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2006-09-01 03:53:37 · 19 answers · asked by Aslesha 1 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

19 answers

Astronomy section = science
Astrology section = horoscope bull$hit

2006-09-01 03:55:44 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

No, they cannot! Astrology is nonsense, but Astronomy is Science. I studied astrology and can do horoscopes, so my opinion is expert. On a typical horoscope, a few items may seem somewhat accurate, and believers look only at them, but they ignore many more that are totally wrong. A stopped clock is right twice a day...but no one knows when. I could concoct a system to guess about people that would be more accurate than astrology.

2006-09-01 06:31:40 · answer #2 · answered by miyuki & kyojin 7 · 1 0

You have asked your question in the wrong category, however; Astrology can be quite helpful, if your chart (horoscope) is done specifically for you. An astrologer will need your correct time of birth, place of birth (city and state), and date of birth. Newspaper horoscopes are too general (Sun Sign oriented), therefore cannot give an accurate personal forecast.

2006-09-01 05:46:40 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Yes horoscope will give accurate forecasts with following conditions.

1. the date of birth + time + place must be accurately noted down.
2. the astrologer must be good at calculations and well knowledgeable of course.
3. you have the right horoscope and the astrologer, you can get pretty decent forecasts, but it wont be very detailed of course.

But understand one thing you cannot change your destiny, horoscope is a read-only entity. You can just know, performing puja or homas will not and cannot change your destiny.

2006-09-01 04:02:36 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

The common question of which Bible translation to use is very important—it concerns the most important words ever spoken, the words of God the Creator. It’s crucial to understand at the outset that behind each version is a fundamental philosophy of Bible translation. You want to make sure the version you use reproduces in your own language what God actually said. Translation Philosophy You can separate modern Bible translations into two basic groups—formal equivalency and dynamic equivalency. Formal equivalency attempts a word for word rendition, providing as literal a translation as possible. Dynamic equivalency is more like a paraphrase, trying to convey ideas thought by thought. Since no one language corresponds perfectly to any other language, every translation involves some degree of interpretation. A translation based on formal equivalency has a low degree of interpretation; translators are trying to convey the meaning of each particular word. When faced with a choice between readability and accuracy, formal equivalency translators are willing to sacrifice readability for the sake of accuracy. By its very nature, a translation based on dynamic equivalency requires a high degree of interpretation. The goal of dynamic equivalency is to make the Bible readable, conveying an idea-for-idea rendering of the original. That means someone must first decide what idea is being communicated, which is the very act of interpretation. How the translators view Scripture becomes extremely important in the final product. Sadly, there are many in the Bible-translation industry who have a low view of the Scripture. They think the Bible is merely a product of man, replete with mistakes, contradictions, and personal biases. Many translators today have also adopted the postmodern idea of elevating the experience of the reader over the intention of the author. They make the contemporary reader sovereign over the text and demote the intended meaning of the historic human writers who were carried along by one divine author (2 Peter 1:19-21). Therefore, it’s vital that you find a translation that represents what the Holy Spirit actually said as faithfully as possible. Who’s interested in some contemporary translation committee’s spin on what they think contemporary readers want to read? We want to read what the author intended us to read, which is what the Holy Spirit originally inspired. MIMI

2016-03-27 03:20:31 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

No. People make up all kinds of things, like horoscopes and nonesense such as that to explain away things, or make them logical.

You may as well beleive in tea leaves, tarrot cards, or the roll of the dice to forcast anything in a game of chance...

Get out of bed, and greet the World and with the LORD by your side, you can accomplish anything that HE has a mind to let you do.

I wish you well..

Jesse

2006-09-01 04:03:12 · answer #6 · answered by x 7 · 2 0

If they did, all horoscopes would have to agree and there would only be 12 different outcomes to the day.

2006-09-01 04:24:38 · answer #7 · answered by heidavey 5 · 0 0

No horoscopes make it so that you are waiting for the predictions to come true, sometimes you even trick yourself into thinking it happened. I think horoscopes are one big mind game!

2006-09-01 03:56:30 · answer #8 · answered by Ganja 2 · 2 0

No.

Whenever I read them they could happen to anyone.

I dont know about going to see an actual psycic i've heard that they can predict things more so.

2006-09-01 03:57:36 · answer #9 · answered by -x-STEPHiE-x- 2 · 1 1

I dont believe in that kind of thing, but i still check it for laughs sometimes.

2006-09-01 03:56:43 · answer #10 · answered by swift_stryker84 1 · 2 0

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