See also: Signs of the zodiac
One of the most common arguments
used against astrology is that the statements astrologers make have long
become obsolete. Astrology claims that someone born on 30th March has the sun at
10° Aries, whereas in reality on 30th March the sun is clearly in the fixed
star constellation of Pisces.
Claims such as this one are very
confusing for those interested in astrology. Do astrologers really live on the
far side of the moon, continuing to cling onto beliefs that science has long
since debunked? Confusion arises because both of the above statements regarding
the sun's position on 30th March are correct. On this date the sun is in both
the zodiacal sign of Aries and in the fixed star constellation of Pisces. These
statements differ because they are made within different frames of reference.
Something similar would occur if you were to call a friend in London from
Germany to discuss the time of day. The person in London might claim that it is
10 am, whereas for you in Germany it would be 11 am. Both claims are, of
course, correct - within different frames of reference i.e. time zones.
The constellations are groups of
fixed stars in the sky. Since ancient times humans have pondered over their significance.
The strip of sky which is particularly relevant for astrology is the ecliptic
within which the planets of our solar system move. It is here that we find
(going round anti-clockwise) the twelve fixed star constellations of Aries,
Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn,
Aquarius and Pisces. These constellations are of widely varying sizes and at
times they even overlap. Because the patterns formed by these constellations
can be interpreted in a variety of ways, it impossible, for example, to say
where Capricorn ends and Aquarius begins. It is into this zone of the sky (or
celestial sphere) that astronomers project a perfect circle - the ecliptic -
formed by the earth's yearly orbit around the sun - or, for an observer on the
earth, the sun's apparent orbit around our own planet. The ecliptic remains
practically stable against the background of the fixed stars. Astronomers today
continue to use this circle as a point of reference. In the ecliptical
coordinate system a planet's location is given using two numbers: the
ecliptical longitude is ascertained by measuring in an anti-clockwise direction
from the zero-point on the ecliptic, and the ecliptical latitude by measuring
the planet's deviation from the circle. Both of these readings are given in
degrees. The ecliptical longitude is measured from 0 to 360°. But where is the
zero-point on the ecliptic? The fixing of the zero is necessarily arbitary -
i.e. a matter of definition. For geographical coordinates on earth, for
example, zero degrees longitude has been fixed at the astronomical observatory
at Greenwich in London. The zero-point on the ecliptic has been established by
using the vernal equinox in the northern hemisphere (Aequinoktium) - 20th or
21stMarch - the day on which day and night are of equal length over
the entire planet. This point is mathematically defined using the point of
intersection between the equator and the earth's orbit around the sun, i.e. the
ecliptic. The celestial equator is given by the position of the earth's axis in
space. If this axis were to remain stable the vernal equinox on 21st March
would be a fixed point in space.
At astronomy's high point in
antiquity during the hellenistic age from around 200 BC - 200 AD, the vernal
equinox in the northern hemisphere was situated on the border between the fixed
star constellations of Aries and Pisces. Astrologers at the time divided the
circle of the ecliptic into twelve equal segments of 30° using this zero-point
as a frame of reference. These segments were given the same names as the fixed
star constellations lying behind them. It is important to distinguish these 30°
degree segments of the ecliptic (or signs of the zodiac) from the background of
fixed star constellations carrying the same name, which are both vaguely
defined and of irregular size.
However, the earth's axis is not
stable. The earth is not a perfect sphere, but flattens out at the poles and
bulges at the equator. It reacts to the the gravitational influence of the sun
and moon like a spinning top whose rotation is distorted by some external
force: this causes what has been termed the earth's precession - which means
that the earth's axis itself rotates in a circle, leading to a conical movement
around the fixed pole of the ecliptic. One complete rotation around this cone
takes roughly 26000 years. This shifting of the earth's axis causes the
celestial equator to shift so that the point of intersection between it and the
ecliptic - the vernal equinox - moves from east to west along the circle of the
ecliptic, i.e. in the opposite direction to the standard zodiac.
It takes about 26000 years for the
vernal equiox to make one complete revolution around the ecliptic, i.e. through
all of the twelve constellations. It takes around one twelfth of this time -
roughly 2160 years - to traverse one sign of the zodiac. In antiquity the
vernal equinox was situated between the signs of Pisces and Aries, and because
of its retrograde movement through the zodiac is at present situated in the border
zone between the constellations of Pisces and Aquarius, moving slowly towards
Aquarius. Because the constellations lack clear boundaries, it is difficult to
say exactly when the vernal equinox will move from the constellation of Pisces
into that of Aquarius, i.e. when the so-called Age of Aquarius will begin.
Depending on where the boundary is drawn this will occur somewhere between 2100
and 2500 AD.
The vernal equinox is the point of
reference from which both astronomers and astrologers begin their measurement
of the ecliptic, and it marks the beginning of the division of the zodiac into
twelve equal segments. This is why the segment of the zodiac known as
"Aries" is situated where the fixed star constellation of Pisces is.
On 30th March, the sun is situated at roughly 10° of the astrological segment
of the ecliptic known as Aries, but if one were to look up into the night sky
one would see the fixed star constellation of Pisces.
Western astrology no longer uses
the background of fixed stars as a point of reference. Modern western astrology
uses the same system of reference as that of astronomy, i.e. it divides the
ecliptic into segments starting at the vernal equinox. Although these segments
have been given the same names as the fixed star constellations, the earth's
precession means that they are no longer in line with the constellations of the
same name. It is only in certain specialist areas of astrology - such as
mundane astrology when studying larger epochal changes - that the relationship
between these constellations of fixed stars and the ecliptic has any
significance. References are then made to the "Ages" of Pisces,
Aquarius etc. Other non-western systems of astrology still work to some extent
with alternative systems to the ecliptical equinoctial coordinate system used
by western astrologers. Indian astrology uses a system which refers to the
fixed stars as its method of measurement, leading to a situation in which the
position of the zero-point has become a matter for dispute. This is because different
astrological schools in Indian astrology refer to different zero-points.
More details concerning the themes of
precession and zodiac can be found in Dieter Koch's book "Kritik der
astrologischen Vernunft (Eine Klärung des Anspruchs der Astrologie - Antwort
der Astrologie an ihre Kritiker)", Verlag der Häretischen Blätter, ISBN
3-931806-03-0.
The book is only available in German.
Translated by Andrew Clark