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Dr. Peter Niehenke: Lecture held at the 10TH INTERNATIONAL
RESEARCH CONFERENCE ON ASTROLOGY by: The Astrological
Association & URANIA TRUST, London (9th and 10th November
1996)
The process of research into astrology is stagnating:
as astrologers appear to fail even when they have had
considerable influence on the design of a study as was
the case in Rob Nanning's recent "Astro-Test". Most
of the numerous master theses and dissertation papers
dealing with an empirical investigation of astrological
claims, again and again lead to the same result: no
support for the astrological hypothesis. The monument
called Mars effect as discovered by the Gauquelins became
cracked, even begins to rock.
But something remains the same: In our daily work
as counselling astrologers we continue to be successful.
Our clients confirm, often to their dismay, that the
chart reveals deep insights into their soul or psyche.
For more than ten years now I have been preoccupied
with the question how it fits that we, in the counselling
session, are able to impress our clients again and again,
that again an again I get this deep feeling of proof
when reading a chart, but that nearly every test to
objectively prove the correctness of chart interpretations
in scientific studies failed in the end. My very own
dissertation ten years ago was such a "grandiose" failure.
Please excuse the word "grandiose" but, after all, I
had mailed out 12,000 questionnaires of sixteen pages
each with more than five-hundred items and my study
was one of the biggest studies ever done at the psychological
institute of the university of Freiburg/Germany (by
the way, it also needed the largest allocation of CPU-time
ever needed for a psychological study at the computer
centre of the university). But, I did not succeed in
showing that people with Aries or Taurus dominant, feel
themselves as they should feel as Aries or Taurus --
at least, they had not responded this way.
Colleague [astrologers] very quickly had some explanations
ready as they also have today for the continued failure
of new studies: scientific methods in general and statistical
methods in particular, actually are inappropriate to
prove the truth of astrology. These colleagues seemingly
do not recognize the inconsistencies they get involved
in this way, for in their next basic lessons about astrology
they probably will again explain that water people tend
to be more emotional than air people. They probably
do not recognize that with this explanation they state
something about frequencies because they say that among
water people you will find more emotional people than
you will find among air people. And this is a statistical
statement which is either true or not true. If one decides
to enter the playground of statistics with this kind
of statements one has to accept and stand by its rules!
In other words, it could well be that scientific methods
in general, and statistical methods in particular, are
not appropriate to prove astrology as a whole but they
are in fact appropriate to prove the statements made
in astrological textbooks and announced in astrology
courses. It is not very helpful to explain these facts
away or to deny their existence. We all too often try
to wriggle ourselves out of our problems with various
justifications, downplaying our failure, finding thousands
of explanations after the event -- instead of getting
a deeper knowledge of astrology by taking up these facts.
The problem is that many astrologers in spite of their
protests, approach astrology with similar prejudices
as do scientists when criticising astrology. The crucial
point is, what kind of information one can acquire by
using astrological methods. Even most astrologers unconditionally
accept the logical rule of the "tertium non datur" to
be always true: Either a statement is true or it is
not true. There is no third possibility. But for rules
in astrological textbooks it is true that they are neither
true nor false. Actually, they are also not partly true,
as this statement could be misunderstood. They are true
if they are adequately understood. This statement needs
explanation.
On the basis of a naive sense of reality and an outdated
view of science, scientists as well as astrologers normally
share the notion of the term "truth" in a way that has
become obsolete even in natural sciences.The development
of systems theory clearly shows that when describing
complex self-organising systems, we have to deal with
definitions located far away from the mathematical and
scientific ideal of unambiguousness. The "system-laws"
as found by the biologist Bertalanfy, the founder of
systems theory, at any rate share more with analogies
than with the differential equations of physics. Due
to this fact the scientific ideal of objectivity becomes
more and more obsolete itself.
We are not yet able in science to deal with the dimension
"similarity" just as we are equally unable to deal with
the dimension of "meaning". Meaning is not something
of a symbol has (be it either in a linguistic or in
a general sense) but meaning is something a living being
attributes to a symbol, a situation or an action. Therefore,
there is no possibility to objectively measure the meaning
of information. Of course, we are able to find out that
most of all road users stop when the traffic light is
red but in an objective sense this does not mean that
red light has something to do with the action of stopping.
Let me explain by an example, what all this has to
do with astrology and with scientific proof of astrological
rules: If I look at the clouds in the sky and suddenly
see an animal in one particular cloud there is no possibility
whatsoever to prove that the similarity of the form
of the cloud with the form of a certain animal (objectively)
exists. If you want to prove something you need equality
(identity); a proof means that something is unequivocally
true. But this very equality is not true in the case
of similarity.
If dealing with visual forms, with the development
of computers it would now be possible to calculate a
kind of a coefficient of similarity between the shape
of the cloud and the shape of an animal on the basis
of photographs. But the decision what minimum coefficient
is necessary in order to legitimately speak of "similarity"
is a matter of taste.
So I cannot force someone else who is watching the
clouds with me, to accept the similarity with a certain
animal as I could do in the case of proof (for instance
by a scientific experiment). The fellow at my side must
be willing to accept my view, to look through my glasses
so to speak if he wants to be able the see the similarity.
In fact, he actually has to be sort of "uncritical"
if he wants to see what I can see. In spite of that,
the similarity is not only illusion: think of the coefficient
of similarity that could be calculated by a computer.
But if we leave the sphere of visual forms: What about
similarity between pieces of music, building styles
or cultures? We do not even have a notion how similarity
in these cases could be measured. And even if we had:
Similarity gradually increases and decreases. There
is no way of saying that something is similar to something
else or not, because it is always a matter of degree.
In this world all things are similar to a certain degree
be this similarity only the very fact that they all
belong to this same world.
Also, in the counselling session as well as in the
case of a client (who is willing to understand!) reading
a blind test, we face a similar situation as in the
case of two people watching the clouds and seeing an
animal. The evidence the client might feel is not conclusive
as it would be in case of a logical conclusion or in
the case of a proof of an experiment as naive astrologers
believe, nor is it arbitrary, random or pure illusion
as the psychologically trained critics of astrology
try to make people believe.
Hence, to see similarities you need empathy and willingness.
For this reason the interpretation of a chart does
not produce "reliable information" as most astrologers
believe; it does not tell something about facts that
could be proven objectively. If I see an animal in a
cloud someone else could see the similarity, too, but
just as well he might not see it. If he will see it
depends, besides the degrees of similarity between cloud
and shape of the animal, on his past experiences, his
fantasy and his willingness [to see]. Objectively proven
could be only the fact that there is a cloud with a
certain form.
And in the case of an astrologically based description
of personality traits (the question is of course applicable
to every description of personality traits), what about
the concept of similarity in this field?
The similarity between a cloud and the shape of a certain
animal relates to the visual form. What then is the
similarity between the description of a person's traits
and the respective person based on personality traits
(for instance being emotional) are of course not directly
conceivable as is the physical shape. We infer the existence
of those traits from certain behaviour. That's why we
call them psychological constructs. If in a study "emotionality"
is intended to be a variable we not only have to be
able to measure this variable (that is, we have to able
to assign a number to every person representing the
what degree this person is emotional), if we want to
know about the validity of our findings we have to know
what this variable actually means. But in fact, our
knowledge of the meaning of the term "emotional" is
rather diffuse. That is the reason why psychologists
do not explain or explicitly define what they mean when
they speaking of emotionality, but are content with
a so-called "operational definition"; that is, they
tell us how this variable will be measured in the context
of a special study. For instance, they define a person
is emotional if at least 75% of all her friends and
acquaintances characterize her as such. Of course, they
cannot tell whether their measurement is adequate in
grasping the meaning of the term "emotional" because
they do not even know whether such a trait really exists
(because they do not know what that could mean, a trait
exists).
All the secrets of the nature of human characteristics,
all the ambiguities regarding the ontological state
of these characteristics (is a trait really something
similar to the colour of the skin, the weight or other
physical attributes, can we deal with them in the same
way?) remain hidden behind the curtain called "operational
definition". Psychologists do not clearly resolve these
questions, they do not solve the problem of the relation
between a certain operational definition and the real
meaning of the corresponding term - they define the
problem away. In every study they more or less appeal
to the reader that the way they measure the variable
somehow relates to the meaning of the term.
For many years all this has been well-known among psychologists.
And it is true that from a pragmatic point of view these
problems could be put aside (similar to physicists who
delete certain terms in an equation that are negligible
in a special context because the amount they represent
might be smaller than the measurement error). Psychological
methods have proved to be successful in many areas of
life. From a practical point of view this is a justification
for the applied methods. But as in physics, where the
relativistic term in most equations normally could be
omitted so that Newton's formulas apply: if we want
to make a decision about the existence or non-existence
of a phenomenon, it is pointless to argue that a certain
method has proved to be "practical". In such a situation
we have to go back to the roots of the methods applied
and have to ask basic questions.
Back to astrology and astrological research: We astrologers
state that a certain constellation of planets in the
sky is related to something called a human trait, which
we can not explain of what it actually is. We relate
constellations to psychological constructs and so all
the uncertainties related to the use and definitions
of these constructs slip into the results of our study.
How could we prove something like a relativistic theory
when the effects we are searching for, are smaller than
the signal-noise-ratio of our experimental conditions?
To avoid having to answer the question what dimensions
of our lives the chart actually is related to, many
researchers in the field of astrology just correlate
a clearly definable attribute of people (for instance
their affiliation to a certain profession) with the
position of certain planets in the sky. If we would
try to prove in this way that a cloud in the sky is
similar to an animal, we of course would fail because
nowhere in such a design the concept of similarity occurs.
The only support left for our conviction that astrology
works is our success in the counselling situation, as
I pointed out at the beginning of this lecture. As long
as the processes characterizing this counselling situation
are not fully understood, research in astrology will
continue to stagnate. My chief interest as a researcher
therefore actually is to solve the problem what the
so-called evidence (in German: Evidenz-Erlebnis) when
reading a chart actually is and what the factors are
it is based on. A very important question in this respect
will be whether this evidence is stronger when using
the correct birth data in contrast to using arbitrarily
chosen birth data.
Because the ability to "see" similarity depends on
empathy or willingness only real counselling
situations should be taken, for: If someone knows participating
in a study his approach to the situation is completely
different from a real counselling situation.
He will for instance be more "critical" handling the
interpretations and most probably will not really let
himself in for the process. In other words: It is not
possible to learn about the processes going on in a
real counselling situation by investigating artificial
situations. This necessity of real counselling
situations of course evokes serious ethical problems:
If I want to find out whether wrong birth dates yield
the same evidence as correct birth dates neither the
astrologer nor the client should know whether the chart
in question is based upon the correct or the false birth
time. For the time being I have no idea how this ethical
problem can be solved.
In this short lecture I only wanted to outline the
idea that the failure of astrological research might
partly be due to a misunderstanding of the kind of information
a chart reveals. At the beginning of this lecture I
stated that the rules in astrological textbooks are
neither right nor wrong - that they are correct if adequately
understood. What does this mean? Of course you all have
heard of "fuzzy logic". In fuzzy logic a rule not simply
does apply or does not apply but it applies to a certain
degree and, what is even more important, rules that
are contradictory in terms of aristotelian logic can
to some extent apply at the same time. Although I do
not think that fuzzy logic will solve all our problems,
the concepts behind fuzzy logic are at any rate a better
analogy to the way astrological rules work than statistics.
And the very success of fuzzy logic in daily life shows
that our notion of natural laws or, in a more general
sense, of how nature functions has to be altered.
Regarding rules in textbooks: The only effect they
should have is to remind me of certain themes in our
lives, to evoke certain emotions, to guide our intuition
in a certain direction by evoking certain associations.
We do not actually know how these rules are related
to the evidence we feel when reading a chart. We have
to find that out first.
© Peter Niehenke
My thanks for his permission to publish it here.
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