ARIES (March 21-April 19): The interesting struggles you’ll wage in the coming weeks will require your vulnerability: showing up exactly as you are when you might rather fight or escape. Your warrior nature probably prefers a clear enemy or a definable problem you can confront, but the truer conquest will come from laying down your weaponry. I suggest you meet aggression with curiosity and engage chaos with receptive stillness. At least for now, your greatest strength will be to remain undominated by your own reactive impulses. Think of it as an advanced martial art.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): In accordance with astrological omens, I invite you to be inspired by this wisdom from artist Pablo Picasso: “I am always doing that which I cannot do in order that I may learn how to do it.” He’s proposing that we treat a lack of expertise not as an embarrassment, but as a doorway. Instead of waiting until we feel ready, trained and confident, he suggests we head into territory where we fumble, guess and feel awkward. Our discomfort may lead to gratifying growth. So I dare you to ask yourself whether there’s a capacity or skill you’d love to add to your repertoire but are too shy or timid to try. Then take small, imperfect steps toward it, trusting that each move will teach you how to do what once felt impossible.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Hummingbirds keep track of every flower they visit and know how long it will take each one to replenish its nectar. They maintain mental maps of many feeding sites and visit them on precise schedules. To ensure their survival, they can’t waste energy on flowers that aren’t ready yet. Your mind could work like this if you want it to, Gemini. Which people, places and projects need time to refill before you visit them again? Who have you been approaching too frequently, seeking their nectar before it has had time to regenerate? In the coming weeks, practice strategic patience with your resources. In your secret conversations with yourself, call yourself “Hummingbird.”
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Now is an auspicious time to declare a sweeping amnesty and observe a personal season of pardon. To the best of your ability, release your clenched feelings about people who have caused you pain. Banish blame! Purge any lingering resentment and regret that has curdled into self reproach. Celebrate atonement and absolution! Most vital of all, exonerate yourself. Shed the guilt you’ve carried for missteps and missed chances. And please offer yourself a sweet gift: a ritual of renewal.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): If you happen to be swallowed whole by a dragon or whale sometime soon, don’t freak out. It’s far preferable to being chomped into bits first, which absolutely won’t happen. You may indeed spend a brief spell inside the creature’s dark belly, but I confidently predict you will ultimately be deposited on the outside in one intact piece, after which you will only need to find your meandering way back home. The whole episode may be confounding or humbling, but I bet it will also scrub you free of a load of old karma.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Bees perform what scientists call a “waggle dance” to communicate the location of flowers to their hive-mates. But the directions are sometimes imprecise, and the apparent sloppiness actually helps the hive. It forces other bees to explore more broadly, discovering new food sources that the original bee missed. Perfect information would make them too efficient to be adaptable. Your precision is one of your gifts, Virgo, but right now I think you need strategic vagueness and fuzzy logic. Leave some directions unclear. Mistakes and misunderstandings might lead to discoveries that your perfect plans would have eliminated.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): In ancient Greek thought, kairos referred to the opportune moment. It meant the right timing, when circumstances aligned for action to be most effective. The term chronos, on the other hand, was about sequential time, which blindly marched forward without any regard for special moments or auspiciousness. Most of us are more or less hypnotized by chronos-consciousness. We measure our lives by calendar dates and external schedules. But in the coming weeks, Libra, I recommend you stay on high alert for kairos-rich pivots. For now, suspend inquiries like “Am I on schedule?” and ask, “Are the circumstances ripe?”
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Ravens are strongly motivated to engage in elaborate play: aerial acrobatics, complex games, sliding down snowbanks, and sharing food with non-relatives. These behaviors lack an immediate payoff, yet support learning, motor skill development and social relationships. They seem to be both emotionally rewarding and indirectly advantageous for survival and success over the long term. Let’s apply this to you, Scorpio. Let’s conclude that delight isn’t wastefully frivolous and that pleasure doesn’t need to justify itself through productivity. In the coming weeks, you may face pressure to explain or defend your joy, as if to prove it’s worth it in some utilitarian way. Refuse. Like the ravens, engage in purposeless beauty and fun simply because it feels so good.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Glaciologists studying ice cores can read Earth’s climate history going back 800,000 years. Each layer contains trapped air bubbles. These are time capsules that preserve the atmospheric composition of each moment. The ice remembers everything. You accumulate similar records, Sagittarius. Each of your experiences leaves its trace. And in the coming weeks, you will have extra access to these archived layers of your own history. Memories and patterns you thought were lost will surface with intriguing clarity. I hope you study these revelations to glean insight about your long-term patterns and cycles. It’s time to see the Big Picture.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Many people forget, but you know: Structure is the foundation for freedom, not a suppression of it. While others fantasize about escaping responsibility, you know that mastery is key to every emancipation. When properly practiced, your flair for discipline adds vigor as well as rigor. More than any other sign of the zodiac, you are adept at using limits to give unlimited possibilities their specific shape. I trust you will express all these Capricornian powers to the max in the coming weeks. People in your life need them even more than usual.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Horticulturists practice “deadheading.” They remove spent flowers from plants to encourage new vitality. Faded flowers drain energy that could go toward fresh growth. Plants that have been deadheaded produce more abundant blooms than those left to manage their own decay. I recommend a metaphorical version of this practice to you, Aquarius. You’ll be wise to deadhead your emotional garden. Certain attachments, once vibrant and nourishing, have expired. They’re not evil or wrong; they’re simply finished. It’s best not to keep directing precious energy toward maintaining their faded forms. With gratitude for the old beauty, clear the way for new beauty.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): For maximum safety, be as uninteresting as possible. Shun risks that might shake up your beliefs and avoid adventures that could expose you to people who aren’t similar to you. If you really want to be certain about preserving your security and stability, as I’m recommending, the surest method is to retreat to your power spot and do nothing at all. WAIT! STOP! Dear Pisces, everything I just said was pure misdirection! I was joking! In fact, the opposite is true. The true way to nurture genuine safety and security is to pursue what sparks your curiosity and lights up your zeal. And the coming days are likely to provide you with plenty of chances to do exactly that.
Homework: Imagine what life would be like if you half-dissolved a big fear. tinyurl.com/55zz55xx
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Aries mathematician Paul Erdos lived without a permanent address, traveling the world to collaborate with other mathematicians. He owned little, claiming “property is a nuisance.” His life was structured around doing mathematics and helping others do mathematics. He published over 1,500 papers, more than any mathematician in history. Was his minimalism a form of deprivation? I prefer to think it was liberation from everything that didn’t serve his purpose. What would your life be like if you eliminated things that don’t serve your deepest purposes, Aries? In the coming weeks, you have permission to be ruthless about your priorities. What are you maintaining out of habit rather than conviction? What burdens masquerade as responsibilities?
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): A friend told me about the creative-writing class he took with renowned poet Brenda Hillman. “I recall being in class,” he says, “and having the thought, wow, this teacher works far harder at teaching than I do at learning.” Dear Taurus, please don’t indulge in a similar laziness anytime soon. Your educational opportunities are currently richer than usual. To extract the full benefit, you must match the verve and vigor of your teachers. (PS: The teachers may or may not think of themselves as teachers. They could even be animals, rainstorms or ancestors.)
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Eastern monarch butterflies migrate annually from the American Midwest to central Mexico. The individuals who start the journey from Nebraska or Wisconsin die long before they reach the oyamel fir trees of Mexico. So do their children and their grandchildren. Their great-grandchildren finish the trip, though they have never been to the destination. Somehow they know where to go, navigating thousands of miles to trees they’ve never seen. Let’s apply this as a metaphor for you, Gemini. I suspect you are carrying navigational wisdom you didn’t realize you possessed. Inherited knowledge, encoded deep in your secret places, is ready to guide you. So pay attention to inexplicable certainties. Trust the directions that arrive without logical explanation.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): A large earthquake doesn’t relieve stress evenly along a fault. Instead, it creates zones where stress is reduced and others where stress increases, making future ruptures more likely. So the stress is redistributed, but not uniformly. According to my reading of the omens, Cancerian, you recently experienced a metaphorical shake-up. I suggest you identify where stress has grown and where it has dissipated. Your next moves should account for this new distribution of pressure. Some areas of your life are now more vulnerable, while others have become more stable. Read the landscape accurately before proceeding.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Songbirds like zebra finches practice their melodies while asleep. Their vocal muscles move in ways that mirror daytime singing. These replay patterns help young birds learn their songs and adults maintain and refine their tunes over time. I suspect that you are engaged in a similar type of learning, Leo. You are enhancing skills and uncovering insights while asleep and dreaming. Bonus! Even when awake, you’re absorbing clues on a subconscious level. Your deeper intelligence is gathering information you will need for your upcoming breakthroughs. Hooray for mysterious help!
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Architects who design concert halls know that perfect sound isn’t achieved through perfect smoothness. The best acoustics come from strategic irregularities, textured walls and angled surfaces that distribute vibrations in pleasing ways. Too much uniformity creates dead zones and echoes; too much chaos creates muddle. Pleasing resonance arises from organized complexity. In my estimation, Virgo, your life is currently too smooth in some areas and too haphazard in others. You may need more strategic irregularity. Consider introducing productive unpredictability into relationships that have become too routine. Add inventive structure to efforts that have become shapeless. Don’t aim for either total order or complete randomness. What will generate maximum beauty?
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Have you ever been ambushed by unexpected bursts of gratification emerging from subtle miracles? Maybe a loved one finally grasps a truth you’ve been trying to convey for eons. Or you feel balanced in a situation that once made you feel lopsided. Or you grasp, with shivers of awe, that you got uncanny spiritual guidance at a key crossroads. I foresee at least three such blessings for you in the coming weeks. To ensure you recognize them, don’t get distracted in the pursuit of splashy bonanzas and gaudy prizes. Be nimbly alert for subtle breakthroughs.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Poet Emily Dickinson rarely left her family home but bequeathed us a marvelous body of lyrical work as she roamed through vast inner worlds. Sci-fi novelist Octavia Butler rose early to write before long shifts at low-paid jobs, imagining visionary futures during her limited hours to be creative. Lucille Clifton raised six children while shaping poems of distilled, luminous insight, showing us how to summon fierce originality from a life crowded with responsibilities. Moral of the story: Buoyant power can flourish even when circumstances are limited. This lesson may be relevant for you in the coming weeks. If conditions seem imperfect or incomplete, trust that your resilience and adaptability can compensate for external obstacles. I have faith in your ability to generate useful beauty.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Our tongues are primed to heal astonishingly fast thanks to dense blood vessels, saliva’s repair proteins, and a rapid immune response. Wounds that would take more patience elsewhere can heal here in days. I suspect that your psyche now possesses your tongue’s high level of healing power. So I hope you will launch a phase of accelerated repair. Call on every possible form of therapeutic assistance, please!
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Now is an ideal time to clear out old romantic karma from the past. Please consider performing a DIY ritual to release painful memories, leftover grudges and long-standing hurts that keep tugging at your intimate connections. The coming weeks will also be a favorable phase to discard rigid beliefs about gender and dismantle anything that blocks you from experiencing full-bodied sensual and sexual delight. Expect to be freed from at least some energies that have limited your ability to explore fun and vigorous ways of savoring your desires.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): I suggest you adopt a new honorary title like “Charm Weaver” or “Emissary of Radiance” or “Beauty Whisperer.” Why? Because I hope it will help inspire you to stir up delightful play and lyrical mystery wherever you wander. For instance: Infuse your conversations with sparkling harmony and sly, graceful humor. Burst into whimsical songs, fling out extravagant compliments, pose clever questions that spark fresh ideas, and call attention to systems and relationships in your world that are functioning wonderfully well. Many perks will flow your way as you do.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Is there a dream from childhood that you’re ready to revive on a higher octave? Think of something you longed for before the world told you to be boringly realistic: an art you wanted to practice, a way you wanted to live, or the kind of person you hoped to become. The question isn’t “Can I go back and do it exactly the same?” but “What is the mature, wiser, present-day version of that dream?” You might write in your journal: “The childhood dream I’m ready to lift to a higher octave is ______,” and then add, “If I took one concrete step toward it, what would it be?”
Homework: Beam unconditional acceptance at a part of yourself you often criticize. tinyurl.com/777vvv777
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Many of you have a fraught relationship with discipline. You recognize you need it if you want a life rich with epic adventures. Yet you sometimes resist planning ahead or organizing your resources, fearing it might dampen your immediate pleasures. The problem is that when you skip the planning and organizing, the short-term fun you default to may turn out to be unsatisfying. That’s the challenging news. The encouraging news is that you’re now in a cycle when you can transform how you relate to discipline. I bet you can render some of those old patterns obsolete.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Gemologists evaluate opals less for flawless uniformity than for their mesmerizing play-of-color. They study how light interacts with a stone’s microscopic internal structure to produce vivid, shifting hues. The most prized opals aren’t necessarily the most perfect in shape, but the ones whose internal pattern and rainbow-like displays are most vibrant, varied and alive. This is a marvelous metaphor for you in the coming weeks. I hope you don’t obsess on consistency or smooth away your complications. Let the world see your play-of-color.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): “Dear Oracle: Why do we always have to start at the beginning? I’d much prefer just jumping into the middle of things. Right now, I would love to bypass all the tedious baby steps I’m being forced to take as I try to get some momentum going. Please slip me a few clues about how to fast-forward directly to the fun stuff. —Bored with the Groundwork.” Dear Bored: Your timing is perfect. The planetary omens say you are now authorized to vault over the preludes and prologues and dive right into the heart of the action.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Restoration ecologists work to revive damaged prairies. They’ve discovered that seeds of many native plants can lie dormant in the soil for years, waiting for the right conditions to germinate. If they remove invasive species and restore the land’s natural cycle of controlled fire, wildflowers long absent from the landscape spring back to life. With this metaphor in mind, Cancerian, consider what dormant possibilities may lie buried in your own psyche. What seeds did you plant long ago and then forget? What dreams or talents are waiting for you to clear away the choking overgrowth and create space for them to emerge? Old potentials may be patient, not dead.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Better than any other sign, you understand that ego and generosity can be collaborators rather than enemies. Your charismatic radiance is often a public service. When you express your interesting beauty, you give others permission to tap into their own luminosity. The world always craves your unique flavor of audacious joy, and especially now. The rest of us need your intense insistence that flair and flamboyance are forms of resistance against the forces that would diminish life’s splendor.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Many people struggle with what could be called “imagined ugliness,” a condition clinicians refer to as body dysmorphic disorder. It usually involves fixating on a supposed physical defect, or even on a flaw that exists only in one’s mind. I suspect that almost everyone carries a trace of this tendency, including you and me. The good news, though, is that the current astrological climate is ideal for you to at least partially shatter its spell. You are poised to transform your self-image so vigorously that you begin to regard yourself as a flawless exemplar of quirky, one-of-a-kind beauty.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): The Golden Gate Bridge, which is a few miles from my home, is painted continuously. Painters start at one end, work their way across, and by the time they reach the other side, it’s time to start over. The job is never finished; maintenance is the permanent condition. Some people find this depressing, but I find it oddly liberating. It means the bridge doesn’t have to achieve some final, perfect state. It just has to be tended. Similarly, you don’t have to fix everything once and for all, Libra. The relationships, projects and internal states you’re concerned about aren’t meant to reach completion. You shouldn’t worry about trying to finish what’s meant to be an ongoing practice. Just keep starting the cycle again.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Innovative theater director Viola Spolin was a Scorpio. She taught that the best scenes emerge when the actors avoid trying to control outcomes. Instead, they fully commit to the reality they’re creating together. Spontaneous responses are their gold standard. Let’s make this a keynote for you in the coming weeks. Your assignment is to give yourself heartily to improvisation. The most interesting magic will happen as you relax into the collaborative process, trusting it to guide you toward beauty and meanings none of you could have scripted alone.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Musicologists distinguish between “perfect pitch” and “relative pitch.” A person with perfect pitch can sing or identify a specific note without hearing any other music beforehand. Relative pitch is the ability to recognize musical notes in relation to other notes. In the coming weeks, Sagittarius, relative pitch will be a more useful metaphor for you than perfect pitch. Don’t insist on perfect clarity about what’s right and wrong, beautiful and ugly, worthy and unworthy. Instead of obsessing on fixed standards, practice relational discernment. How does this choice feel compared to that one? How does a person behave in this context versus another? For you right now, truth lives in the intervals and connections.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The best way to eliminate a bad habit is to replace it with a good one. Now is an excellent time to acquire more expertise in this art. Start by choosing a specific habit that drains your energy, time or self-respect. Then identify what that habit is secretly trying to give you, like comfort, distraction or a sense of control. Your mission is to find a healthier behavior that offers a similar payoff without the damage. For example, maybe you go online and binge-scroll through bad news because you imagine it soothes your anxiety. Instead of that, read an uplifting book or listen to serene music for a while. Be concrete: When the itchy habit hits, what exactly will you do as an alternative?
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): In 1905, twenty-six-year-old Albert Einstein worked full-time as a clerk in a Swiss patent office. During his off-hours, he wrote four audacious papers that fundamentally changed how physics understood space, time, light and matter. He accomplished his revolution without the sponsorship of a renowned university or laboratory. His example suggests that we can perhaps re-imagine and recreate the world even if we’re not supported by glamorous circumstances. I suspect this principle applies to you these days. Breakthrough insights and earth-shaking realizations may arrive while you’re doing ordinary tasks. Be alert for the flashes that arise in seemingly routine and modest situations.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): For linguists, “untranslatable” words are concepts that exist in one language but have no equivalent in others. One example is mono no aware, which in Japanese refers to the tender poignance and appreciation you feel in the presence of fleeting beauty, like cherry blossoms falling. I bring this to your attention, Pisces, because I suspect that you, too, are untranslatable right now. My advice is to forget about trying to get others to grasp what’s going on with you. Here’s a suggestion that might help: Find soulful artists and emotionally intelligent creatives who speak the language of your mystery.
Homework: What gifts do you have that you have never yet given with fullness? tinyurl.com/33ss33ss
ARIES (March 21-April 19): If you’re a professional photographer, now is an ideal moment to invest in the higher-end lens you know would expand your best work. If you’re a committed chef, it’s a perfect time to spring for a precision knife set that elevates your craft. If you’re a devoted yoga or meditation teacher preparing a new series, you might decide to purchase an upgraded sound system to share your vocal offerings more crisply. And if you are none of the above, consider this your sign to obtain a key instrument or tool that will help you move to the next level of professionalism in the work you’re called to do.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): When we hear people described as having fertile imaginations, we may assume they are artists, writers or musicians. But the truth is that many creative visualizers are engineers, city planners, inventors and the like: those who design and build functional wonders. Of this group, you Tauruses make up a disproportionately high percentage. Your tribe is often most imaginative when vitalizing concrete details and transforming practical matters. In the coming weeks, this will be a vibrant X-factor in your relationship with the world.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): When many people reflect on their early years, they focus on the alienation and wounds they endured. Few recall, in vivid detail, the moments of joy, triumph and breakthrough. It’s a symptom, I suppose, of our era’s compulsive cynicism, and not necessarily an accurate account of the past. So many good things happened, too! This isn’t to dismiss the real pain that shaped us in our tender years. Still, I want you to know that you are in a season when it’s essential to recognize and celebrate the blessings of your beginnings—the fun, guidance and grace that helped you flourish. Update your gratitude!
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Of all the zodiac signs, you have the most potential to cultivate robust emotional intelligence that’s helpful in practical situations. More than everyone else, your feelings are less likely to render you vulnerable and fragile and more likely to make you a powerhouse. The coming weeks will be prime time to deploy these talents to the max. I encourage you to summon gleeful exuberance as you provide your sensitive, heartful nurturing. Practice the ingenious art of keeping the world emotionally literate and spiritually alert.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): I am pleased to predict that you will be less egotistical and narcissistic in the coming weeks than you have ever been in your life. In saying that, I don’t mean to imply that you’re any more egotistical and narcissistic than the rest of us. I’m simply saying you can get a liberating reprieve from the excessive pride and selfishness that regularly debilitates us all. Congratulations, Leo! This grace period should enable you to deepen your attunement with your soul’s blueprint, the design of destiny you chose before birth. I bet you will enjoy a period of vibrant, exciting tranquility.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Consider this a friendly heads-up to your inner critic, your gloomy side, and any voice in your head that expects too little from life. Upcoming astrological omens are influencing me to predict a stream of auspicious omens and fortunate events. So if you’d rather cling to tired stories about not being good enough or strong enough, you might want to skip my forecasts for a while. But if you’re ready to vivify your faith in your power to eagerly create what you desire, stay tuned. Karmic blessings are coming.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): To be blunt, dear Libra, I think you need soul medicine that’s most available in frontiers, borderlands and thresholds. Some of these might be bright, shiny places, and others may be akin to mazes and tunnels. Please keep in mind that your main motivation, as you seek adventures in the outskirts, should be the quest to have fun as you blow your own mind. For the sake of your lust for life and joie de vivre, you really must explore power spots untouched by trivia and pettiness: sanctuaries where vastness, freedom and raw vitality can wash away at least some of your fixations and habits.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Giant Pacific octopus dens are identifiable by the “gardens” of debris outside. They include shells and bones, arranged like ornamentation around the entrance. Are the creatures trying to decorate? Scientists don’t know. But it’s clear they are leaving evidence of their appetites. The result is distinctive, artistic and revealing. With this scenario as your metaphorical meditation, Scorpio, I invite you to look at what you have been pursuing and consuming in recent months. Contemplate the stuff piling up in your sphere. What do your finished experiences reveal about your quest for meaning? Does this pattern reflect your deepest intentions? Is this who you want to be? Make sure the story you’re telling about yourself is the right one.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Advising a Sagittarius to be patient is like asking a bonfire to burn slowly and politely. Still, I will give it a try. Because I love you, I will dare to be frank. So here goes: If you want to align yourself with astrological currents, practice being reverently at ease with life’s madness as you watch and wait. See if you can take genuine pleasure in resting within a field of calm trust. Imagine, with fearless delight, the rewards that will find you as you nurture a steady, unhurried confidence in your intuition, which will ultimately tell you exactly what you need to do.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In 1994, immunologist Polly Matzinger revolutionized her field with a radical theory. She discovered that our immune systems don’t focus on distinguishing “self” from “non-self,” but rather responding to threats. The body puts less emphasis on asking “is this me?” and more on “is this harmful?” Her breakthrough transformed our understanding of immunity, autoimmune disease and transplant rejection. According to my analysis of the astrological riddles, you Capricorns could benefit from a similar adjustment. Don’t worry about whether any particular influence harmonizes with your identity or aligns with your history. Instead, ask, “Is it nourishing or harmful? Supportive or useless?” As you refresh your approach to guarding and protecting your precious self, new options will become visible.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): According to my interpretation of the astrological signals, you have run into an obstacle to your creative flow, or may soon do so. Though this could feel discouraging at first, I think it’s a promising sign. It indicates that a hidden bug is surfacing. An inner saboteur is no longer operating in the shadows. You’re being given the opportunity to repair an unseen energy leak that has been sapping your vitality. To illuminate this process, consider the wisdom of author Joyce Carol Oates. She says that writer’s block arises when a writer subconsciously believes that what they’re trying to create is false, misguided or harmful to themselves, which results in a temporary creative paralysis. Be brave and relentless in hunting down the glitch in your self-love, Aquarius.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Maybe you’ve been having thoughts like this: “I’m too scrambled to do what’s necessary to get unscrambled.” Here’s another snag that may be tangling your mind: “I’m too mixed up to know what questions to ask to sort out my confusion.” If this is true, Pisces, I’m here to offer advice. Imagine calling a timeout on the whole noisy world and slipping free of the habitual trance. Consider retreating to a sanctuary where time doesn’t oppress you and complications subside. Let your mind be empty, give your ambitions a rest, and immerse your tender attention in the deepest part of yourself you can find.
Homework: The most beautiful thing you’ve done? The most beautiful thing you’ll do? tinyurl.com/333×999
The Astrology Podcast • An overview of the month ahead astrology forecast for February 2024, discussing planetary alignments and key events that will occur during the month, with astrologers Chris Brennan and Austin Coppock. The main planetary alignment this month is that Mercury, Venus, and Mars all conjoin Pluto in Aquarius for the first time, giving us a preview of what those conjunctions will be like over the next 20 years that Pluto is in Aquarius. We spend the first 45 minutes talking about the astrology of news and recent events since our last forecast, and then in the second hour we get into the forecast for February. This episode was recorded on Thursday, January 25, 2024. This is episode 434 of The Astrology Podcast:
This is part of my unpublished book on Astrology, the second chapter of part 3. While taking a break from writing new material (see this article), I am using the opportunity to try to complete this project. (For what has preceded please see this list.) Following on from the previous chapter, where I established the relationship between Astrology and the Perennial Philosophy and the implications of this, here I explore the possibility of using Astrology as a means to reunify science and religion.
chapter 20: REUNIFICATION
“The most exalting fascination that has ever, up to now, inspired human thought and life, however, was that which seized the priestly watchers of the night skies of Mesopotamia about 3500 BC: the perception of a cosmic order, mathematically definable, with which the structure of society should be brought to accord… Not economics, in other words, but celestial mathematics were what inspired the religious forms, the arts, literatures, sciences, moral and social orders which in that period elevated mankind to the tasks of civilised life.
Today such thoughts and forms are of a crumbling past and the civilizations dependent on them in disarray and dissolution. Not only are societies no longer attuned to the courses of the planets; sociology and physics, politics and astronomy are no longer understood to be departments of a single science”. (Joseph Campbell, Myths to Live By¹).
That was how it used to be in the old days, when astrologers held positions of influence in court and government circles. It seems extremely unlikely that modern society will ever reinstate astrologers as advisers to kings, queens, and prime ministers, although one can live in hope. There was an occasion during Ronald Reagan’s presidency when a rumour* emerged that he was consulting astrologers before making decisions. Needless to say this was greeted with concern by the serious British media, and derision by the tabloids. I remember thinking that it was the only ray of hope in the make-up of an otherwise intellectually challenged president, that he might be seeking to understand the Divine Will; thank God he wasn’t making the decisions himself. (*See Gangof4’s response, where it is claimed that the rumour wasn’t true.)
Astrology would first have to be rehabilitated in the hearts and minds of the nations. The direction towards which I think we are heading ideologically as a planet, as suggested by the quantum physics revolution, is a unification of science and religion. There are different ways of looking at the role of Astrology in such a scenario. As one contributing factor, there might be a specific reunification between astronomy and Astrology. Others might see the reunification as being between Astrology and science itself. Some of the astrologers I have studied have expressed an interest in these directions, for example the Parkers: “The long awaited marriage between astrology and science may be about to take place”², and River/Gillespie: “Here we have chosen to tell astrology’s story without a rigid definition of the subject, to reconnect astronomy with astrology, science with magic, and the practical and political with the spiritual”³. The same sentiment has been expressed by the philosopher AugustSchlegel: “Astronomy will have to become astrology again”⁴.
That would be at a practical level, the understanding that the interpretation of the symbolism of celestial mechanics has implications for the lives of individuals and societies. However, at a deeper, metaphysical level Astrology can be seen as that higher place where science and religion meet. It was always meant to be “part of an ancient doctrine that at one time fused art, religion, philosophy and science into one internally consistent whole”⁵. I would therefore describe it as a philosophical/scientific enquiry into the ultimate nature of the cosmos. In that sense it hasalways been a higher form of science, because it has always known what much modern science refuses to acknowledge, that the universe is multi-layered. Thus Stephen Arroyo says: “To me, astrology is a cosmic science; using it is an art, but ultimately astrology is a science (his italics). But this cosmic science is so high in its essence, so vast, that very few people can reach that high level of consciousness where they can understand it thoroughly”⁶.
The purpose of these reunifications would therefore be to recreate an open-minded desire for knowledge in all areas and at all levels, a return by philosophy to its roots, in that in modern hands it has often become “merely a sterile word game used to perpetuate intellectual arrogance”⁷. To replace this wasteland Stephen Arroyo identifies Ancient Greek society as a model to which we can aspire: “When studying the history of Western civilization, we always find that the Greeks’ emphasis on science and reason is considered the crucial turning point in Western man’s intellectual and cultural development… However, the contribution of the Greeks was not limited to the discovery of certain natural laws active in the material world; it also extended into the realm of the individual’s inner life and growth. ‘Know thyself’ was the key idea underlying the development of Greek philosophy; and the word ‘philosophy’ (philosophia) literally means ‘love of wisdom’. Science for the Greeks was not merely the collection of data in the hope that certain correlations could be discovered. It was rather a systematic search for the essential truths underlying life and nature, and an attempt to discover not only natural laws but also the universal metaphysical laws of life itself. And, for the Greeks, ‘reason’ did not refer merely to the computer-like calculations of the logical mind, but rather to an inspired (or ‘inspirited’) combination of analysis and intuition founded upon ideals of elegance and symmetry”⁸.
Looking further afield, science in India, under the influence of the metaphysical standpoint of the Vedanta, understands that it is limited in what it can achieve, and there is no conflict between science and religion. Thus Robert Hand says: “It is possible with little or no compromise in one’s religious beliefs to be a modern scientist and a Hindu”⁹. The two go together because the task of both is seen as being to understand the multi-layered universe. In the West, however, science has set itself the task of understanding the physical universe, at best saying that the other dimensions are the concern of religions, more often denying their existence.
Other relevant examples would be:
the Kabbalah, which is the basis for (Zev ben Simon) Halevi’s astrology, described by him as a teaching system, a compendium of science, theology, philosophy, and psychology, thus all knowledge.
the medieval Arabian approach to physical science, described by Gauquelin as “a kind of vast astrology”¹⁰.
It is therefore clearly not impossible for science and religion to be united; we already have several useful models. Astrology is par excellence the discipline which can achieve it, and it is not surprising that many astrologers refer to its potential in this respect. Dennis Elwell, for example, speaks for many: “Astrology is the best and maybe the last hope of religion, because it offers a meeting-ground for the scientific and religious views of reality, reconciling many of their differences”¹¹.
John Addey, however, seems to have taken this to the level of a campaign. Discussing the scientists’ usual protest that the type of ideas which interest him are ‘religious’, and that it is therefore not their function to deal with them, he replies: “This is not true. It is the office of science to preserve, cultivate and expound truth, and every aspect of truth has its appropriate science, interior and spiritual aspects of truth no less than exterior and natural ones”. He then discusses the cultural problems which stem from the scientific attitude, and concludes: “What is needed is some kind of knowledge which will at least open men’s minds to the kind of solution which is required and the direction in which it is to be sought — and which can speak to both sides of the present impasse in terms which each can understand and acknowledge to be valid: to Science in terms of the quantitative analysis of scientific data; to Religion in the language of spiritual philosophy — the language of those timeless truths which the mystical philosopher has expounded from age to age. It is the writer’s conviction that astrology occupies, in this context, a unique position and is the science par excellence which is adapted to fulfil this reconciling role”¹².
What would the reunification actually consist of?
Quantum physics by itself is limited in what it can achieve. It does not have a theology, but does seem to lead scientists in a spiritual/mystical direction, (for example Capra, Bohm, Wolf, Pauli). In its search for the ultimate reality, it forces us to knock on the door of religion, even if it cannot provide the key. Thus Stephen Arroyo, noting that “researchers in psychology, with a few notable exceptions, continue to operate as if they were bio-chemists or reflex physicists”, says that quantum physics can rescue us from a psychology based on outdated physics¹³. (Insert. Since first writing this, I’ve also come across this quote from Werner Heisenberg: “The first gulp from the glass of natural sciences will turn you into an atheist, but at the bottom of the glass God is waiting for you”.)
The reciprocal benefit is explained by astrologer Dane Rudhyar as follows: “We claim… that science will have to use more and more psychological methods as it finds that atoms and universes behave more and more like personalities”¹⁴.
You may think that such comparisons between physics and psychology are mere analogies or metaphors. Luis Alvarado, however, makes a quite literal connection: “According to Edward Whitmont, the collective unconscious is the image-producing stratum of the psyche that contains the drives and emotions as psychic energy, or libido. Libido moves by way of fields: ‘A field is an energy pattern or configuration that becomes perceptible to the experienced observer only through the patternings of directly observable elements susceptible to its influence’. For instance, iron filings will form a pattern when exposed to a magnetic field. Archetypes can be conceived of as fields that give form to the drives and the emotions contained within the psyche. Archetypes, utilizing psychic energy or libido, order our life experiences in the same way a magnetic field orders iron filings”¹⁵.
Now it is time to suggest that Astrology can take both these disciplines forward. Thus Dennis Elwell says: “By showing what is really at work in human nature, astrology seems the most likely route whereby psychology will enter the age of the new physics. To date psychologists, secure in their own specialities, have been slow to understand the implications of what it means for humans to be living in a universe of unbroken wholeness. Physically it is recognised that our bodies are made of the same stuff of the universe, and that the laws of that physical universe apply. But when it comes to our minds, it is assumed that here the total universe withdraws, allowing other factors to enter into the little pockets it has vacated. Just as our bodies live in intimate association with the totality, so must our minds, our consciousness. Any other possibility would contravene the first law of being, that of interconnectedness”¹⁶.
Can Astrology also help scientists? By confining themselves strictly to the rules of their discipline, they consistently run into brick walls. I refer once more to the words of Toben/Wolf: “Mathematicians can describe the limits of space-time, but they can’t describe what is beyond, they only know there is a beyond”¹⁷. The reunification of science and religion offered by Astrology provides the opportunity to move towards an understanding of the higher levels. Scientists like Stephen Hawking seek a ‘grand unified theory’ of physics but want to achieve this on their own terms. Addressing the same issues I have just been discussing he says:
“Up to now, most scientists have been too occupied with the development of new theories that describe what the universe is to ask the question why. On the other hand, the people whose business it is to ask why (both his italics), the philosophers, have not been able to keep up with the advance of scientific theories. In the eighteenth century, philosophers considered the whole of human knowledge, including science, to be their field and discussed questions such as: Did the universe have a beginning? However, in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, science became too technical and mathematical for the philosophers, or anyone else except a few specialists. Philosophers reduced the scope of their inquiries so much that Wittgenstein, the most famous philosopher of this century, said, ‘The sole remaining task for philosophy is the analysis of language’. What a comedown from the great tradition of philosophy from Aristotle to Kant!
“However, if we do discover a complete theory, it should in time be understandable in broad principle by everyone, not just a few scientists. Then we shall all, philosophers, scientists, and just ordinary people, be able to take part in the discussion of the question why it is that we and the universe exist. If we find the answer to that, it would be the ultimate triumph of human reason — for then we would know the mind of God”¹⁸.
Note that there is no mention here of anything that represents any kind of ‘religious’ attitude. Hawking hopes that through the use of human reason scientists will penetrate the mind of God (which we assume is a metaphor not to be taken literally in his case), and will then generously share these insights with the public.
In chapter 11 I discussed the fact that, despite there being strong evidence for the existence of organising principles, teleology etc., many scientists tend to ignore this and cling to their existing models. I noted there that Paul Davies, while sincerely wanting to know the answers, remains committed to seeking solutions through scientific avenues. It is not clear to me, however, what formulations science will achieve in relation to the archetypes, given their profoundly irrational nature. I suggest therefore that science, in order to make progress in its search, will have to turn to, that is to say unite with, Astrology and Analytical Psychology, which do know something about the archetypes. Here is Aniela Jaffé on the subject that the scientists I discussed in chapter 11 could not come to terms with: “Both psyche and matter are structured or arranged, in accordance with corresponding laws, by invisible formal factors”, the primordial images, also known as archetypes. She goes on to discuss the work of biologist Adolf Portmann, who concluded that there is “a ‘non-spatial abyss of mystery’ which opens out behind the living organism… He also hints that the ‘primal ground of unknown data’ lying behind biological events on the one hand, and the psychic hinterland, the unconscious, on the other, may be one and the sameirrepresentable mystery”¹⁹. Will scientists ever be able to formulate to their satisfaction laws about an “abyss of mystery”?
When they talk about a grand unified theory, scientists are primarily referring to a formulation which would incorporate four forces of nature: gravity, electromagnetism, and the weak and strong nuclear forces (although there is another consideration of combining general relativity [a classical theory] with the uncertainty principle [a quantum theory] ). It is not clear at which point in the evolution of the universe these forces came into being, but one possibility is that this occurred at the Big Bang.
In that the Big Bang ‘moment’ is usually referred to as a singularity, about which nothing can be said since at this point all laws of physics break down, one is tempted to feel that it is there that one is confronted directly by the nature of God, or in Qabalistic terminology Ayin or Ain Soph. These descriptions of the Big Bang singularity remind me of this statement by Luis Alvarado: “The Ain Soph, meaning ‘without end’, Limitless, is the well-spring of the universe, yet cannot be understood in terms of this universe… The Ain Soph is in effect, unknowable”. He also quotes Charles Poncé: “En-Sof, I would further suggest, is the meaning in creation, the limitless meaning which our scientists seek to discover in their attempts to unveil the origin of the universe. En-Sof is what they seek”²⁰.
Access to the understanding that Hawking is talking about is usually considered to be attained through mystical experience, not by thinking about it. We are therefore confronted by one of the perennial dilemmas of philosophy: which type of knowledge is better, theoretical concepts or direct experience? Hawking is attempting to discover the Grand Unified Theory, is searching for an understanding of God, and thinks that he can achieve this through the human analytical mind. (Although aspiring to the same scientific aim, Paul Davies is, perhaps wisely, more restrained about the meaning of such an achievement: “It is sometimes remarked that attaining this dazzling prize would represent the culmination of fundamental physics, for such a theory would be capable of explaining the behaviour and structure of all matter…” At this point I can almost hear the champagne corks popping! The celebrations may have to be somewhat muted, however, for he feels compelled to add “…in a reductionist way, of course”²¹.)
On the face of it he should be more cautious, since, according to Wolf/Toben, his own favourite language (mathematics) tells him that he cannot know what is beyond spacetime. I am even tempted to wonder whether the professor might benefit from some psychology classes, given by Anthony Stevens perhaps: “In other words, the archetypes which order our perceptions and ideas are themselves the product of an objective order which transcends both the human mind and the external world. At this supreme point physical science, psychology, and theology all coalesce”²².
What is the role of Astrology in this context? It is certainly not an experience of the transcendental, rather an activity of the mind, albeit one informed by a deeper understanding of irrational, transcendent factors. In chapter 9 I argued that astrological effects operate at the ‘boundary’ of the spacetime universe, entering it from outside. If that is true, then Astrology represents the limit of what the human mind is capable. It is a language of the archetypes; we can attempt to decipher the messages, but we can never see what sent them. Thus Astrology is arguably the best tool available to science for understanding what is beyond spacetime. (Compare Dane Rudhyar: “In its search for the ‘first Cause’ religion will use a method and a basis of thought not unlike those on which a revaluated astrology will be founded”²³, and John Addey: “The re-assimilation by science of the truths implicit in such results as those described earlier can have one end, and one end only: the reunification of the entire field of science so that all possible objects of knowledge, from the heights to the depths, from the innermost recesses of deity to the last and most transient of phenomena, are seen to coalesce in one perfect scheme of truth entire and seamless from first to last: all sciences rooted in the First Science; all causes in the First Cause; all lives in the First Life; all substances in the First Substance”²⁴.)
How will this reunification be achieved?
When there has been a big argument, and a reconciliation is desired, the two sides usually meet half way, and find a compromise position. It would certainly be desirable for science to make such a move. Its major task would be to force itself to give up its absolute dependence on the method that it has formulated. There would have to be:
1) much greater reliance on some current anathema: subjective impression, anecdotal evidence, intuition.
2) a willingness to incorporate irrational factors into their thinking.
Some astrologers show a strong interest in turning Astrology into something more like a materialistic science, in effect seeking a compromise. The most forceful expression I have found is this one by Jim Lewis: “It should proceed to look less like a religion and means to self-fulfilment and more like an objective science, adapting wave theory, gravitation, statistics, or some probably yet unnamed branch of psychology to justify itself to an increasing rigid and intolerant academic establishment”²⁵. Of the astrologers I discussed in chapter 2, the Parkers also spend considerable time trying to present Astrology in a form more acceptable to science.
Yet most of the others have no interest in appealing to materialistic science as it is:
Dane Rudhyar: “Attempts at making astrology an exact empirical science by basing it on measurements of actual influences and rays are, if not doomed to failure, at least bound to explain or prove only a fragment of the entire body of ideas which constitutes and has always constituted astrology. Whatever science may discover concerning cosmic radiations, we do not believe that the philosophy of astrology can or should ever be the same as that of an empirical science”²⁶.
Stephen Arroyo: “Instead of putting oneself at the mercy of incredibly limited assumptions and paradigms by forcing one’s mode of observation and expression to fit the ‘scientists’ mold, we should realize that their molds are not ‘objective’ as they pretend. Instead of forcing our way of thinking and expression into their molds, which is what a lot of astrologers are now trying to do, we should find our own way and not play into the hands of those with a very limited concept of life”²⁷.
Dennis Elwell: “Rather than attempt to bring the (phenomena astrology presents) within the fold of common sense, it is better to admit that astrology is a radically different way of looking at the world… Astrology..can claim to be an alternative reality, complete in itself, and credible within its own terms”²⁸.
Geoffrey Cornelius: “In our usual description of our subject, its foundation in a magical-religious inspiration has been obscured. The materialism and positivism of our opponents is the complement to a misleading materialism and positivism within astrology itself. If astrology in truth operates according to principles that do not belong in present-day science, then astrologers should not present the subject as if it is really a variant of science”²⁹.
They clearly believe that Astrology does not need to compromise with science in order to effect a reconciliation, and who can argue with them? If it is already the ‘truth’ it should not be afraid to hold its ground, and wait for science to catch up. To pursue the ‘argument’ analogy further, Astrology is the wronged party and it is therefore materialistic science that should apologise. It has very little to learn from science, but science needs to spend much time learning from Astrology. As Dennis Elwell says: “Mainstream science will eventually be obliged to embrace the astrological if it is to unify its picture of the universe”³⁰. The value of this highly desirable outcome will be diminished, if en route Astrology has to adapt itself in order to become more appealing to the other side. Here is Elwell again: “It is a popular delusion that as science advances, the beliefs of astrologers will become more and more discredited. The very reverse is happening… A growing number of discoveries leads us to think that the old astrologers must have been wiser than they knew” (p48).
On the same theme I especially like John Addey’s way with words: “How could scientists, as we have been accustomed to think of them, convert us to their way of thinking when they are no longer able to sustain their old beliefs themselves? We are not even in the position, as we have sometimes liked to think of ourselves, of a David pitting its strength against the Goliath of Modern Science. Science today — and I am speaking of the heart and core of the scientific world-view which has prevailed for the past 300-odd years — is not so much like a Goliath as like a great simpleton who is even now in the process of falling over his own bootlaces into the dust from which he will not rise again.
“I hope indeed that we shall become more scientific in our methods, but we certainly need not fear their philosophy (if one can call it that) when they themselves are already deserting that philosophy in order to rejoin the road which we have never left”³¹.
What specifically can science learn from Astrology?
In chapter 11 I argued on the basis of Paul Davies’s work that science might be unable to make further progress unless it accepts previously unacceptable ideas, for example teleology and organizing principles. Since these two factors are staring reluctant scientists in the face, and both of them are at the heart of Astrology and have been for thousands of years, it is clear not only that science has much to learn from Astrology, but also that materialistic science is a pretty slow learner. Here is Dennis Elwell on teleology: “Science, out of its concealed metaphysics, long ago set its face against any notion of intention, purpose, design, in the universe. Astrology may be destined to be the means whereby such teleological concepts are reintroduced into the mainstream of science’(p149). And John Addey on the archetypes: “Science is about to undergo a transformation in its thinking about first principles… Why (does) modern scientific thought (have) difficulty with the conception of a hierarchy of principles?… (The principles) are not abstractions; they are certainly not products of the human mind. Man can think of these principles because they are there (and because they are within man “as well as external to him); they are not there because man thinks of them” (p201).
Perhaps the following quotation says it best of all. I have referred several times to Wolf and Toben’s view that, while we can know that there is something outside spacetime, we cannot know what it is. It can hardly appear otherwise to science. However, Elwell here gives some hope that Astrology, even without being excessively mystical, might be the key which, in a manner comparable to science, can help science begin to unlock the mysteries of the spiritual realm: “What astrology does is allow us to take hold of that reality not so much at the experiential or intuitive level, but at the intellectual level, with concepts which are clear enough to be expressed and argued about. It supplies both the language and the methodology. Herein lies its relevance for science: it gives the bright light of reason access to areas hitherto only dimly apprehended” (p5). Perhaps there is hope for Stephen Hawking’s approach after all.
Science united with religion, Astrology united with astronomy, that was how it began in the ancient civilisations, for example Mesopotamia and Babylon, where the earliest star-studiers monitored the movements of the heavenly bodies, which eventually enabled them to construct accurate calendars and to predict eclipses. For some reason that we no longer understand it seemed self-evident to them that their findings could also be used to determine the ‘will of the gods’, in other words the evolution and destiny of their societies.
In the following period, even if astronomy and Astrology were not always considered a single discipline, they existed perfectly happily and peacefully alongside each other. This situation persisted for thousands of years, and included civilisations and cultural movements as diverse as the Vedantist tradition of India, the ancient Greeks, Romans, Egyptians, the Chinese and Japanese, the Arabs, the Maya and Incas, and the medieval Italian Renaissance. At this time, as Geoffrey Cornelius says: “The astrological world-view ‘intrudes everywhere’, entering into almost every area of inquiry and belief… The fundamental conception of a continuous pouring down of stellar influence was virtually unquestioned by critic and practitioner alike” (p1). And that seems to have included the great astronomers and mathematicians of the late Middle Ages! The standard account goes something like this: “The decline of astrology is generally attributed to the rediscovery of the heliocentric system by Copernicus, to Kepler’s laws, Newton’s mechanics… This account of the decline of astrology has become so general that it is no longer even questioned”³². To these three I would like to add the name of Galileo, who was responsible for the final triumph of the Copernican theory, and who is now remembered as much as the other three, if only for his famous trial.
West and Toonder, not having to scratch too deeply beneath the surface, offer a different picture. Let us see just how ‘scientific’ these figures were.
“Copernicus was led to his rediscovery of the heliocentric system by his study of Pythagorean ideas, with which he became acquainted in Italy, at the school begun by the theologian and mystic, Nicholas de Cusa”³³.
“Copernicus himself did not draw up horoscopes, but he had no difficulty in accepting the aid of a notorious astrologer, Rheticus, in completing and bringing out the first edition of his famous book DE REVOLUTIONIBUS ORBIUM CELESTIUM, which explained that the earth turned round the sun. Tycho Brahe combined a solicitude for precision and perfect objectivity in astronomy with classical astrological beliefs. As for Kepler, astrology was at least as dear to him as the laws of the stars’ motions which have made him immortal”³⁴.
“Galileo was a practising astrologer… and he nowhere intimates that he practised only to make a bit of money on the side, or that he privately repudiated the subject”³⁵.
Johann Kepler, discoverer of the elliptical orbits of the planets, and of the ratios between their distances, of the four names was the one whose allegiance to Astrology is the best documented. “He was… an intensely religious man, a Neo-Platonist… (Because he) was in permanent financial straits… he wrote astrological almanacs predicting events in the coming year, and cast personal horoscopes; both of which he regarded as a waste of time”. So, like most serious astrologers, he repudiated the trivial, fortune-telling side of Astrology. Yet this did not detract from his belief in the serious Astrology. It is interesting that he was converted to it after initial scepticism: “A most unfailing experience (as far as it can be expected in nature) of the excitement of sublunary natures by the conjunctions and aspects of the planets has instructed and compelled my unwilling belief”. Kepler repeatedly writes to friends of his intention to separate the ‘gems from the slag’. He issues ‘a warning to certain theologians, physicians and philosophers who rightly reject the superstitions of the astrologers, not to throw the baby out with the bathwater’. And declares: ‘nothing exists and nothing happens in the visible heavens that is not echoed in some hidden manner by the faculties of Earth and Nature: the faculties of the spirit of this world are affected in the same measure as heaven itself’ ”.
The authors conclude that “Kepler’s astronomical discoveries were part of his life’s work to find the literal, physical proof of the Pythagorean notion of the harmony of the spheres… Using rather complicated mathematics, Kepler tried to calculate the exact literal sounds emitted by the planets and contended that this music could only be ‘heard’ by the sun, which stood as the embodiment of the Divine Principle. And when he thought that he had found the key to it all, he exulted, believing he had re-discovered the secret of the Egyptians… These being his interests, it is quite understandable that he should chafe at having to cast horoscopes to finance his work… The astronomy Kepler praises was astronomy carried out in the name of Pythagoras… Kepler’s astronomy was not what a modern astronomer would call astronomy: it was astrology”³⁶.
If asked who was responsible for the greatest intellectual achievement by one person in the history of the planet, many people might reply Einstein, who single-handedly revolutionized the prevailing scientific worldview with his theories of Special and General Relativity. (Although no source is given for the reference, he is quoted by A.T. Mann as saying: “Astrology is a science in itself and contains an illuminating body of knowledge. It taught me many things and I am greatly indebted to it”³⁷.)
The person normally credited by scientists with this achievement, however, is Newton, for his groundbreaking work the Principia Mathematica. It has been claimed by others that this book demolished Astrology once and for all. Why they should have said this when the man responsible for this intellectual achievement did not claim his discoveries invalidated it, and himself was interested in Astrology is not clear. A favourite anecdote amongst astrologers is that Newton, when criticised by the astronomer Sir Edmund Halley for his sympathy for Astrology, is alleged to have retorted: “I have studied it, you sir have not”. Critics often claim that the story is apocryphal, saying that there is no independent confirmation. His interest in Astrology is confirmed, however, by Sir Harold Hartley who, reviewing The Mathematical Papers of Isaac Newton (in New Scientist, 11/5/67) said: “Newton’s last undergraduate year was the seminal period of his mathematics when his interest in astronomy and, on his own admission, astrology, needed a fair knowledge of contemporary mathematics for their proper understanding”³⁸. There is also a large section devoted to alchemy(!) in his unpublished papers. West/Toonder conclude that “over a long life more of his time was spent studying what would now be called ‘occultism’ than what would now be called ‘science’ ” (also p95).
Which modern scientist would dare call Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, and Newton superstitious and gullible? Yet these are the men who are claimed to be the advance guard of the Age of Reason, the most anti-astrology period in the history of the planet. The reality is that those responsible for some of the most significant astronomical advances of the last 2,000 years, all took an interest in Astrology or closely related ideas seeing no conflict between the two. Then there was an extraordinary turnaround. As Geoffrey Cornelius puts it: “By the end of the eighteenth century astrology in any shape or form had been all but wiped out as a credible intellectual endeavour, its serious study confined to a small minority perceived as eccentrics” (p1). We are entitled to ask the question, if Astrology lived comfortably side by side with astronomy and science for thousands of years, that is if they were not in fact identical, and that this situation was accepted by some of the greatest minds, was the arrival of the Age of Reason a genuine advance, or is it just a passing trend, a fashion imposed upon us by over-rational scientists?
I hope you have enjoyed this article. I have written in the past about other topics, including spirituality, metaphysics, psychology, science, Christianity, and politics. All of those articles are on Medium, but the simplest way to see a guide to them is to visit my website (click here and here). My most recent articles, however, are only on Medium; for those please check out my lists.
FEBRUARY 21, 2023 AT 7:00 AM BY ROB BREZSNY (newcity.com)
Staring At Point Blank/Photo: Marshal Quast
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Philosopher John O’Donohue wrote a prayer not so much to God as to Life. It’s perfect for your needs right now. He said, “May my mind come alive today to the invisible geography that invites me to new frontiers, to break the dead shell of yesterdays, to risk being disturbed and changed.” I think you will generate an interesting onrush of healing, Aries, if you break the dead shell of yesterdays and risk being disturbed and changed. The new frontier is calling to you. To respond with alacrity, you must shed some baggage.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Rightwing religious influencers are rambling amuck in the United States. In recent months, their repressive pressures have forced over 1,600 books to be banned in 138 school districts in thirty-eight states. The forbidden books include some about heroes Nelson Mandela, Cesar Chavez and Rosa Parks. With this appalling trend as a motivational force, I encourage you Tauruses to take inventory of any tendencies you might have to censor the information you expose yourself to. According to my reading of the astrological omens, now is an excellent time to pry open your mind to consider ideas and facts you have shut out. Be eager to get educated and inspired by stimuli outside your usual scope.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): I think we can all agree that it’s really fun to fall in love. Those times when we feel a thrilling infatuation welling up within us are among the most pleasurable of all human experiences. Wouldn’t it be great if we could do it over and over again as the years go by? Just keep getting bowled over by fresh immersions in swooning adoration? Maybe we could drum up two or three bouts of mad love explosions every year. But alas, giving in to such a temptation might make it hard to build intimacy and trust with a committed, long-term partner. Here’s a possible alternative: Instead of getting smitten with an endless series of new paramours, we could get swept away by novel teachings, revelatory meditations, lovable animals, sublime art or music, amazing landscapes or sanctuaries and exhilarating adventures. I hope you will be doing that in the coming weeks, Gemini.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): The scientific method is an excellent approach for understanding reality. It’s not the only one, and should not be used to the exclusion of other ways of knowing. But even if you’re allergic to physics or never step into a chemistry lab, you are wise to use the scientific method in your daily life. The coming weeks will be an especially good time to enjoy its benefits. What would that mean, practically speaking? Set aside your subjective opinions and habitual responses. Instead, simply gather evidence. Treasure actual facts. Try to be as objective as you can in evaluating everything that happens. Be highly attuned to your feelings, but also be aware that they may not provide all facets of the truth.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Is there anything in your psychological makeup that would help you do some detective work? How are your skills as a researcher? Are you willing to be cagey and strategic as you investigate what’s going on behind the scenes? If so, I invite you to carry out any or all of these four tasks in the coming weeks: 1. Try to become aware of shrouded half-truths. 2. Be alert for shadowy stuff lurking in bright, shiny environments. 3. Uncover secret agendas and unacknowledged evidence. 4. Explore stories and situations that no one else seems curious about.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): The country of Nepal, which has strong Virgo qualities, is divided into seven provinces. One is simply called “Province No.1,” while the others are Sudurpashchim, Karnali, Gandaki, Lumbini, Bagmati and Janakpur. I advise Nepal to give Province No. 1 a decent name very soon. I also recommend that you Virgos extend a similar outreach to some of the unnamed beauty in your sphere. Have fun with it. Give names to your phone, your computer, your bed, your hairdryer,and your lamps, as well as your favorite trees, houseplants and clouds. You may find that the gift of naming helps make the world a more welcoming place with which you have a more intimate relationship. And that would be an artful response to current cosmic rhythms.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Are you aimless, impassive and stuck, floundering as you try to preserve and maintain? Or are you fiercely and joyfully in quest of vigorous and dynamic success? What you do in the coming weeks will determine which of these two forks in your destiny will be your path for the rest of 2023. I’ll be rooting for the second option. Here is a tip to help you be strong and bold. Learn the distinctions between your own soulful definition of success and the superficial, irrelevant, meaningless definitions of success that our culture celebrates. Then swear an oath to love, honor and serve your soulful definition.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): The next four weeks will be a time of germination, metaphorically analogous to the beginning of a pregnancy. The attitudes and feelings that predominate during this time will put a strong imprint on the seeds that will mature into full ripeness by late 2023. What do you want to give birth to in forty weeks or so, Scorpio? Choose wisely! And make sure that in this early, impressionable part of the process, you provide your growing creations with positive, nurturing influences.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): I recommend you set up Designated Arguing Summits (DAT). These will be short periods when you and your allies get disputes out in the open. Disagreements must be confined to these intervals. You are not allowed to squabble at any other time. Why do I make this recommendation? I believe that many positive accomplishments are possible for you in the coming weeks, and it would be counterproductive to expend more than the minimal necessary amount on sparring. Your glorious assignment: Be emotionally available and eager to embrace the budding opportunities.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Actor Judi Dench won an Oscar for her role as Queen Elizabeth in the film “Shakespeare in Love”—even though she was onscreen for just eight minutes. Beatrice Straight got an Oscar for her role in the movie “Network,” though she appeared for less than six minutes. I expect a similar phenomenon in your world, Capricorn. A seemingly small pivot will lead to a vivid turning point. A modest seed will sprout into a prismatic bloom. A cameo performance will generate long-term ripples. Be alert for the signs.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Most of us are constantly skirmishing with time, doing our best to coax it or compel it to give us more slack. But lately, you Aquarians have slipped into a more intense conflict. And from what I’ve been able to determine, time is kicking your ass. What can you do to relieve the pressure? Maybe you could edit your priority list—eliminate two mildly interesting pursuits to make more room for a fascinating one. You might also consider reading a book to help you with time management and organizational strategies, like these: 1. “Getting Things Done” by David Allen. 2. “The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People” by Stephen R. Covey. 3. “15 Secrets Successful People Know About Time Management” by Kevin Kruse.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “What is originality?” asked philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. Here’s how he answered: “to see something that has no name as yet, and hence cannot be mentioned though it stares us all in the face.” Got that, Pisces? I hope so, because your fun assignments in the coming days include the following: 1. to make a shimmering dream coalesce into a concrete reality; 2. to cause a figment of the imagination to materialize into a useful accessory; 3. to coax an unborn truth to sprout into a galvanizing insight.
Homework: What’s something you would love to do but were told never to do by someone you loved? Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com
FEBRUARY 7, 2023 AT 7:00 AM BY ROB BREZSNY (NewCity.com)
Photo: Omer Salom
ARIES (March 21-April 19): During my quest for advice that might be helpful to your love life, I plucked these words of wisdom from author Sam Kean: “Books about relationship talk about how to ‘get’ the love you need, how to ‘keep’ love, and so on. But the right question to ask is, ‘How do I become a more loving human being?’” In other words, Aries, here’s a prime way to enhance your love life: Be less focused on what others can give you and more focused on what you can give to others. Amazingly, that’s likely to bring you all the love you want.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You have the potential to become even more skilled at the arts of kissing and cuddling and boinking than you already are. How? Here are some possibilities. 1. Explore fun experiments that will transcend your reliable old approaches to kissing and cuddling and boinking. 2. Read books to open your mind. I like Margot Anand’s “The New Art of Sexual Ecstasy.” 3. Ask your partner(s) to teach you everything about what turns them on. 4. Invite your subconscious mind to give you dreams at night that involve kissing and cuddling and boinking. 5. Ask your lover(s) to laugh and play and joke as you kiss and cuddle and boink.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You are an Italian wolf searching for food in the Apennine Mountains. You’re a red-crowned crane nesting in a wetland in the Eastern Hokkaido region of Japan. You’re an olive tree thriving in a salt marsh in southern France, and you’re a painted turtle basking in a pool of sunlight on a beach adjoining Lake Michigan. And much, much more. What I’m trying to tell you, Gemini, is that your capacity to empathize is extra strong right now. Your smart heart should be so curious and open that you will naturally feel an instinctual bond with many life forms, including a wide array of interesting humans. If you’re brave, you will allow your mind to expand to experience telepathic powers. You will have an unprecedented knack for connecting with simpatico souls.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): My Cancerian friend Juma says, “We have two choices at all times: creation or destruction. Love creates and everything else destroys.” Do you agree? She’s not just talking about romantic love, but rather love in all forms, from the urge to help a friend, to the longing to seek justice for the dispossessed, to the compassion we feel for our descendants. During the next three weeks, your assignment is to explore every nuance of love as you experiment with the following hypothesis: To create the most interesting and creative life for yourself, put love at the heart of everything you do.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): I hope you get ample chances to enjoy deep soul kisses in the coming weeks. Not just perfunctory lip-to-lip smooches and pecks on the cheeks, but full-on intimate sensual exchanges. Why do I recommend this? How could the planetary positions be interpreted to encourage a specific expression of romantic feeling? I’ll tell you, Leo: The heavenly omens suggest you will benefit from exploring the frontiers of wild affection. You need the extra sweet, intensely personal communion that comes best from the uninhibited mouth-to-mouth form of tender sharing. Here’s what Leo poet Diane di Prima said: “There are as many kinds of kisses as there are people on earth, as there are permutations and combinations of those people. No two people kiss alike—no two people fuck alike—but somehow the kiss is more personal, more individualized than the fuck.”
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Borrowing the words of poet Oriah from her book “The Dance: Moving to the Deep Rhythms of Your Life,” I’ve prepared a love note for you to use as your own this Valentine season. Feel free to give these words to the person whose destiny needs to be woven more closely together with yours. Oriah writes, “Don’t tell me how wonderful things will be someday. Show me you can risk being at peace with the way things are right now. Show me how you follow your deepest desires, spiraling down into the ache within the ache. Take me to the places on the earth that teach you how to dance, the places where you can risk letting the world break your heart.”
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Libran author Walter Lippmann wrote, “The emotion of love is not self-sustaining; it endures only when lovers love many things together, and not merely each other.” That’s great advice for you during the coming months. I suggest that you and your allies—not just your romantic partners, but also your close companions—come up with collaborative projects that inspire you to love many things together. Have fun exploring and researching subjects that excite and awaken and enrich both of you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Scorpio writer Paul Valéry wrote, “It would be impossible to love anyone or anything one knew completely. Love is directed towards what lies hidden in its object.” My challenge to you, Scorpio, is to test this hypothesis. Do what you can to gain more in-depth knowledge of the people and animals and things you love. Uncover at least some of what’s hidden. All the while, monitor yourself to determine how your research affects your affection and care. Contrary to what Valéry said, I’m guessing this will enhance and exalt your love.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): In his book “Unapologetically You,” motivational speaker Steve Maraboli writes, “I find the best way to love someone is not to change them, but instead, help them reveal the greatest version of themselves.” That’s always good advice, but I believe it should be your inspirational axiom in the coming weeks. More than ever, you now have the potential to forever transform your approach to relationships. You can shift away from wanting your allies to be different from what they are and make a strong push to love them just as they are.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): I analyzed the astrological omens. Then I scoured the internet, browsed through twenty-two books of love poetry, and summoned memories of my best experiences of intimacy. These exhaustive efforts inspired me to find the words of wisdom that are most important for you to hear right now. They are from poet Rainer Maria Rilke (translated by Stephen Mitchell): “For one human being to love another human being: that is perhaps the most difficult task that has been entrusted to us, the ultimate task, the final test and proof, the work for which all other work is merely preparation.”
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): To get the most out of upcoming opportunities for intimacy, intensify your attunement to and reverence for your emotions. Why? As quick and clever as your mind can be, sometimes it neglects to thoroughly check in with your heart. And I want your heart to be wildly available when you get ripe chances to open up and deepen your alliances. Study these words from psychologist Carl Jung: “We should not pretend to understand the world only by the intellect; we apprehend it just as much by feeling. Therefore, the judgment of the intellect is, at best, only the half of truth, and must, if it be honest, also come to an understanding of its inadequacy.”
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “In love there are no vacations. Love has to be lived fully with its boredom and all that.” Author and filmmaker Marguerite Duras made that observation, and now I convey it to you—just in time for a phase of your astrological cycle when boredom and apathy could and should evolve into renewed interest and revitalized passion. But there is a caveat: If you want the interest and passion to rise and surge, you will have to face the boredom and apathy; you must accept them as genuine aspects of your relationship; you will have to cultivate an amused tolerance of them. Only then will they burst in full glory into renewed interest and revitalized passion.