Scoping
It Out
Telescopes & Horoscopes
Khafiz Wrobel
"There is one God,
but within that God are many. There is one self, but within that self
are many. There is one body, in one time, but the self has other bodies
in other times. All 'times' exist at once. Historically speaking,
mankind chose a certain line of development. In it his consciousness
specialized, focusing upon sharp particulars of experience. But inherent
always, psychologically and biologically, there has been the possibility
of a change in that pattern. Such a development would, however, necessitate
first of all a broadening of concepts about the self, and a greater
understanding of human potential. Human consciousness is now at a
stage where such a development in not only feasible, but also necessary
if the race is to achieve its greatest fulfillment."--Seth, through
Jane Roberts.
Several centuries ago, a very
brilliant and creative person lived in Italy. His name was Galileo.
Many scientific experiments he conducted were fairly revolutionary
for his period. As befalls many thinkers who are slightly ahead of
their times, Galileo ended up facing the inquisition. The bone of
contention in this case was whether or not the Earth revolved around
the Sun. Galileo was for--the Church against. Because martyr-hood
wasn't his thing, Galileo recanted and was allowed to go free. It
has always been rumored, however, that as he turned from his inquisitors
he whispered under this breath, "But it does move."
Galileo could ignore the common sense evidence of his eyes (the Earth
is stationary) and the dogma of the church (the Earth is the center
of the universe) and support his belief that the Earth did revolve
round the Sun. The reason was because he was the inventor and earliest
user of what we now call the telescope. Prior to Galileo, mankind
polished glass into various prismatic shapes and found that certain
combinations of lenses held together produced a magnifying effect.
Objects on Earth, for example, could be made to look much larger than
they did to the unaided eye. Galileo, apparently, was the first to
turn the telescope toward the heavens.
This must have been one of the ultimate mind blowers of all time,
for, among other things, Galileo saw the moons of Jupiter circling
their mother planet. That telescopic vision of smaller bodies circling
a larger one gave factual support to the monk Copernicus' hypothesis
that the Earth moved about the Sun.
Galileo published his findings and it is popularly believed that he
was laughed out of the academic community. The majority of the authorities,
to whom he looked for approval, simply refused to look through the
telescope. I suppose one reason for their hesitation was the unconscious
realization that if they took one look through the telescope it might
be the end of the world as they knew it. This telescope could be dangerous
to their world view. Another interesting reason for skepticism was
the fact that Galileo didn't really know how the telescope worked.
This is true, for the laws of optics weren't under-stood until Newton's
day--quite a bit later. All Galileo knew were the new facts. He saw
craters on the moon, rings of Saturn, and the four inner moons of
Jupiter. He didn't know why his combination of the lenses allow-ed
this to happen, but he thought it absurd to deny that it did.
What we have here with Galileo, it seems to me, is a strange but not
that uncommon historical parallel between the telescope and the horoscope.
The telescope is a tool that gathers and focuses light. It allows
us to see physical things otherwise invisible. It works whether or
not you understand the principles of physics involved. The bottom
line test of the telescope is using it as it is supposed to be used
and see what you see.
I suggest the same thing can be said for the horoscope. The horoscope
is also a tool for focusing. It allows us to focus on the dimension
of meaning. One of my key beliefs is that we live not only in a world
of facts, but also in a world of meanings. They are part of the fabric
of the universe. We can discover meanings in the events of our lives.
A focusing lens enables us to do so. The horoscope is one type of
focusing lens. Like the telescope it works, whether or not you understand
why.
It is absurd to argue against astrology, as modern day academics do,
on the grounds that it is "scientifically impossible" It
is just as absurd as it was for earlier skeptics to deny the properties
of the telescope. I've never found anyone who couldn't use the horoscope
to focus on the world of meaning. All it takes is desire to do so
and some instruction on how to use the tool.
Galileo, as we all know, had the last laugh, for facts have a peculiar
stubbornness about them. They just don't go away. I suspect there
were people in his day who held out to the end. However, people who
refused to consider the possibilities of the telescope and the brave
new world it implied, probably went to their graves muttering things
about the devil and human folly. In our own time we are confronted
with a similar choice. Are we not going to consider the possibility
that horoscopes work? Are we at all interested in expanding the limits
of who and what we think we are? What type of strange fear kept Galileo's
contemporaries, especially the intelligent ones, from looking through
the telescope? What are we afraid of? Ourselves?
Khafiz Wrobel is
an astrologist in Humboldt County, CA. He has also been a guest on
Spirit Talk TV. He can
be reached at 707-834-3750
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