Social help Astrology
#1
Posted 2008-November-26, 02:38
Now as you all know, astrology is complete and utter nonsense, but on the other hand I didn't want to mess up the upto this point good atmosphere by pointing this out.
What would you have done?
#2
Posted 2008-November-26, 02:53
#3
Posted 2008-November-26, 03:13
Quote
I wouldn't say utter nonsense anyway. It's like being on a group where people are talking about God and saying:
Now as you all know, the existence of God is complete and utter nonsense
You can't prove it either way (the existence or non-existence). Zodiac signs (not the daily horoscope) are like the enneagrams of personality, some stuff will be true, some will not.
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
My YouTube Channel
#4
Posted 2008-November-26, 05:05
Usually people laugh when you say something like this. If most of the group doesn't take astrology really seriously this injects humor back into the situation (and might shut up the astrologer if in fact that person does take it seriously but most others do not). Of course, if you get a lot of blank stares it will be awkward, but at least now you know that you're the only one who doesn't believe the nonsense...
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#5
Posted 2008-November-26, 05:39
It is probably less explosive than the existence of God (as Hanoi compares to). There will be some who would get upset if you say that we all know that astrology is nonsense, but few will get upset about jokes about astrology.
#6
Posted 2008-November-26, 06:29
I attend a Yoga class. Mostly we do stuff that feels good but occasionally there is some background theory that strikes me as unlikely. It's OK.
#7
Posted 2008-November-26, 06:34
kenberg, on Nov 26 2008, 01:29 PM, said:
Interesting.
Btw, I was reassured by being told that virgos don't believe in astrology.
#8
Posted 2008-November-26, 09:42
When someone brings up (mundane) astrology, steer the conversation towards Chinese and then Mayan and then Egyptian star studies.
The best part of the conversation then slides into how people don't change, just circumstances. In this way, you lose the trite and get into what actually can tell you something about those with whom you associate...
#9
Posted 2008-November-27, 15:59
Believers in other supernatural activities, such as astrology, psychics, palm reading, etc., know that they are out of the mainstream. Also, these rarely form parts of someone's core belief system, the way religion does.
#10
Posted 2008-November-27, 17:28
Quote
What would you have done?
Offered instead of an astrological reading to read the bumps on the women's chests as a counter assessment-of-the-future technique.
#11
Posted 2008-November-27, 18:56
kenberg, on Nov 26 2008, 07:29 AM, said:
Gosh, I wonder if my parents got my birthday wrong.
Go along with it. The more analysis they put into the reading, the more they'll be telling YOU about what's going on in their subconscious.
Maybe they'll let slip an assumption or understanding they have about someone that you didn't previously know.
V
"gwnn" said:
hanp does not always mean literally what he writes.
#12
Posted 2008-November-27, 19:43
#13
Posted 2008-November-27, 20:06
Quote
Apparently I have never played with a Capricorn...
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
My YouTube Channel
#14
Posted 2008-November-27, 22:33
Gerben42, on Nov 26 2008, 03:38 AM, said:
Now as you all know, astrology is complete and utter nonsense, but on the other hand I didn't want to mess up the upto this point good atmosphere by pointing this out.
What would you have done?
I'd identify myself as a "skeptic" and suggest that instead, if there's someone in the group who really believes in astrology, what might be more interesting is to have that person discern each member of the group's zodiac sign from his/her personality.
Call me Desdinova...Eternal Light
C. It's the nexus of the crisis and the origin of storms.
IV: ace 333: pot should be game, idk
e: "Maybe God remembered how cute you were as a carrot."
#15
Posted 2008-November-28, 03:07
Hanoi5, on Nov 26 2008, 12:13 PM, said:
I agree with you that one should go with the flow but not with the provability of the matters.
God (at least the Christian one) is by definition unknowable by a mortal human's mind. Astrology, on the other hand, claims to be able to predict your daily fate depending on the time of your birth. So its predictions could be subjected to statistics and scientifically proved or disproved. I am not at all surprised that AFAIK nobody bothered to do it but it's still doable.
#16
Posted 2008-November-28, 03:26
Quote
People did bother and scientific results were as follows:
A professional horoscope fits the great majority of people and is interchangeable. For example they took the professionally made horoscope of some well-known person that people wouldn't want to be associated with (think evil dictators, serial killers, etc.), and let people believe that this was their personal horoscope especially made for them. 95% of the participants said the horoscope described them well.
They also let astrologers make predictions and then see if they came true. The predictions that came true were made in such a way that they would be true most of the time anyway. The very specific predictions rarely did.
Nostradamus' verses work in the same way. As they can be interpreted in many ways, you just have to wait for something to happen, and then point out that some verse predicts this.
Conclusion: Personal horoscopes are interchangeable, even astrologers think that the weekly horoscopes in the newspapers are nonsense, and astrological predictions about the future are like putting your money at number 12 in roulette, and then spinning the wheel until it hits 12, then pointing out that you've won.
Sorry if I've disillusioned you.
#17
Posted 2008-November-28, 04:29
Maybe the way to deal with the conversation is to try to confuse them with a paradox. Say something like "I'm an Aries, and they don't believe in astrology."
#18
Posted 2008-November-28, 05:40
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#19
Posted 2008-November-28, 09:36
http://alabe.com/freechart/
mine was more accurate than I care to admit...
#20
Posted 2008-November-28, 10:37
I would also go along with the flow (and have done so in the past)... but you might consider asking anyone purporting to do a chart whether they have accounted for the movement of the zodiac, over the past several thousand years. They do not, I understand, lie in the same relative places in the sky as they did when first identified... and of course the patterns we see are no longer exactly the patterns than our ancestors saw, because the stars all move relative not just to the earth, but also to each other.