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Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) is famous for the laws of planetary motion. He was an active professional astrologer, who made significant contributions towards the effective techniques of astrology. Tycho Brahe (1546-1601) is remembered as a great Danish astronomer. He was also very well versed in astrology and focused a great deal of time and energy in creating more accurate ephemerides that those in common usage. Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) has often been presented as the torch bearer of modern science. Nevertheless, he was a practicing astrologer, who not only found himself under house arrest by the church for his views, but also experienced considerable criticism by later science writers for his his astrological work.
Giordano Bruno (1548-1600) was a Dominican friar and astrologer, who was burned at the stake by the Roman Inquisition for his views, which maintained an experiential stance to astrology as an inner and outer spiritual science.
Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727) is remembered for among other things, his laws of gravitation, his famous publication: Principia Mathematica that laid the basis for celestial mechanics, his discoveries in optics that led to the reflecting telescope and as a co-discoverer of calculus. Nevertheless, Sir Isaac Newton was an alchemist first and a scientist second. As an alchemist, his inner scientific search included a profound understanding and acceptance of the validity of astrology.
A relief depiction of the the 3 Magi from the 3rd century. Vatican Museum, Rome. Credit: Nina Aldin Thune The 3 Magi, Italian-Byzantine, mosaic, 565 AD. Basilica of Sant'Apollinare Nuovo, Ravenna, Italy. Scientists in a laboratory. Have you ever wondered why scientists tend to be depicted in white lab coats, regardless of their field of research?
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The Split Between Astrology
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Sir Isaac NewtonThe timing of the growing spilt between science, astrology and religion is perhaps best illustrated by the life, beliefs and contributions of Sir Isaac Newton. Both Newton and his close friend, Robert Boyle were very much involved in alchemy, and by the very nature of that pursuit, Newton was also intimately familiar with astrology. This has been an embarrassment for those that sought to present Newton as a forebearer of the modern science, when in reality, Newton was a true scientist, a man that walked the path of the objective outer science as it was forming on the outside, while still maintaining the inner scientist, the spiritual seeker on the path of meditation and inner alchemy. Newton was familiar with and had read astrological texts, but his love was for alchemy, perhaps even more than for the new science. Historians until recently have largely ignored this in his writings. Newton believed in the bible, but felt it had been mistranslated and misinterpreted. His stance, in terms of his beliefs as a true adept of the inner science prevented him from taking holy orders in the Church of England. He could not accept the established view of the trinity. His views, if made public at the time, would have faced a charge of heresy. Newton was a living example of the way the split between science, astrology and the established religion of the west occurred. For Newton, he lived that split by keeping secret his true convictions and beliefs. You can find more information about Newton and the early scientists from an excellent article by Bruce Scofield in Mountain Astrologer, entitled Were They Astrologers? - Big League Scientists and Astrology. Here is the link. Modern Science Did Not Stop Being a ReligionThere is no question that science and the technology it helped to foster has achieved much in its expanded interpretation of the world. As much as it has contributed, we should not be blinded to its shortcomings. One of those shortcomings, is that as much as science purports to be totally objective, it is still a religion. There is a reason that scientists still to this day are seen to walk around in 'white' lab coats. Our society expects it as the gown and signature of the religious order that sacrifices itself to seek out the truth and meaning of the universe. Its moral compass lies in seeking the 'objective' truth, perhaps best stated in the motto of the Royal Society of London: 'Nullius in verba' - Take nobody's word for it. In many ways, science has become the religion of our modern society, the ironic result of a political miscalculation that the Church made several centuries ago. From that posture, the boundaries that History has many examples of religious intolerance between religions and other belief systems. This has often been exacerbated, when a belief system assumes that theirs is the only real perspective and other systems are invalid because they do not share these beliefs. Those that claim to be scientists, but instead act as religious zealots have attacked the spiritual sciences on the very basis that they are deemed to be unscientific. The point of the attacks is that most spiritual sciences do not rely on an eternal mechanistic explanation for the phenomena they encounter, which is another way of saying that they are spiritual sciences! Unfortunately, those attacks have molded the direction that many academic disciplines that have taken, especially in the healing and social sciences. For too
many disciplines, the price of being admitted into to a respectable 'scientific' circle of influence, by embracing more objectified and externally defined mechanisms, was the sacrifice of the
experiential. humanistic and spiritual knowledge that was at their core. Rewriting HistoryOne strong indicator that science is a religion, as much as it may believe that it is an objective path to the truth, is the way that history is being distorted and rewritten in order to support a 'scientific' past. Astronomy Did Not Exist before the 17th CenturyIt is important to understand that with very few acceptations, there were no real astronomers until the late 1600’s. Until then, almost every so called astronomer was an astrologer, who, like many before them, were perfecting the technology of their craft. We live in an era where history has been rewritten to dance to a rational paradigm, and in so doing, historians of science and astronomy have taken it upon themselves to call all of the research and contribution of astrologers back to antiquity and beyond as archeo-astronomy. Part of that re-writing conforms to the illusion that it was science that took humanity out of the stone age only a few thousand years ago. That illusion has no real evidence that passes closer scrutiny. At best the support of that illusion has resulted in the cherry picking of the archeological artifacts that support that premise and ignoring the substantial evidence that has accumulated that indicates that what we refer to as the stone age, was a period of collapse that followed the demise of several fairly advanced civilizations. What is being discovered are artifacts that support a 'stone age' and artifacts that support more advanced knowledge, from the same time period. There is no question that astrology survived that ancient collapse. Vedic and related documentation in India describe celestial events from a sophisticated astrological perspective dating back to at least 8,500 and 10,000 BC. In Egypt, the Nabta Playa site establishes a knowledge of astrology that goes back at least 6,300 BC. History does need to be re-written, but it must be an honest history, that does not ignore or hide the evidence. The Legacy and Contribution of Astrology
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Astrology Horoscope Readings All Text and graphics are Copyright © 2012, 2020 by Roman Oleh Yaworsky. All rights reserved. Any unauthorized use by whatever means is prohibited. |