bloodyrosemccoy: (Geek On)
bloodyrosemccoy ([personal profile] bloodyrosemccoy) wrote2011-10-24 11:44 am

The Stars Say That You're An Exciting And Wonderful Person, But You Know They're Lying

Trying to find a book on the history of astrology and its influences on the world, which isn’t hard to find. The tricky part is finding an author who doesn’t feel the need to constantly insist that astrology is TRUE DAMMIT. Bit surprising, really—I’d have expected it to be impartial, but the last author waxed strongly poetic about how empty astronomy is without astrology, and how astrology gives lives meaning and connects us to the greater universe in a tangible way, and other such bullshit.

Thing is, as an anthropology nerd, I find astrology fascinating. Not for its objective truth; one can be interested in urban legends, or religions, or fairy tales, without thinking they’re actual truths. No, I like to see what a complex mythology like that says about the people who made it up, and how a human-generated system influences how humans actually behave. It doesn’t matter if the position of Jupiter actually affects a person’s life*; what matters is that the person behaves as if it does.

I kinda wish I could find a book that sees the difference.

And yes, this is more research for writing. I’m trying to add some more mythology into the OGYAFE culture, and they just can’t get enough of their stars. If nothing else, it gives me some good place names to work with.


*It says you should spend the rest of the week face-down in the mud.

[identity profile] padparadscha.livejournal.com 2011-10-24 07:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Cool! *amends knowledge* That is one terrific project, too.
beccastareyes: Image of Sam from LotR. Text: loyal (Default)

[personal profile] beccastareyes 2011-10-24 07:58 pm (UTC)(link)
It was 'we are going to have a debate about where Earth's water came from, so all of you have to study up on at least one of these possible theories'. I really liked that class -- Planet Formation and Evolution -- even if it was kind of scattered all over.

Actually, one thing I like about being a scientist is reading papers. And understanding them.