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I have been to astrologers couple of times. Once, whatever he said worked. Not sure if it is a coincidence. Does astrology work?

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    "I predict you will have a positive day very soon". Disprove that!
    – Sklivvz
    Apr 22, 2011 at 12:03
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    You are right that there's more than coincidence to predictions that seem to work. Cold reading, vague statements (see the prediction of our famous astrologer Sklivvz, above), etc. However none of the "working" methods include reading the Stars, and most of them include reading humans. Good call on tagging Psichology :)
    – user288
    Apr 22, 2011 at 12:08
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    The dating site OkCupid likes to use the astrological chart in their blog, OkTrends as a control group. image of the chart
    – DampeS8N
    Apr 22, 2011 at 15:30
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    I think this is subjective depending on your definition of "work". Can the question be updated with a specific example? Apr 22, 2011 at 19:29
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    If you payed your astrologers, I'm pretty inclined to recognize it worked Apr 23, 2011 at 7:50

6 Answers 6

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Dr. Phil Plait, and Astronomer, has a great write up that debunks astrology (I cannot encourage you enough to read that page (or the google cache of it).) Sadly his web page seems to be down, so here’s the Google Cache copy of the same page. After a long discussion and research (with sources), he concludes with

There is no force, known or unknown, that could possibly affect us here on Earth the way astrologers claim. Known forces weaken too fast, letting one source utterly dominate (the Moon for gravity, the Sun for electromagnetism). An unknown force would allow asteroids and extrasolar planets to totally overwhelm the nearby planets.

Astrologers tend to rely on our ability to remember hits and forget misses. Even an accurate prediction may be simple chance.

Study after study has shown that claims and predictions made by astrologers have no merit. They are indistinguishable from chance, which means astrologers cannot claim to have some ability to predict your life's path.

There is harm, real harm, in astrology. It weakens further people's ability to rationally look at the world, an ability we need now more than ever.

Now let's look at other places.

If you want to look at this scientifically though, the first questions to ask: By what mechanism does this work? Why are predictions always very vague? And if the questions are specific, why are they no better than cold reading?

Emily Lu from the Palomar observatory (another Astronomy site) makes these great observations.

With the scientific knowledge that we have gained in recent history, there is little reason to place much trust in the notion that the Sun, Moon, or planets will affect your day to day life. Five thoughts:

1) Distances. As anyone who has taken introductory physics should know, the force of gravity goes with the inverse square of the distance... i.e., the further a body is from you, the less it will affect you. Remember how far away Earth is from the Sun, Moon, and planets (hint: MILLIONS of miles). Though the person who delivered you at birth may be much less massive than any celestial body, they are much closer and would certainly affect you more than the positions of the planets.

2) Other influences. For argument’s sake, let’s say that there is some unknown force that far-away celestial bodies do exert. The laws of physics have yet to be completely understood, so I’ll concede that it may be possible that there is something that works independently of distance and might influence the lives of people. But if that force is not distance dependent, why aren’t stars, galaxies, quasars, or black holes included in astrological forecasts?

3) Uranus, Neptune and Pluto. The three outermost planets were only discovered within the past three centuries. How does that work with the claim that astrologers make about the accuracy of their art for previous times?

4) Precession of the Earth. Due to the slight wobbling of the Earth’s axis, the current position of objects in the zodiac circle are no longer consistent with the tenets of astrology set up thousands of years ago. Your "sun sign" is actually currently shifted over by one (i.e., a Leo is really a Cancer).

5) Build me a house of ham. If you’ve thought about the human reproductive process, you know that a baby spends about 9 months gestating in the mother’s womb before it is born. Why, then, does your birth time matter? Shouldn’t it really be the time of conception that would affect who the baby is to become? Or is it that the muscular lining of the mother protects the fetus from all external forces? In that case, shouldn’t a ham enclosure do the trick?

James Randi has a great video on the subject as well.

Also, here is an old video from Carl Sagan's Cosmos series that deals with Astrology. Note how he is reading the same astrology sign from multiple papers.

For some humour on the subject, check out this comic (not totally relevant, but funny none the less since I mentioned Carl Sagan).

Keep in mind, any sort of "debunking" of this fervent wish by believers will meet with resistance. There will be explanations and rationalizations, but much like any "psychic", there is no distinguishing this from chance, or the art of cold reading (should you be visiting an astrologer). Confirmation bias will do the rest for you.

Also, keep in mind that astrology has tried to legitimize itself in complexity. Thus there is no single one answer or smoking gun that can be used to talk about it. Rather, a myriad of answers are required to fully understand what is going on. The human brain's pattern recognition software is poor in this sense, and that is why people will fall for this.

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    Okay, I'll play along. :) 1. Run the equation for gravitational attraction. Numbers don't lie. 2. Oh, they move much faster than anything in our solar system. Just so "they" know. 3. So how do they account for the fact that it isn't any more accurate than it was before, which is to say, not any more accurate than cold reading? 4. Doesn't address anything. 5. Outright lie unless you are saying that your birthtime correlates 100% with your actual birthtime. Can't argue that sort of circular argument. Apr 22, 2011 at 15:10
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    Ah, gotcha. Sometimes it's hard to think like someone who actually swallows some of this codswollop. :) Apr 22, 2011 at 15:51
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    In science, you always have two components to a phenomenon. First is a plausible mechanism, second is an actual experimental verification. Scientists are willing to wait and see if only one of the two is provided (Superconductivity was discovered some decades before a plausible mechanism was found. Bose-Einstein condensation was postulated decades before its experimental realization). Astrology, however, lacks both. There is no plausible mechanism, and there is also no observable verification.
    – Lagerbaer
    Apr 22, 2011 at 17:51
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    @Lager ...or you can first have an unexplained phenomenon and then a theory. It works both ways. The only thing you need to have is a phenomenon - there are always unexplained phenomena in science :-) My point is that before attempting explanation you should verify that there is a phenomenon at all. Without that its really hard to come up with a possible theory.
    – Sklivvz
    Apr 22, 2011 at 19:06
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    "Real astrologer"? That's an oxymoron if I ever heard one! ;) Apr 23, 2011 at 15:06
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There are two claims astrologers make. First, that they can use it to predict the future: Google

Second, that your zodiac sign and date of birth tell something about your character.

The first claim is so inane that I do not think it needs much debunking. It is a mixture of self-fulfilling prophecies and overly vague statements. And, more often than not, it simply fails. Shouldn't astrologers otherwise be able to foresee natural disasters with astonishing precision? It is noteworthy that a lot of astrologers adhering to the second claim shun the first claim in an attempt to strengthen their credibility.

The second claim is easily debunked in experiment: Here is Derren Brown doing a nice little experiment: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=haP7Ys9ocTk

In brief: He writes "personal readings" for his test subjects and asks them to rate the accuracy of these readings. His readings get extremely high accuracy ratings (80 - 100 %), but it turns out that he has provided everyone with exactly the same reading. This is because he uses so called Barnum statements, also called the Forer effect (The Wikipedia article has a link to the original work by Forer).

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  • I think Carl Sagan (IIRC) did the same experiment way back.
    – Sklivvz
    Apr 22, 2011 at 15:58
  • Sure. It is the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about how to do a controlled experiment regarding astrology.
    – Lagerbaer
    Apr 22, 2011 at 16:45
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    The demonstration that you can fool people doesn't mean everybody's always fooling people. The claim about "claims astrologers make" needs some backing up, to make sure you aren't inadvertently creating a straw man. I'm not real sure about claims to predict the future; what have you seen about it? Apr 23, 2011 at 1:58
  • Edited that. Although you are right in that these experiments don't prove that everybody is always fooling people, but extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. Otherwise doing simple card tricks would be prove that I can read minds...
    – Lagerbaer
    Apr 23, 2011 at 2:07
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A guy named Shawn Carlson conducted a study, published in Nature on December 5, 1985. Unfortunately, that link is a paywall. There's a description available, unfortunately not as authoritative. Essentially, he let astrologers test themselves, by setting up a test where they would use natal charts to predict peoples' scores on standardized personality tests. He picked thirty astrologers that were considered good by their peers. He appears to have given astrologers every chance to prove themselves right.

As people reading this might guess, the results were indistinguishable from chance.

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You may find this issue of the Zetetic Scholar relevant. It contains an interesting article on the "Mars effect". This revolves around sTARBABY.

  1. No. Astrology doesn't work.
  2. The links above discuss a scientific investigation of the influence of Mars on sports performance and a discussion of the sTARBABY case. The Zetetic Scholar was set up by one of the founders of CSICOP (Marcello Truzzi) to encourage communication between advocates and counter-advocates of the paranormal. The article includes commentary by IJ Good, Hans Eysenck, Piet Hein Hoebens etc.
  3. And no. Astrology doesn't work.
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  • For some reason I cannot access the site. Can you paraphrase their main point?
    – Lagerbaer
    Apr 23, 2011 at 0:24
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It may also be worth pointing out that your familiar "astrological sign" ignores precession so to the extent the question relates to the "popular" astrology of newspapers and so forth, even if there were a mechanism, the predictions would be significantly off-base. I believe that even "serious" astrologers rely on the traditional "houses" and would be subject to the same bad data.

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No, astrology, Western or Indian, especially the part that deals with predictions, has no scientific basis. The scientific community considers it as pseudoscience i.e., it resembles science but is based on fallacious assumptions.

From An Indian Test of Indian Astrology by Jayant V. Narlikar:

Our Experiment

Our experiment was performed in the university city of Pune (formerly Poona) about 160 km (100 miles) southeast of Mumbai (formerly Bom­bay) in the state of Maharashtra, which is the second-largest in population and third-largest in area of India’s twenty-five states. Pune itself has a population of about 3.5 million.

For the experiment I was assisted by Professor Sudhakar Kunte from the Department of Statistics at Pune Uni­versity, Narendra Dabholkar from the Committee for the Eradication of Super­stitions, and Prakash Ghatpande a former professional astrologer who has subsequently turned into a critic of astrology.

Indian astrologers claim that they are able to tell intelligence from a person’s horoscope. So volunteers from the Committee for the Eradication of Superstitions went to different schools and collected the names of teenage school children rated by their teachers as mentally bright. They also collected names from special schools for the mentally handicapped. The destinies of these cases could hardly be more different, so they were ideal for testing the above claim. From the collected data we selected 100 bright and 100 mentally handicapped cases whose age distribution is shown on the next page.

Birth details were obtained from their parents because birth certificates are rare in India. Professional Indian astrologers routinely assume that birth details provided by parents are correct, so our procedure followed the norm. Each horoscope (birth chart) was calculated by one of us (PG) using commercial astrological software. All horoscopes were coded and stored in safe custody by Professor Kunte at Pune University, so that neither the experimenters (our group of four) nor the astrologers could know the identities of the individuals.

Conclusion

Our experiment with twenty-seven Indian astrologers judging forty horoscopes each, and a team of astrologers judging 200 horoscopes, showed that none were able to tell bright children from mentally handicapped children better than chance. Our results contradict the claims of Indian astrologers and are consistent with the many tests of Western astrologers. In summary, our results are firmly against Indian astrology being considered as a science.

From Shawn Carlson's A double-blind test of astrology:

CONCLUSIONS

...

We are now in a position to argue a surprisingly strong case against natal astrology as practiced by reputable astrologers. Great pains were taken to insure that the experiment was unbiased and to make sure that astrology was given every reasonable chance to succeed. It failed. Despite the fact that we worked with some of the best astrologers in the country, recommended by the advising astrologers for their expertise in astrology and in their ability to use the CPI, despite the fact that every reasonable suggestion made by the advising astrologers was worked into the experiment, despite the fact that the astrologers approved the design and predicted 50% as the "minimum" effect they would expect to see, astrology failed to perform at a level better than chance. Tested using double-blind methods, the astrologers' predictions proved to be wrong. Their predicted connection between the positions of the planets and other astronomical objects at the time of birth and the personalities of test subjects did not exist. The experiment clearly refutes the astrological hypothesis.

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