Is astrology accurate? Reading horoscopes is a popular pastime, but is there any scientific evidence that they are accurate?
When you’re enticed by a familiar interruption and your willpower weakens, problems can occur.
Every day, up to 70 million Americans consult their horoscopes. At least, that’s what the American Federation of Astrologers claims. According to a Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life poll conducted twenty years ago, 25% of Americans believe that the positions of the stars and planets have an impact on our daily life. In 2012, the General Social Survey indicated that 34% of Americans think astrology is “extremely” or “kind of scientific,” and that the percentage of individuals who think astrology is “not at all scientific” has decreased from two-thirds to about half.
Astrology is the concept that astronomical phenomena, such as the stars over your head when you were born or the fact that Mercury is retrograde, have the potential to influence our daily lives and personality traits. Of course, this is distinct from astronomy, which is the scientific study of celestial objects, space, and the physics of the cosmos.
A particular branch of astrologyforecasting a person’s future or providing advice on everyday activities through horoscopesis gaining in popularity. The Cut, for example, recorded a 150 percent rise in horoscope page views in 2017 compared to 2016.
Clearly, a lot of people are trying to figure out how to read the stars for guidance. Understanding the positions of the stars is the foundation of astrology, which appears to be a scientific discipline in and of itself. Is there any scientific evidence that astrology has an impact on our personalities and lives?
But, since I still have five minutes of this six-minute podcast to fill, let’s take a look at how astrology has been put to the test.
Is your personality determined by your zodiac sign?
It’s crucial to realize, however, that astrology is not the same as astronomy. Astronomy is the scientific study of the universe and everything in it, but astrology isn’t. “No one has proved that astrology can be used to foretell the future or describe people’s personalities based just on their birth date,” NASA says.
Can you tell which student was born in which month based on their behaviors and personalities if you think back to that party? The answer is simple: no. There is no scientific evidence that a person’s brain chemistry is affected by the constellations on the day they are born. However, a person’s zodiac sign can influence their personality if they allow it to, because people are in charge of their actions and behaviors, which shape their personalities. “When I put others before myself, I’d like to think I’m selfless,” sophomore Pisces Helen Duan remarked. “However, my intuition is not Pisces-like.”