On Sunday, April 9, 2017 at 8:52:44 PM UTC-5, Deborah Swanson wrote: > PS. I've been using medical astrology to look ahead at my > medical condition for years in advance. And being off by a > day or so doesn't matter that much when you're looking at > trends over the course of years and decades. I also have a > little software widget to look at the planetary data in > graphical chart form at any particular second, also based > on sweph, which has been quite astoundingly accurate in > following the rather complex kaleidoscope of my symptoms > during the course of a day. (Though it doesn't do you a bit > of good if you forget to look! Which is my entire > motivation to get it encoded and available with a few > clicks.) And it is quite useful to know in advance what > will be happening when, and most importantly when it will > stop. Knowledge is power!
It's simply amazing what technology can do these days. And with medical diagnosis now just a few clicks away, someone really should tell those medical students to stop wasting time and money at university. > Caveat. This kind of precision and accuracy is only found > in the specific forms of astrology which relate to pure > physical phenomena, and most of what you see these days > masquerading as astrology is pure hooey, almost entirely > invented on a large scale in the Middle Ages and flowered > in the Renaissance. Whadda coinicidence, as did alchemy! > By pure physical phenomena, which is the only phenomena > that is at least debatably influenced by physical planetary > forces, I mean things like the moon's tides, sunspots, > plant and animal activity throughout the year, and > supremely, the inner workings of the human body, the first > wholly Western medicine devised by the ancient Greeks. (The > ancient Greek physicians are an excellent fallback if > modern medicine is failing you - if you can find enough > that remains today of their art.) Yeah, just uh, be sure to avoid te hemlock, mmmkay? ;-) -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list