research as applied to astrology?

 

Researchers: In astrology there are millions of opinions and we can

have them for nothing. But for knowledge we must work. We must do

research. Scientific research in astrology has the same aim as

scientific research in general -- to improve what we know and to

improve what we do. To us it reduces to four simple guidelines: (1)

Be careful because pitfalls are everywhere. (2) Consider other

explanations for claimed astrological correspondences. (3)

Investigate all promising ideas. (4) Follow wherever the results of

sound investigation lead even if they conflict with existing beliefs.

 

EQQ3.2

These four guidelines really look like applied commonsense. Are they

really any different from what a competent astrologer would do?

 

Researchers: The four guidelines may look like applied commonsense

but to our knowledge few astrologers actually follow them. Even the

most competent astrologers seem unaware of pitfalls, they do not

consider other explanations, and they do not follow where the

results of sound investigation lead. In fact these are the main

objections that scientists hold against astrologers. Nevertheless

your point is true in one sense -- researchers investigate the same

testable claims as do astrologers. The crucial difference is that

researchers are more careful and more rigorous. Researchers and

astrologers differ not so much in their ideas as in the approaches

used to test those ideas.

 

To put it another way, astrologers seem to see research as being

consistent with a philosophy that says "We use X, therefore we need

research to confirm X." Here X might be anything from the most

trivial of techniques to astrology itself. Or as Donald Bradley

(then the leading US research astrologer) said in 1950, "It appears

to be an unwritten article of faith ... that all improvements are

welcome so long as the complacent surface of tradition is not

disturbed." But we see research as being consistent with a

philosophy that says "Research by many people has shown that X works

under conditions where alternative explanations can be ruled out,

therefore we use X."

 

OQQ3.3

Are there different schools of thought advocating different

methodologies for scientific research in astrology, or are

researchers unanimous in their approach?

 

Researchers: Yes and no. Methodologies in science generally may

differ in detail but all involve the critical examination of ideas.

The same applies to scientific methodologies in astrology -- nothing

is accepted just because astrologers say it works. What matters is

whether it stands up to critical examination, of which tests are an

important part.

 

OQQ3.4

So what is your own approach to scientific research? From start to

finish, what do you actually do?

 

Researchers: Our own approach is quite ordinary. First, we survey

the literature to determine what research already exists. Very

little research into astrology by scientists existed before the

1950s. Today there is a great deal, although few astrologers seem to

know about it.

 

Second, we perform tests of promising ideas according to our

interests and resources. Thus we might test astrologers to see if

they get the right answers, or we might test the charts of say

extraverts to see if they differ from those of introverts, or we

might re-examine old studies to see if they might provide new

information.

 

Third, we submit the results to informed critics and act on their

comments. If flaws are uncovered, or if we fail to follow up a

promising line of enquiry, then we must try again. Science is a

tough business. Finally, at the end of years of painstaking work

(nobody said research had to be easy) we survey the totality of

results to get an overall indication. No individual study stands

alone.

 

EQQ3.5

What types of test are there?

 

Researchers: Tests can be qualitative (what kind?) or quantitative

(what amount?). A qualitative test involves categories (yes/no,

male/female, Jupiter/Saturn), so shades of grey are not allowed. A

quantitative test involves numbers that express position on a scale

(20 kg, 50% certain, orb 5 degrees), so shades of grey are allowed.

Which is best? Some astrologers say qualitative, but to us this

applies only if people were never shades of grey.

 

Qualitative tests tend to be exploratory (finding out what might be

present) rather than confirmatory (testing what is known to be

present), so they tend to incorporate as many factors as possible,

which might seem to make them well suited to astrology. But

astrologers claim to know what is present (read any astrology book)

so an exploratory method seems inappropriate. Furthermore,

incorporating many factors greatly increases the chance of spurious

interactions, which in effect makes qualitative tests incapable of

detecting complex interactions of the kind said to be characteristic

of astrology. They also tend to use small unrepresentative samples

that are unable to detect weak effects (large samples are more

sensitive than small samples). So once past any initial exploration

stage, we prefer quantitative tests.

 

Indeed, much of astrology is already quantitative, as when

astrologers use orbs or when they weight factors prior to chart

synthesis, which they presumably would not do if qualitative really

was better. But qualitative tests may be preferred by astrologers

because they are easier to apply non-rigorously and are therefore

more easily persuaded to give the desired outcome. Or because they

are more open to creative interpretation, which amounts to the same

thing.

 

EQQ3.6

I'm not sure I can agree. Quantitative tests require using

statistics, but many astrologers feel very strongly that the

statistical approach is quite unsuited to astrology.

 

Researchers: There are two kinds of statistics. If astrologers mean

descriptive statistics, as in births and deaths, their argument is

that statistics deals with groups whereas astrology deals with

individuals. That is, each chart is said to be unique, so the

success or failure of judgements for other charts is irrelevant. But

this is like saying each day is unique, so whether the sun rose on

previous days is irrelevant. Those who depend on the sun might

disagree.

 

Alternatively if astrologers mean inferential statistics, as in p =

0.05, their argument is invalid. Astrology is said to incline rather

than compel, so we have no way of knowing whether a particular chart

judgement is a hit or miss until after the event. Astrology works

only sometimes. In other words it is essentially probabilistic,

which means that probabilistic (i.e. statistical) approaches could

hardly be more suitable. Furthermore, whether we describe our

observations qualitatively (e.g. by categories) or quantitatively

(e.g. by scale positions), we still need to count their numbers, so

we still need statistics to make sense of them. Calling our approach

qualitative does not avoid the use of statistics.

 

Although astrologers and researchers both use qualitative

approaches, only researchers follow them with quantitative checks to

avoid being led astray by artifacts and reasoning errors.

 

OQQ3.7

What sort of questions do researchers investigate?

 

Researchers: Is it true that positive signs are extraverted, that an

elevated Neptune is musical, that adverse Mars transits indicate

accidents, and that Bucket patterns become agitators? What is the

best zodiac, house system, aspect system, dynamic technique? Does

Saturn mean the mother, the father, or neither? Are sun sign columns

plausible? Should the signs be reversed in the southern hemisphere?

What about distance, latitude, the 99th harmonic? How important is

experience, intuition, a friendly client, an accurate birth time? Do

astrologers perform better than computers, graphologists, palmists,

psychics, tossing a coin? Is X easy to see in charts? How strong are

astrological effects? How important is the search for new

techniques? What makes a good astrologer? How to choose and

astrologer? And so on. But perhaps the most important question is

one that astrologers rarely ask, namely could we be fooling

ourselves? Could astrology seem to work for reasons that have

nothing to do with astrology? This too has been carefully

investigated.

 

EQQ3.8

Are there some astrological claims to which scientific research

might be irrelevant?

 

Researchers: Some astrologers claim that scientific research is

impersonal or unspiritual or insensitive to deeper truths. For

example they claim that the personal direction and purpose revealed

by astrology cannot be tested. Or they claim that astrology involves

subtle factors not yet known to science. In each case they conclude

that science is unsuited to astrology, period. But apart from its

emphasis on critical evaluation, science requires only that events

be observable in some way. Astrology is the same, for example the

Larousse Encyclopedia of Astrology (McGraw-Hill 1980) says the

central tenet of astrology is that the heavens and their terrestrial

counterparts "are related in a significant and observable manner"

(p.19).

 

We recognise that astrological "observations" are often little more

than mere impressions. Nevertheless if astrologers can observe the

claimed correlations, so can scientific researchers, and vice versa.

 

In fact we all use scientific methods every day whether we realise

it or not. Thus when our car won't start we form likely hypotheses,

all of them involving observables (such as blown fuse, flat battery,

faulty starter), and then test them. If our hypotheses did not

involve some observables then by definition we could never discover

the problem and therefore we could never fix it. Similarly if

someone is ill, or if someone is said to match their chart, we use

the same approach based on observables. We act like prototype

scientists. It is unlikely that astrologers could survive if science

did not apply to general everyday matters of the kind that clients

consult astrologers about.

 

Does this mean that science must apply to all areas of astrology?

Not at all. If no possible observation could rule out a particular

claim, then the claim is untestable, and scientific research is

irrelevant. It is as simple as that. We can test the idea that Leos

are more generous than other signs, say by analysing the tips given

in restaurants, but as yet we cannot test the idea that Leos were

Cancerians in their previous life. Even so, we can still compare

astrology to other systems that claim to give direction and purpose

to our lives (astrology has no monopoly here), in the same way that

we can compare the origin and maintenance of religious beliefs.

Perhaps more importantly, we can explore the distinction between

subjective and objective astrology.

 

4. Subjective and objective -- two views of astrology

 

OQQ4.1

Are you putting "subjective" and "objective" forward as distinct

categories of astrology? I'm sure that many astrologers view

astrology as existing half-way between subjectivity and objectivity.

 

Researchers: For such astrologers the distinction is a philosophical

one, as for example in whether or not we create the world we live

in. But this is not the distinction we mean. We use these words in a

particular way, so their definition is crucial. For our purpose we

can divide astrology, however defined, into subjective and objective

components as shown in Figure 1. Figure 1 shows that subjective-

objective is not a matter of black-white but of shades of grey.

Nevertheless we can still describe what each dimension represents,

as follows:

 

 

 

Figure 1. Subjective (vertical axis) vs objective (horizontal axis).

 

In principle we can take any practice and divide it roughly into two

components, subjective and objective. If we make the total equal to

100%, the plot of one component against the other will then be a

straight line as shown above. At the top, only feelings are

important, as in pure faith-based religion. At the bottom, only

facts are important, as in pure science. In between are those

practices that are nominally a bit of both, such as astrology,

phrenology, and cooking. To illustrate the subjective-objective

distinction we have aligned them with feelings-facts. Alternatively

we could have aligned them with say spiritual-material or benefit-

truth or values-facts or religion-science. Of course the terms are

not strictly equivalent, but our aim is to illustrate the

distinction without being dogmatic about what subjective-objective

should mean.

 

In subjective astrology only subjective values matter. The

correctness of a particular statement, or of a chart reading, or

even of the chart itself, is of no direct concern. What matters are

issues like: Does astrology give a direction and purpose to our

life? Does it provide benefit, self-understanding, insight,

empowerment? Do astrologers feel that it always works? Are clients

always satisfied by astrology? Does it enrich our lives in ways that

the rational cannot? As say religion, myth, poetry and fiction do?

To be accepted, subjective astrology does not need to be true.

 

In objective astrology our subjective values do not matter. That

millions of people may feel empowered or dismayed by astrology is of

no direct concern. What matters are issues like: Are the statements

of astrology true? Are Leos more Leonian than non-Leos? Which

techniques are the most accurate? Do rectified times agree with

actual times? Can astrologers pick the real chart from a control?

Can clients pick their own interpretation from a control? Does

astrology provide information not available from elsewhere? To be

accepted, objective astrology needs to be true.

 

Figure 1 also shows how we cannot conclude that a false or

problematic belief is due to nothing more than simple-minded

gullibility. The belief might be due to its spiritual value, its

social value, or its cultural value. A material feast cannot appease

a spiritual hunger, a point underlined by the sheer longevity of

major religions. In other words there is more to astrology than

being true or false. Let us look at this crucial point in another

way:

 

The distinction between subjective and objective astrology reflects

how believers and critics tend to view astrology differently. The

typical believer is looking for a spiritual experience that

transforms the self (does astrology give meaning, understanding,

direction?), but the typical critic is looking only for material

proof (is astrology true, what is the evidence, where are the

tests?). So the believer sees the critic as having missed the point,

and vice versa.

 

In summary, any particular astrological claim could fall anywhere on

the straight line in Figure 1. If we do not make the distinction

between its subjective component (sought by typical believers) and

its objective component (sought by typical critics), we will be

unable to choose the proper criteria for judging the claim, thus

creating conflict where none may exist. Which is not helpful to

either side.

 

NQQ4.2

My concern is this: many astrologers believe that astrology works

precisely because the subjective and objective domains interact. In

this view, subjective qualities such as detachment, confidence or

empathy might be necessary conditions for an astrologer to

accurately answer a question such as "when will my daughter give

birth?" -- objective information.

 

Researchers: There are two separate issues here. First, as shown in

Figure 1, we are using the terms subjective-objective as a

convenient label for a distinction that could also be seen as

spiritual-material or benefit-truth or value-fact or religion-

science. But astrologers (and yourself) are using the terms

subjective-objective in a different way. For example Rob Hand in his

1989 Carter Memorial Lecture says "astrology does not accept that

subject and object are independent. If astrology did, how could one

talk about someone's spouse from a horoscope?" (Astrological Journal

Nov-Dec 1989). Here his usage is grammatical -- horoscope (subject)

indicates (verb) spouse (object), which is the same as saying that

everything (subjects, objects, apples, oranges, the above, the

below) is linked to everything else. In principle we can tell what

our fingers are doing by looking at our toes. Nothing here about

spirit-benefit-religion being a necessary condition for an

astrologer to deal with matter-truth-science, or about astrologers

who want to be accurate having to be X rather than Y.

 

Nobody denies that empathy is important for astrologers to have, but

this has nothing to do with the accuracy of astrology itself. No

doubt hugely empathetic phrenologists existed, but so what? To imply

that their empathy converted an untrue phrenology (see 6.3) into a

true phrenology is like saying empathy will convert you into a

person for whom a wrecked car or TV set will instantly work.

Obviously the world does not work like that.

 

Second, we are merely dividing astrological claims into what for

convenience we have called subjective (spirit-benefit-religion)

components and objective (matter-truth-science) components to make

sure we choose the proper criteria for testing them. If the claim is

about spiritual matters then a material test is clearly

inappropriate, and vice versa. To not make the distinction would be

like dismissing Christianity because archbishops cannot walk on

water.

 

NQQ4.3

Another concern has to do with your reference to a "subjective

astrology", which "does not need to be true". It seems to me that

astrologers generally need to believe that they can access objective

information from reading a chart. Those who lose this belief do the

honourable thing and stop practising. Astrologers do not think of

themselves as practising purely "subjective astrology" -- most would

consider it to be fraud.

 

Researchers: Again there are two separate issues here. First, the

need to believe that astrology is objectively true, which we will

come back to in Part 2 when we discuss research outcomes (see 14.4).

Second, the idea that a purely subjective astrology is a fraud,

which is like saying spiritual astrologers are frauds but not

archbishops.

 

NQQ4.4

If I try to picture someone, who is not a fraud, practising "purely

subjective astrology", I have to see them as not saying anything

which is falsifiable about the person, event, or whatever they are

using astrology on. This seems to exclude virtually all statements

of the form "You are like this", and "You will experience this".

 

Researchers: Exactly right. Nothing is falsifiable anyway, simply

because astrology is said to only incline and not compel, or because

contrary factors can always be found, or because the manifestation

is not typical. So the statement can never be of the form "You are

like this", only of the form "You may or may not be like this".

Although astrologers and clients seem quite unaware of this

nonfalsifiability, it nevertheless implies that this part of their

astrology is purely subjective as defined by us, but presumably they

do not consider it to be fraud.

 

NQQ4.5

I don't see that such statements can be labelled "astrology".

Astrology is, by definition, about getting information from the

positions of planets and stars; and if no information has been

obtained, then no astrology has taken place.

 

Researchers: We do not see why charts containing opposing factors,

or an astrology that only inclines, should deny the getting of

information. No astrologer argues that nonfalsifiability stops

astrology taking place. Also, the information can be inaccurate, as

research repeatedly confirms, but an astrologer's reliance on

mythology and reasoning by analogy is unable to detect error or to

separate the wheat from the chaff, see 6.5-6.6. So the mere fact

that astrology has taken place as opposed to not taken place is no

guarantee of anything.

 

But many astrologers argue that astrology is about getting meaning

rather than information, where (like religion, myth, poetry and

fiction) it enriches our lives in ways that the rational cannot -- a

disagreement readily resolved by our subjective-objective

distinction (meaning is subjective, information is objective). It

also introduces another set of problems to do with meaning, but we

have already touched on those in 4.1.

 

NQQ4.6

Perhaps you could go ahead and explain something more about the uses

of your subjective-objective distinction.

 

Researchers: Our subjective-objective distinction is especially

helpful when we come to judge the relevance of science because it

avoids any shouting match between astrologers and scientists. Where

astrology limits itself to areas where only subjective or spiritual

values are required, science hardly matters. But where astrology

makes objective and testable statements such as those that fill

astrology books, then science becomes essential, at least for those

unwilling to accept everything on faith.

 

OQQ4.7

How does this affect the aims of scientific researchers?

 

Researchers: It is not for researchers to dictate which kind of

astrology (subjective or objective) is important. Their aim should

be a more modest and respectful one -- to point out for astrologers

the need to be careful, and to show what happens when this need is

neglected.

 

5. Do researchers differ from astrologers?

 

OQQ5.1

What do you think astrologers could learn from the discipline of the

researcher?

 

Researchers: What we do is no different from what astrologers do in

that we both make observations. But we are more careful. In fact

hugely more careful.

 

OQQ5.2

What does this mean in practice?

 

Researchers: Consider first how astrologers do things. Each time

they erect a chart they see how remarkably it corresponds with the

person or event. They see with their own eyes that astrology works

even though science (apparently) cannot explain it. This is their

everyday experience, and on this experience they rest their claims.

What could be more fair, more reasonable, and more disarming of

criticism? Who could argue against "it works"?

 

But consider what "it works" actually means. It means that all non-

astrological influences leading to the same result have been ruled

out. Astrologers seem to take this proviso for granted, but

researchers have to be more careful. Ruling out non-astrological

influences is harder than it might seem. We are too easily misled.

 

NQQ5.3

Why is that?

 

Researchers: Throughout human evolution we have been deluged with

incomplete and ambiguous information arriving via our senses. But

survival required us to see, hear and move instantly in response to

food or danger. To stop and reason carefully on every occasion, as

when a predator was about to pounce, would have been disastrous. A

man seeking truth by reason did not live long. Today we have

inherited the consequences -- speedy sense perception as in

recognising faces but poor reasoning skills as in assessing

astrology. In short, when it comes to reasoning we are easily

misled, a liability that went largely unnoticed until the rise of

experimental and cognitive psychology in the early 1900s. So we have

to look at astrology under conditions where we are less likely to be

misled.

 

OQQ5.4

And you see this as being where your approach differs from that of

most astrologers?

 

Researchers: Yes. We want to avoid being misled, and avoiding being

misled is part of what being scientific is about. Unless we are

careful, unless we are aware of where we can go wrong, we can look

at the Earth and conclude it is flat. Things are not always what

they seem, a point most astrologers seem unaware of.

 

6. Reasoning errors and their disastrous effects

 

OQQ6.1

Can you illustrate what you mean about "things not always being what

they seem"?

 

Researchers: Here's an example anyone can try. With a ruler draw a

vertical line a few cm long, then close underneath draw a horizontal

line of the same length. The vertical line looks distinctly longer.

The illusion prevails even though many credible authorities might

claim the lengths are equal. Worse, it prevails even though you re-

measure the lines to check their accuracy. This example shows how,

without measurement, without tests, the error would never become

apparent. The thing is not what it seems.

 

The dangers of error become immensely greater at the higher levels

of reasoning, i.e. at the levels where astrological ideas are

formed, taught and applied, which is why we are so easily misled.

Indeed, errors at these levels are as diverse as human experience

itself.

 

OQQ6.2

Can you give examples?

 

Researchers: Ordinary people have embraced countless things now

known to be untrue, such as the belief that the Earth is the centre

of the universe, or that the number 13 is unlucky, or that sleeping

in moonlight sends you insane, or that rubbing frostbite with snow

is helpful, or that the Moon is covered in ice 140 miles thick, or

that bloodletting cures illness, or that the Fox sisters were

genuinely psychic, or that the 23,28,33-day cycles of biorhythms

work. Books such as Charles MacKay's Extraordinary Popular Delusions

and the Madness of Crowds (Noonday reprint 1977) and Martin

Gardner's Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science (Dover 1957)

attest to the pervasiveness and often amazing longevity of delusions

(false beliefs). N-rays, polywater, and canals on Mars are examples

where even scientists saw things that subsequent investigation

showed not to exist. Cold fusion may be another. Such delusions

(other than optical ones) are almost always due to our poor

reasoning skills, and here the example closest to astrology is

phrenology. A look at phrenology is enormously revealing about

astrology.

 

OQQ6.3

Tell me more.

 

Researchers: Phrenology is a system of philosophy based on reading

character from brain development as shown by head shape, or in

popular terms by the bumps on the skull. Phrenology is now

effectively dead but in the 1830s its popularity exceeded that of

astrology today. Thus in the UK one quarter of the then 25 million

population was illiterate, and a phrenology book cost one quarter of

the average weekly wage. Yet roughly 1 person in 3000 was practising

or studying phrenology, roughly three times the proportion

practising or studying astrology today. It was just as popular in

Europe, the USA, and Australia. So in terms of popularity it

compares more than favourably with astrology. No obscure restricted

system here.

 

Like astrology, phrenology predicts the general tone of life (albeit

not specific events), and it encourages you to assess yourself and

act on its findings to achieve harmony with the world. Like

astrology, its ideas were expressed with complete authority, it lent

itself to cookbook interpretations (feel your bumps and look up the

meanings), and it attracted people of intelligence and a vast

literature wherein every criticism was furiously attacked. Most

important of all, like astrology, phrenology flourished because

practitioners and clients saw that it worked. Unlike their critics

they had been there.

 

So believers in phrenology were unmoved by what the critics said,

and for what seemed the best of reasons. As in astrology, their

views exuded overwhelming confidence. For example, according to the

1896 Year Book of the British Phrenological Association, phrenology

was "so plainly demonstrated that the non-acceptance of phrenology

is next to impossible." No ifs or buts here.

 

Nevertheless scientific research upset everything. The experience-

based claims of phrenologists were shown to be completely wrong.

Character was not indicated by brain size and shape because the

brain did not work like that. Nor did character break down in the

ways required by phrenological theory. So a certain head shape did

not mean what it was supposed to mean, nor was there any way it

could possibly do so. The system that millions of people

passionately believed in, and passionately acted upon, was totally

without foundation.

 

Note the problem: Experience led phrenologists and their clients to

believe in phrenology, just as experience leads astrologers and

their clients to believe in astrology. In each case the reasoning is

the same -- the interpretation seems to fit the client, therefore

the system works. But the reasoning was wrong for phrenology, so why

should it be any different for astrology? Might astrology be just a

figment of our poor reasoning skills?

 

NQQ6.4

One obvious distinction is that phrenology was around for not much

over 100 years before its decline, whereas astrology has been around

for thousands of years, continuing to appeal to people in a huge

range of cultures. What would you say about this?

 

Researchers: One answer is that an idea has free reign only up to

the point where scientific methods become capable of testing it,

which gave astrology a head start. Thus much of the necessary

methodology for testing astrology was not available until the 19th

and 20th centuries, and the really decisive technology (computers)

has been available for only two or three decades. An example similar

to phrenology is that of Freudian ideas, whose initial untestability

steadily disappeared as methods improved. Another answer is that

physiognomy, the forerunner of phrenology, is as old as astrology.

If we see the relation between modern astrology (say post Alan Leo)

and traditional astrology as similar to that between phrenology and

physiognomy, the comparison is almost exact. In any case longevity

is irrelevant for our purpose -- ideas just as old and stable as

astrology, such as the geocentric view of the cosmos, the four

elements, planetary gods, alkahest (universal solvent), and the

philosopher's stone, have now all been overturned.

 

OQQ6.5

But if the claims of phrenology were wrong, how could experience

lead to the opposite belief? How could the experience of

practitioners and clients support non-existent effects?

 

Researchers: What matters here is that systems like phrenology and

astrology rest on correspondences, otherwise known as reasoning by

analogy, the assumption that things similar in some respects are

also similar in other respects. Thus a high forehead or a strong

Mercury indicates a strong intellect. The number four and the fourth

planet have the same qualities. Big handwriting indicates power and

dominance. Mars the red planet indicates blood, anger and war, and

by extension anything vaguely red, hot, or aggressive.

 

Reasoning by analogy seems at first sight to be similar to ordinary

reasoning. Size indicates strength, so a big man is stronger than a

small man. Loudness indicates activity, so a loud noise suggests

more danger than a faint noise. The difference is that these

statements involve clear causal links, so we have reason to believe

them. They do not claim to tell us anything new. By contrast,

reasoning by analogy involves no causal links. It requires only that

X correspond with Y in some way, from which correspondence we

supposedly discover something new. The problems should be obvious.

 

OQQ6.6

Such as?

 

Researchers: First, it is impossible to specify any two things, no

matter how dissimilar, that do not show some kind of correspondence.

A raven is like a writing desk because both cast shadows. But

knowing something about ravens does not necessarily tell us anything

about writing desks.

 

Second, we have no way of deciding between conflicting

correspondences. Are black cats lucky as in ancient Egypt or unlucky

as in medieval Europe? Is the keen edge of our intellect blunted by

over-use or sharpened? Is Mars unfortunate because red = blood (war)

or fortunate because red = blood (life)? Who can believe any

correspondence when it is so easily contradicted by another?

 

Third, our chances of being correct are not good. No longer do we

believe, as Aristotle did, that death can occur only at low tide. No

longer do midwives open the door to ease a painful labour. No longer

do doctors use the lungs of foxes, noted for strong respiration, to

cure asthma. No longer do alchemical ideas appear in chemistry

courses. In fact reasoning by analogy is generally so spectacularly

wrong that it survives in scientific textbooks only as an example of

fallacious reasoning.

 

NQQ6.7

But doesn't much of scientific thinking depend on analogy?

 

Researchers: Analogy can be a wonderful source of insight and

inspiration, and it can lead to exciting new ways of looking at

things. In science it has been an invaluable guide to the discovery

of new truth, as when Darwin was led to his theory of evolution by

considering the analogy between what nature does and what animal

breeders do, hence the name natural selection. But analogy is only

suggestive. It is not an arbiter of truth. Analogy cannot decide the

cause of AIDS, or the location of endangered whales, or the

longevity of a new romance, or whether the Earth is flat, square or

circular. For this we need an independent investigation.

 

OQQ6.8

But what if the correspondence actually exists?

 

Researchers: We still have problems because we are so bad at judging

correspondences. Even if the correspondence is strong, as between

human height and weight, we are still bad at judging it accurately.

We can also see correspondences where none actually exist, so a

system such as phrenology can seem to work even though it does not.

This is why researchers have to be so careful. They cannot afford to

be misled.

 

OQQ6.9

Please explain how we can see correspondences where none actually

exist.

 

Researchers: Consider the Draw-A-Person test. You draw a person on a

sheet of blank paper, and the person's size, detail, clothing, and

so on, supposedly reveal your inner conflicts. This is reasoning by

analogy. Close-set eyes mean you have a suspicious nature. Big eyes

indicate paranoia. A big head means you worry about being clever.

This is an example of the correspondences that have been widely

accepted. Nearly everyone believes these particular ones. It is also

an example of the correspondences that have been critically

examined, and in this case dozens of studies have found them to be

wrong -- people with such features do not draw such pictures. But it

does not end there.

 

In one famous set of studies, groups of 56 college students were

given 45 drawings of a person from a Draw-A-Person test. Each

drawing was accompanied by six personality statements about the

drawer from which each student had to work out the meaning of

features such as head size. So they were rather like astrologers

trying to work out the meaning of a new chart factor, say a new

asteroid, using the traditional method of comparing charts with

their owners. But unknown to the students the personality statements

were deliberately unrelated to the drawings. For example the

statement "worried about being clever" appeared just as often for

small heads as for big heads.

 

So did the students see what was actually in the data, namely

nothing? Not at all. Nearly every student saw the correspondences

even though they did not exist in the data. Worse, they continued to

see them despite corrective strategies such as repeating the

exercise, sorting the drawings into piles for closer study, and even

when offered money for accuracy. Worst of all, when the statements

totally opposed the correspondences, so that "worried about being

clever" appeared only for small heads, never for big heads, the

students still saw them, albeit to a lesser extent.

 

In other words the students saw only what they expected to see. They

reasoned by analogy. The actual data (the only thing that mattered)

had almost no effect. Or as the late Professor Eysenck would

say, "my mind is made up, don't confuse me with facts." The

important point is that these studies could not have made it easier

to avoid seeing non-existent correspondences, yet the students still

failed miserably. So there is no reason to suppose that astrologers

do any better once their minds are focussed on astro symbolism --

and this process is only one of the many ways we make errors in our

reasoning.

 

OQQ6.10

Can you say something about these other errors?

 

Researchers: Reasoning errors are the focus of dozens of books and

thousands of published studies, where they are given intriguing

names like anchoring, Barnum effect, cognitive dissonance,

confirmation bias, Dr Fox effect, halo effect, hindsight bias,

illusory correlation (this is the one we just described),

misattribution, placebo effect, Pollyanna principle, Rumpelstiltskin

effect, regression effect, stacking the deck, and vividness

heuristic. And a fascinating lot they are.

 

For example the Dr Fox effect involves blinding you with style and

jargon rather than content (we just did exactly that). Cognitive

dissonance is the painful consequence of holding incompatible views -

- if we are committed to astrology then it is painful to find

evidence against it, so we search for confirmation, almost anything

will do, and ignore the painful bits. The Barnum effect is where we

read specifics into generalities, and is often thought to be the

most important error in astrology. But other errors can be just as

important, such as the placebo effect (it does us good if we think

it does), the Pollyanna principle (the power of positive thinking),

hindsight bias (afterwards we knew it all along), stacking the deck

(ask only confirming questions), safety in complexity (so even the

wrong chart fits), and vividness heuristic (judging by vividness not

content).

 

There are many more, all of them leading us to believe in seemingly

spot-on correspondences where none actually exist. They prevent us

learning from experience, a result that says it all. Perhaps the

cruellest blow is the absence of errors leading in the opposite

direction, which means we are stuck in a one-way street -- a point

to keep in mind when reading what astrologers say in your other

interviews.

 

OQQ6.11

But wouldn't prejudice, the rejection of astrology for emotional

reasons, be an error leading in the opposite direction?

 

Researchers: No, because we are talking about the reasoning errors

made by astrologers, who presumably are not prejudiced against

astrology. The only thing that might persuade astrologers to

disbelieve in astrology is the informed critical mind, which of

course is not a reasoning error but rather a defence against

reasoning errors. Fortunately anyone can have an informed critical

mind.

 

NQQ6.12

But don't you think it's a bit of a jump to then conclude that

everything in astrology can be attributed to reasoning errors? As

the great 19th century psychologist Herbert Spencer said, a belief

may appear entirely wrong, but nevertheless its very existence

implies that it contained (and might still contain) some small

amount of truth. Might you be in danger, as Johannes Kepler said, of

throwing out the baby with the bathwater?

 

Researchers: This is always a concern. But we still have to find

that small amount of truth, and we can only do that by being

properly critical. Ironically those who complain about throwing out

the baby tend to be those who offer no hints on how it might be

rescued from the bathwater. Not for them the grubby business of

being practical. Furthermore the cautious attitude prescribed by

Kepler is rarely present in astrology. Even supposedly serious

astrological publications like The Mountain Astrologer never hint

that astrology has severe problems. They give the impression that

all is well and that only prejudice stands in the way of astrology

being recognised. In their world bathwater does not even exist.

However, note how our subjective-objective distinction sorts out the

mess -- the baby is objective astrology (which needs to be true) and

the bathwater is subjective astrology (which does not need to be

true). But to return to your question:

 

Obviously no scientist wishes to reject an idea that later turns out

to be right. But it does happen. Nobody is infallible. The history

of science is as much the history of mistakes as of successes, as

when the idea of continental drift was initially rejected. But

ultimately mistakes are of no consequence because they are corrected

by other scientists and other studies. It may take time but it

happens in the end. Which is why science changes over time and

astrology generally does not.

 

NQQ6.13

Be that as it may, this still carries the implication that science

as it is right now contains mistaken views which are currently seen

as true. The ramifications of that are probably obvious enough.

 

Researchers: More misleading than obvious. Your argument seems to be

that "science contains mistakes, therefore science cannot be

trusted", which is like saying "the sea contains gold, therefore we

can all be rich" or "ideas about electrons have changed, therefore

power stations will no longer work." What matters here are not

mistakes as such but:

 

(1) The ability to find and correct mistakes. Scientific method

ensures that mistakes are recognised and corrected, whereas present

astrological method is nonfalsifiable (see 3.6, 4.4, 17.5) and

therefore ensures the opposite. By definition, no astrology book

could give agreed procedures for finding errors.

 

(2) Their magnitude. What matters is not whether science contains

mistakes, or whether the sea contains gold, or whether ideas about

electrons have changed, but whether the outcome is enough to

decisively affect our trust in science, or our becoming rich, or our

being suddenly without electricity. Here the outcome in each case

does not start to be even weakly decisive. Compare this with

objective astrology, where so much has been disconfirmed that we

might reasonably distrust all of it. Nobody denies the practical

success of science, but plenty of people deny the practical success

of astrology

 

NQQ6.14

But how does this self-correcting tendency of science help the

individual, fallible, scientist right now?

 

Researchers: It helps in two ways. (1) By ensuring that current

information is the best available until replaced by something

better. Current information may be perfectly adequate (Newton got us

to the moon) even though a better theory (Einstein) came along.

 

(2) By increasing their confidence in the collective effort, where

other scientists act as quality controllers (which is how we

identified problems in cold fusion). The problem faced by each

individual scientist is how best to choose a path between the Scylla

of embracing falsity and the Charybdis of rejecting truth. In

practice the only solution is to be as good a researcher as

possible. Be hugely careful, consider alternatives, and act on

criticism. This will not prevent mistakes but it will make them much

less likely. Of course, if a claim has failed our most careful

scrutiny, then we are obliged to say so, just as we would be obliged

to change our views if better scrutinies than ours showed us to be

mistaken. Scientists are just as interested as astrologers in

possible links between cosmic conditions and terrestrial life even

though such links might well have an entirely non-astrological basis.

 

To return to your earlier point (6.12), researchers supposedly in

danger of throwing out the baby with the bathwater might also hold

that it is up to astrologers to show (as opposed to merely

speculate) that the baby actually exists. To merely speculate that

the baby exists is of course futile because we need only speculate

the opposite to create a gridlock. On the other hand, others might

feel that the existence of a possible baby is a challenge to be

addressed, which is fine if they then take up the challenge rather

than blame others for not doing so.

 

Unfortunately this is invariably what astrologers do. When faced

with negative findings they are quick to invent faults, for example

they may claim that the test was inappropriate or not sensitive

enough, but they never spell out what an appropriate or sensitive

test should consist of. They curse the darkness but seem incapable

of lighting candles. Note the problem -- until astrologers generally

make an effort to overcome this entrenched occupational hazard, they

can hardly expect to be taken seriously.

 

7. Intuition, unconscious processes, ESP

 

OQQ7.1

You have focussed on reasoning errors. But many astrologers would

claim that successful chart reading isn't possible without some

degree of intuition. Might this avoid reasoning errors?

 

Researchers: No. Intuition has been a rich source of inspiration in

all fields of human endeavour including science. Yet it can be

totally unreliable simply because it is not self-verifying. We have

no way of resolving opposing intuitions except by reasoning. So

intuition does not avoid reasoning errors. Furthermore, the golden

rule to consider the whole chart is immediately broken if we select

a focus, yet this is what intuition encourages us to do. Astrologers

generally seem unaware of this conflict. (See also 7.8)

 

OQQ7.2

But is intuition really so unreliable? I know quite a few

astrologers who would disagree with you.

 

Researchers: Their disagreement with us might be more persuasive if

they did not disagree so spectacularly among themselves. If their

intuitions were in fact reliable, the disagreement between

astrologers, between astrological schools, and between traditions

(Arabian, Aztec, Burmese, Chinese, Hindu, Jewish, Mayan, Tibetan,

Western and so on, excluding purely cultural differences), should

not exist.

 

But astrologers are here in the same boat as palmists,

phrenologists, physiognomists, numerologists, and the readers of

cards, colours, tea leaves, and so on. Such people frequently claim

to rely on intuition, as if this somehow allowed them to home in on

the truth despite the disagreement between astrologers on how to

read charts, between palmists on how to read hands, between

numerologists on how to read numbers, and so on. They are like

mechanics who claim that intuition allows successful repairs to cars

despite having no workshop manuals.

 

To be sure, our intuitions, for all their unreliability, serve us

well in everyday life. To adopt alternatives would be unrealistic.

Nobody seeks formal arguments to decide between strawberry and

vanilla ice cream, and most errors are of little consequence. It

would also be incapacitating -- life is simply too short. But this

does not alter the fact that intuitions are unreliable. Just take a

look at selection interviews, which rely for their success on the

interviewer's intuition. Here many hundreds of studies are virtually

unanimous in their findings -- interviewers frequently disagree

completely with each other, e.g. the same candidate can be rated top

by one and bottom by another. So much for the supposed benefits of

intuition.

 

OQQ7.3

The word "intuition" is often used quite loosely, so maybe we should

define exactly what we are talking about.

 

Researchers: In psychology the word "intuition", also called insight

or hunch or gut feeling, refers to the method of arriving at a

conclusion, not to any property of the conclusion itself. The key

features of intuition are: (1) Everything happens in our head. (2)

Answers pop up out of nowhere, especially after a rest period, so we

end up knowing but without knowing how. (3) We are usually confident

of being right. (4) We may be right but we can also be spectacularly

wrong even though it still feels right.

 

However, there is no reason to believe that an answer which pops up

has actually come from nowhere, or that ESP is involved (at least

not during a chart reading). Instead the evidence suggests that such

answers are largely based on previous experience. The relevant

experience may not be quickly remembered or even remembered at all,

so the rest period in (2) can be essential to allow for unconscious

retrieval and unconscious processing of possibilities. Thus the

supposedly effortless and unanalysable nature of intuition means

nothing -- driving a car requires endless decisions of exactly this

nature, but judged by our first fumbling steps at learning to drive

they clearly owe little if anything to intuition as traditionally

conceived as "knowing without knowing how".

 

More on the unconscious. Due to a process known as priming, things

not important enough to form a conscious memory can still affect our

later actions, so they work without us knowing. We see or hear

something that seems trivial, so we forget it (that is, we have no

conscious memory of it), nevertheless it can stay behind the scenes

to subtly affect our later judgement and decisions. So we end up

being affected but without knowing how. Priming is probably behind

much of what is traditionally seen as intuition.

 

Conscious problem solving (i.e. high cortical arousal) narrows the

pool of possible ideas and suppresses our unconscious workings,

which is another reason why the rest period (i.e. low cortical

arousal) can be essential. If having gone to sleep on a problem we

wake up to find the answer mysteriously before us without effort,

this is intuition at work. Sleeping, or doing nothing, has worked

better than thinking furiously. Most scientists including ourselves

have had many such experiences.

 

OQQ7.4

What if there is no rest period, as in a chart reading?

 

Researchers: If there is no rest period, intuition can still apply,

the main feature here being a quick confident conclusion based on a

small (and therefore seemingly inadequate) number of clues. Studies

using problems with known clues and known answers have revealed two

underlying dimensions, namely clues (few-many) and answers (correct-

incorrect). The dimensions are independent, so correctness is

generally unrelated to number of clues, which is not what we might

expect. Getting the right answer also increases with IQ but only

slightly.

 

Interestingly, a person's position on these two dimensions seems to

be inherent. Thus a person can be few-correct or many-correct, or

few-incorrect or many-incorrect, just like any personality trait,

where correct = intuitive and incorrect = non-intuitive. These are

not rigid categories, so most people are a shade of grey. Intuition

is not a yes/no quantity but something we have more of or less of.

 

These two dimensions also align with the personality dimensions of

tough-tender mindedness (few-many clues), and emotionally stable-

anxious (correct-incorrect answers). Non-intuitives tend to be

tender-anxious. Intuitives tend to be tough-stable (also creative

and unconventional). On this basis the genuinely intuitive chart

reader is tough, unemotional, and uses only a few chart factors.

This is so different from the warm caring emotional (and therefore

non-intuitive) stereotype using the whole chart that we might doubt

whether intuition really does play a part in chart reading. Even if

it did, it could only work if the chart factors thereby selected

actually had the meanings they are said to have, which (given the

research results to date) seems doubtful.

 

In any case, the bottom line is that unconscious processes are as

fallible as conscious processes, which is why intuition (despite our

confidence) is not necessarily correct. Even self-proclaimed

psychics cannot tell when their intuitions are correct, otherwise

they would rule the world. No wonder that intuition has been defined

as the strange instinct that can tell us we are right even when we

are wrong.

 

NQQ7.5

You mentioned the need for prior experience, and that people rarely

have intuitions about things they have no experience of such as the

moons of Saturn. But quite a few people have predicted and described

life on other planets on the basis of what would seem to be "leaps

of intuition." What (if anything) do you think this tells us about

the need for prior experience?

 

Researchers: Since the time of the visionary scientist Emanuel

Swedenborg (1688-1772), many hundreds of intuitives, psychics and

mediums have documented such leaps in hundreds of books -- see

Martin Gardner's The New Age: Notes of a Fringe Watcher (Prometheus

Books 1988), pages 252-263 on Psychic Astronomy. The results are

generally glowing descriptions of exotic landscapes, undiscovered

moons, and abundant life (usually hominoid), most of them

conflicting and all of them wrong. We now know that the other

planets are not like that. The supposed leaps of intuition were to

no avail. They produced only heroic delusions. So in this case the

results amply confirm the need for prior experience.

 

NQQ7.6

Has any research been done into the reliance of astrologers on

intuition?

 

Researchers: The use of intuition by astrologers has not been

systematically studied. One 1960 survey of 250 professional or semi-

professional astrologers (mostly in the USA) found that over half

claimed to use intuition in their chart readings, which of course

does not prove that they did or that it was useful or accurate.

Nevertheless this still leaves a substantial proportion who claimed

not to use intuition.

 

NQQ7.7

You have argued that the astrologer's reasoning errors make it

unlikely that they will learn anything valid from doing chart

readings for clients. But surely this experience has to be good for

something.

 

Researchers: Experience of people can make us more astute, and more

aware of cold-reading cues, allowing us to make better judgements in

ways that have nothing to do with astrology. Experience can also

bring insight, and the bigger the similarity between problem and

experience the better the insight. Consider this interesting test

made in 1945:

 

Six laboratory-raised chimpanzees are put one at a time into a cage

containing a stick. Outside beyond reach there is food. Will they

use the stick to get it? Each animal is given half an hour. The

first four have no history of stick-using, and in each case the

answer is no. The fifth has used sticks before and gets the food

within 12 seconds. The sixth has no history of stick-using and

reaches for the food without success. After four minutes his

thrashing arm brushes the stick and moves the food slightly. He

stops, pushes the stick against the food, and sees it move. A few

more trials and the food is his. The four unsuccessful animals are

then given sticks to play with for the first time in their lives.

After three days the use of sticks is old hat. The food test is then

repeated, and all get the food within seconds. Conclusion: there is

no insight that does not go back to actual experience.

 

Of course if our experience is illusory due to our reasoning errors,

then so is our insight. Furthermore, the insight that brings a truly

creative achievement may come only after months or years of

uneventful labour and general floundering. Thus Newton did not

suddenly happen on the law of gravitation in his mother's orchard.

Instead it came "by thinking on it continually."

 

NQQ7.8

All of which actually suggests an important role for unconscious

processes.

 

Researchers: Yes, just as in intuition. But we should remember that,

as in intuition, unconscious processes are just as fallible as

conscious ones. The role of unconscious processes was shown by an

ingenious study in 1990 in which subjects were presented with

numerous items like the following. Imagine you are doing a crossword

puzzle. You have to guess a certain word, for which you are given

two sets of clues:

 

(1) Bird. Pipe. Road. (2) Goat. Pass. Green.

 

Only one of the sets is correct. What is the word? If you cannot

guess the word, which is the correct set of clues? (We tell you the

answers in a moment.)

 

The test seems completely bizarre and meaningless. Unsurprisingly,

only 4% of subjects could guess the word, yet (and this is the

interesting part) no less than 67% picked the correct set. Why? In

each case the correct set of clues had an association with the

target word, so it was coherent, and the other set had no

association with the target word, so it was incoherent. It seems

that the subjects perceived the coherence unconsciously, which

activated the relevant mnemonic networks, which kept on working

until the outcome reached awareness as an intuition or gut feeling.

They knew without knowing why. In this case the correct set of clues

is (2) and the word is Mountain.

 

The same principle suggests that an astrologer will select from a

chart those factors that are the most coherent, which in effect

could mean ignoring the whole chart in favour of isolated factors.

To the extent that different schools disagree on what factors to use

they will also tend to disagree on what is most coherent, in which

case their respective intuitions are likely to be unhelpful.

 

PS. If you cannot see any connection between Mountain and Green,

think of alpine meadows and mountain greenery

 

NQQ7.9

Does this mean, do you think, that astrologers should try to

interpret charts on a purely linear non-intuitive basis, as a

computer program might?

 

Researchers: Not necessarily. It would depend on whether the aim was

subjective astrology or objective astrology. If the former, then

coherence (which in effect would narrow the range of options shown

by the chart) might in some cases be counter-productive. It might

stifle discussion. But what astrologers could do is look at the

strategies used by top experts in other fields. Various studies have

found that ordinary people tend to use intuition and naive

reasoning, whereas experts gather information systematically, use

systematic decision rules, use sound foundations such as empirical

evidence and empirical equations, keep careful track of hits and

misses, and remain alert for improvements.

 

For example one recent study looked at experts recognized by their

peers as being the best in auditing, business management, livestock

judging, nursing, personnel selection, or soil judging, all areas

where there are well-known proven principles and systematic

feedback, which is not true of astrology. These top experts had

several characteristics that set them apart from lesser experts.

They could home in on the relevant information, were always up to

date with the latest developments, and knew which problems to tackle

and which to avoid. More importantly, they also used strategies

designed to overcome reasoning errors. For example they sought

feedback from associates, learnt from past successes and failures,

used aids such as written records to avoid judgement biasses,

focussed on avoiding really bad mistakes rather than on being

exactly right, and solved large problems by dividing into parts and

then reassembling the partial solutions.

 

OQQ7.10

You mentioned (in 7.3) there are reasons for believing that ESP is

unlikely to be involved in a chart reading.

 

Researchers: At first sight it might seem that ESP (if it exists)

could account for all astrological predictions that are difficult to

explain yet appear to be correct, whether personal, electional,

horary, or whatever. Similarly it might seem that ESP could also

explain any successes due to palmistry, tea leaf reading, and so on.

But if ESP was really responsible, planets would be interchangeable

with tea leaves, and we would have no grounds for claiming that such

methods are valid in themselves. In fact the study of astrology

would become irrelevant, which presumably is not a view supported by

astrologers. This alone is good reason for believing that astrology

is not merely ESP in disguise.

 

Furthermore we should recognise that ESP can be defined as not the

result of any means we know of. So if an outcome can be explained by

normal intuitive processes in the brain, no matter how mysterious

they may seem, we are not entitled to invoke ESP. We can invoke ESP

only if all other explanations can be ruled out, which would require

safeguards that are generally never present during a chart reading.

 

OQQ7.11

Are you saying that ESP could never be involved in a chart reading?

 

Researchers: Parapsychologists have explained such ESP effects as

may occur in terms of two models. In the reduction of sensory-noise

model, the key is relaxation and a constant low-level sensory input.

If the subject is relaxed, hears white noise, and sees only a

featureless warm glow, sensitivity to ESP (should it occur) begins

only after 15-20 minutes of habituation to these conditions. That

is, under conditions of unvarying sensory input it takes 15-20

minutes for the brain to stop attending to the senses and become

attentive to internal mental events instead. But if the astrologer

is having sensory inputs, as is necessarily the case when reading

charts for clients, habituation cannot occur and ESP is unlikely to

manifest.

 

Alternatively, in the reduction of bias-and-rigidity model, the key

is the absence of preoccupations and constraints. ESP can then be

triggered by need, e.g. to avoid a not-consciously recognised

hazard, but not too much need, which produces stress and impairs

performance. If the subject is preoccupied, e.g. with finishing

before the next client arrives, or is constrained, as is necessarily

the case when addressing particular issues for clients, ESP is

unlikely to manifest.

 

In both cases, contrary to what some astrologers have claimed, the

process of reading charts, or focussing on mandalas, seems not

conducive to ESP, at least not in the presence of clients.

Nevertheless, if astrologers could consistently score above chance

under conditions where ordinary explanations could be ruled out,

then ESP would have to be considered, even though we have no reason

to suppose that ESP would be any less fallible than our ordinary

senses. But the prospects do not seem promising, given that a direct

test of top psychic readers found them to be no more accurate than

matched non-psychics.

 

OQQ7.12

Could you describe this test?

 

Researchers: It was a remarkable study finished in 1988 that took

five years. It monitored a total of more than 130 readings by the

top 12 counselling psychics in the Netherlands, and then rated their

accuracy against matched groups of non-psychics. Typically each

reading involved 60-90 statements spread over personality (35%),

general circumstances including occupation (25%), relationships

(15%), and physical matters such as health (25%), much the same as

for a typical astrology reading. Over 10,000 statements were

obtained, of which 10% were sufficiently specific to be tested, of

which 14% turned out to be correct, i.e. only about 1.4% of all

statements were both specific and correct. No difference in hit rate

was observed between psychics or between psychics and non-psychics.

It was concluded that psychics were no more accurate than non-

psychics, but their sensitivity to human ills and their huge

experience (their own lives were often traumatic) still made them

useful counsellors.

 

EQQ7.13

What might this mean for astrology?

 

Researchers: It would seem to deny that intuition and ESP (or at

least claimed ESP) could play a useful role in the reading of

charts, though intuition might play a useful role in the reading of

clients. But regardless of whether astrologers use intuition, they

are in effect claiming that chart factors have real intrinsic

meanings as opposed to ones imagined by the ancient Greeks, and that

their permutations can be accurately disentangled by astrologers as

opposed to the mere appearance of disentangling.

 

In fact some astrologers leave us in no doubt that chart factors

have real intrinsic meanings. For example Charles Carter, the

leading British astrologer of the 1930s, says "Practical experiment

will soon convince the most sceptical that the bodies of the solar

system indicate, if they do not actually produce, changes in: (1)

Our minds. (2) Our feelings and emotions. (3) Our physical bodies.

(4) Our external affairs and relationships with the world at large"

(Principles of Astrology 1925 page 14). Similarly Julia and Derek

Parker tell students that "over the years ... your own files will

increasingly convince you ... of the basic and valuable truths to be

found in the birth chart" (Parker's Astrology: The Definitive Guide

to Using Astrology in Every Aspect of Your Life 1991 page 9).

Nothing here about astrology needing intuition before it can work.

 

But we need not rely on selected quotes. You have interviewed many

astrologers. Generally speaking, did they have any doubts that chart

factors have real intrinsic meanings?

 

OQQ7.14

There is a range of opinion. Certainly, all the astrologers I

interviewed believe that they can access real information from the

chart, but views differ as to how this happens. Some see astrology

as an empirical science where each chart factor has an intrinsic

meaning, much as H2O always means water to a chemist. Others

consider that meaning does not inhere in chart factors per se, but

is created by the coming together of chart factors with the

astrologer's mind, so H2O could mean Antarctica, emotion, making

tea, ships, or anything else with watery connections. These are

extreme positions, with most astrologers existing at points on the

spectrum between them. So do astrologers think that chart factors

have real intrinsic meanings? Some do, some don't, and most are

somewhere in the middle.

 

Researchers: The issue boils down to our distinction between

objective and subjective astrology, so it is good to see how well it

agrees with your astrologers' responses. Some believe that chart

factors have real meanings, so theirs is objective astrology. Some

do not, so theirs is subjective astrology. Others try for both,

quoting scientific evidence if positive but ignoring it if negative.

Astrologers can check their position by asking the questions listed

in the discussion of Figure 1.

 

OQQ7.15

Part 1 has looked at questions that science raises about astrology

in principle. Part 2 will look at some of the research that has been

carried out to test astrology in practice.

 

Click here for Part 2 (requires two downloads plus one more for the

index)

 

>From www.astrology-and-science.com Click here to return to

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