Astronomy & astrology

Definitions

Astronomy studies the movement of the planets and stars.
Astrology deals with the supposed influence of the stars on human life.
This distinction is a modern one, however: while astrology is regarded as a pseudo-science today, for centuries it was accepted as a way of explaining and predicting terrestrial events. Before the seventeenth century, astronomy and astrology were not usually separated, and observation of the ‘heavenly bodies' was accompanied by ideas about their effects on man and his earthly habitat.

Astronomy

A universal study

All settled civilizations have studied astronomy:

  • Knowledge of the movement of the moon and the sun was vital for a pre-industrial society, as a way of telling the time
  • The codification of such knowledge produced a calendar, by which the best periods for sowing, reaping, herding and other activities could be determined
  • Observation of the stars was also necessary for sea navigation and long land journeys
  • The calculations involved in this study made astronomy a main stimulus for mathematics.

Cosmology

The accumulated knowledge of the stars gave a cosmology, a picture of the whole universe. Before modern science, cosmology was closely related to theology: as well as describing the physical shape of the universe, a cosmology also explained its meaning, and gave an account of man's nature and purpose. The two central cosmologies in Western history were the geocentric and the heliocentric universe. Both were based on the basic shape of a wheel revolving around a hub.

The geocentric (or Ptolemaic) universe

Ptolemaic UniverseIn the geocentric universe the earth (geo) is at the centre, with other planets (the sun being counted as a planet) revolving around it in concentric circles. Looking out from the earth, astronomers noted the Moon, then Mercury, Venus, the Sun, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. Beyond these came the stars. These were held to be equidistant from the earth, and were placed on a further circle (hence the ‘Fixed Stars').

This was the conception of the cosmos held by the ancient Greeks, as described by Aristotle (384-322 BC). It is often referred to as the Ptolemaic universe after the Egyptian scientist Ptolemy (c.90-168). This cosmology persisted throughout the Middle Ages and much of the Renaissance, until the new science started to supplant it from about 1600.

The influence of the geocentric view

Christianity

Though the geocentric universe was originally pre-Christian, it was comfortably Christianised. Aristotle had described a ‘Prime Mover', a force outside the heavens setting them in motion. To Christians, this Prime Mover corresponded to God. They believed that the universe involved human-like intentions: for example, the (presumed) circular orbit of the planets expressed the planets' desire to be close to God.

The music of the spheres

The planets were believed to revolve on invisible but solid crystalline spheres. Their combined movement made the music of the spheres, which expressed divine harmony. The entire design of the universe was seen to reflect the will of a perfect God.

Geocentricity

The central position of the earth reflected the idea that the human race were privileged creatures, and the cosmos literally revolved around them. But the geocentric universe also put Earth at the furthest possible distance from Heaven (the ‘empyrean'), which lay beyond the Fixed Stars. Thus it also suited ideas of humility, with humans as fallen sinners.

Dual nature

The heavens were held to be perfect and unchanging. Earth, however, was mutable and corrupt. Earthly and heavenly natures were believed to be different, and therefore obeyed two sets of physical laws. Earth corresponded to the body, the heavens to the spirit.

Sublunar / superlunar

Beyond the moon (superlunar), the heavens existed in the perfect atmosphere of ‘ether', the natural element of angels. Man occupied the sublunar sphere. Here the atmosphere was polluted, and matter was composed of the four elements (Earth, Air, Fire and Water). Beneath the moon, all things are liable to corruption and decay.

Finite

The cosmos was seen as vast but finite. Medieval man looking up at the stars imagined he was looking at the outermost edge of the universe.

Heliocentric

In the heliocentric cosmos, the sun (Greek helios) was believed to be at the centre, and the earth and other planets revolved around it. Copernicus's On the Revolution of the Heavenly Spheres (1543) showed that apparent aberrations in planetary orbits on the old model could be better explained if the sun were put at the centre. Thus Earth spins around its axis and revolves around the sun, giving the appearance that the sun rises in the east and sets in the west.

Later astronomers continued this work:

  • Kepler (1571-1630) worked out that orbits are elliptical, not circular
  • Using the telescope, Galileo (1564-1642) observed sunspots and irregularities on the moon, showing that the heavens were not perfect.

The response to the Heliocentric view

Heretical

The heliocentric cosmos was a matter of great controvesy. The Roman Catholic Church authorities condemned the theory, forcingd Galileo to recant in 1616, and banning Copernicus' book. The Ptolemaic model had informed Church teachings about God and man, thus the new model presented a challenge to the authority of the Church. Protestant reactions were very mixed; heliocentrism was enthusiastically adopted by some theologians and taught in some Protestant universities.

New Science

The heliocentric cosmos helped to pave the way for a fresh approach to science, based on mathematics and experiment: Newton (1642-1727) later demonstrated the physical rules underlying the behaviour of all matter. Although most scientists before the twentieth century could be described as theists, who believed that God was the reason behind the order observed within scientific laws, the sense that all aspects of cosmology were a reflection of theology was weakened. Increasingly, science studied only material things, while religion dealt with meaning and morality.

Culture

The heliocentric picture took centuries to be generally absorbed. Writers continued to use ideas and images drawn from the older picture, as is still common today in the words sunrise and sunset.

Developments

The heliocentric model has itself been altered by modern science, which places the solar system on the edge of the known universe. Newtonian physics has been revised by Einstein. Modern theories of parallel universes inspire science fiction in particular, while the relation of science and religion is frequently discussed.


Astrology

The influence of the heavenly bodies

Astrology describes the influence of the stars on human life. It was generally accepted until about 1600. Because the sun is the source of life, and the moon causes tides, it was felt that other heavenly bodies must also influence the earth. In the absence of modern science, this would help explain human behaviour and terrestrial phenomena, and allow for predictions.

The planets

Each planet has an individual influence:

  • Jupiter (Jove) disposes someone to be merry or ‘jovial'
  • Mars and Venus influence man to be warlike ('martial') or loving respectively
  • The influence of Mercury is seen in the term ‘mercurial' (lively and unpredictable)
  • A ‘lunatic' is affected by the lunar cycle of the moon
  • The influence of Saturn is seen in the adjective ‘saturnine' (having a gloomy temprament or appearance)
  • Planets also dominate particular days of the week (Sun-day etc.).

Planetary influence is affected by the planets' relation to each other (their constellation or aspect). Though planets could influence human behaviour, they could not determine it since, in Christian thinking, man has free will (see Romanticism: Determinism and free will).

The stars

By picturing the geocentric universe as a circle, it can be divided like a cake into twelve equal slices. For about a month (starting on March 21st) each ‘slice' will appear in the east where the sun rises. This segment is said to be ‘in the ascendant'.

Each segment has a distinct grouping of stars, referred to by the signs of the Zodiac: Aries (the Ram), Taurus (Bull) , Gemini (Twins), Cancer (Crab), Leo (Lion), Virgo (Virgin), Libra (Scales), Scorpio (Scorpion), Sagittarius (Archer), Capricorn (Goat), Aquarius (Water-carrier), Pisces (Fishes). The stars in the ascendant were believed to further affect the influence of the planets passing through them.

Credibility

There were some scholarly attacks on astrology in the sixteenth century, but in general people from all social ranks turned to astrologers to help them make important life decisions. The mathematics behind it seemed dazzling, and there was no alternative explanation of most events. Astrology also provided a satisfying link between the earth and the rest of the universe. Astrology thus formed part of the general way of thinking until it was displaced by modern science from the seventeenth century. In King Lear, Edmund laughs at his father Gloucester for ascribing events to the stars, a sign of a shift in belief at this time.

Language

The impact of astrology can be traced in language: influence itself comes from the idea of power flowing in from the planets and stars; dis-aster refers to a ‘bad star' having a malign influence.

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