I don’t see it as harmless at all. It promotes belief in other pseudoscience, like various kinds of alternative medicine. People literally die from using fake medicine instead of real medicine. It’s also a scam, and I hate scams.
You’re also missing that the astrology book itself is where the idea came from that the exact time of a person’s birth is important to making accurate predictions. If anything, your commentary about the time being irrelevant is an argument not just against astrology in general, but against that author in particular.
I’m not following on how it promotes belief in “other pseudoscience.” I’m also not sure who decides what is pseudoscience and what is not. I just tried to demonstrate on why the physiological influence of distance gravitational objects is still a great mystery to humanity. I fear that the assignment of these binary labels, and shutting down any discussion of alternative possibilities, is rooted in authoritarianism and is more of a threat than any possible scam.
Regarding exact dates and times, of course, the most accurate input is always preferred. The neat thing about astronomy is that we can actually calculate the approximate location of gravitational bodies at times, in both the past and the future. If you are confident that you know the time of an event to a millisecond, by all means, please use this data with all the accuracy available to you. However, even if you are wrong by a significant amount, this error does not scale linearly with the overarching calculations. I tried demonstrating this by using the absolute maximum error of our position relative to the Earth’s rotation. In sum, this error was insignificant.
I’m sorry if I made any assumptions. I thought that since you used this evidence to make a point to your own friends, that you thought these errors were significant. However, I guess it could just be the “Cult of Science” mentality @agamemnonymous was describing.
I don’t see it as harmless at all. It promotes belief in other pseudoscience, like various kinds of alternative medicine. People literally die from using fake medicine instead of real medicine. It’s also a scam, and I hate scams.
You’re also missing that the astrology book itself is where the idea came from that the exact time of a person’s birth is important to making accurate predictions. If anything, your commentary about the time being irrelevant is an argument not just against astrology in general, but against that author in particular.
I’m not following on how it promotes belief in “other pseudoscience.” I’m also not sure who decides what is pseudoscience and what is not. I just tried to demonstrate on why the physiological influence of distance gravitational objects is still a great mystery to humanity. I fear that the assignment of these binary labels, and shutting down any discussion of alternative possibilities, is rooted in authoritarianism and is more of a threat than any possible scam.
Regarding exact dates and times, of course, the most accurate input is always preferred. The neat thing about astronomy is that we can actually calculate the approximate location of gravitational bodies at times, in both the past and the future. If you are confident that you know the time of an event to a millisecond, by all means, please use this data with all the accuracy available to you. However, even if you are wrong by a significant amount, this error does not scale linearly with the overarching calculations. I tried demonstrating this by using the absolute maximum error of our position relative to the Earth’s rotation. In sum, this error was insignificant.
I’m not the one saying the error is significant.
I’m sorry if I made any assumptions. I thought that since you used this evidence to make a point to your own friends, that you thought these errors were significant. However, I guess it could just be the “Cult of Science” mentality @agamemnonymous was describing.