Richard Feynman, on 'Astrology'
Now, looking at the troubles that we have with
all the unscientific and peculiar things in the world, there are a
number of them which cannot be associated with difficulties in how to
think, I think, but are just due to some lack of information. In
particular, there are believers in astrology, of which, no doubt, there
are a number here. Astrologists say that there are days when it’s better
to go to the dentist than other days. There are days when it’s better to
fly in an airplane, for you, if you are born on such a day and such and
such an hour. And it’s all calculated by very careful rules in terms of
the position of the stars. If it were true it would be very interesting.
Insurance people would be very interested to change the insurance rates
on people if they follow the astrological rules, because they have a
better chance when they are in the airplane. Tests to determine whether
people who go on the day that they are not supposed to go are worse off
or not have never been made by the astrologers. The question of whether
it’s a good day for business or a bad day for business has never been
established. Now what of it? Maybe it’s still true, yes.
On the other hand, there’s an awful lot of
information that indicates that it isn’t true. Because we have a lot of
knowledge about how things work, what people are, what the world is,
what those stars are, what the planets are that you are looking at, what
makes them go around more or less, where they’re going to be in the next
2000 years is completely known. They don’t have to look up to find out
where it is. And furthermore, if you look very carefully at the
different astrologers they don’t agree with each other, so what are you
going to do? Disbelieve it. There’s no evidence at all for it. It’s pure
nonsense.
The only way you can believe it is to have a
general lack of information about the stars and the world and what the
rest of the things look like. If such a phenomenon existed it would be
most remarkable, in the face of all the other phenomena that exist, and
unless someone can demonstrate it to you with a real experiment, with a
real test, took people who believe and people who didn’t believe and
made a test, and so on, then there’s no point in listening to them.
The text above is as excerpt from the
book 'The Meaning of it All: Thoughts of a Citizen-Scientist',
chapter 'This Unscientific Age', by Richard P. Feynman,
published by Basic Books. |
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