From a scientific standpoint, it can be said that such “planets,” located so far from Earth that their gravitational pull (the only known force capable of bridging interplanetary distances) cannot exert any noticeable influence on Earth and the lives of those inhabiting it.” Statements like this are becoming increasingly common. In past centuries, astrology and astronomy were inseparable. An astrologer was usually also an astronomer (Kepler, Galileo, etc.), and any discovery in astronomy was immediately adopted by astrology. Isn’t it time to reconsider astrology’s approach to Pluto, discovered in 1930 (quite recently), which is now known to be one of the largest independent objects in the Kuiper Belt? Perhaps we should no longer regard it as a standalone planet, but rather in inseparable connection with the Kuiper Belt.
Venus and Mars.
From 1962 to 1990, 11 successful spacecraft missions were carried out to Venus, and from 1965 to 2005, 13 missions to Mars. The most recent missions involved direct landings on the planetary surfaces. A vast amount of data has been obtained. Comparing the latest information available about these planets, we find that Mars’ mesosphere shows no signs of splitting into separate tectonic plates, volcanic activity has largely ceased—this is a cooling planet. Venus, on the other hand, exhibits all signs of active volcanic activity. Venus has the densest atmosphere among terrestrial planets and extremely high temperatures—around 500°C, while Mars’ atmosphere is only 0.01% as dense, with an average temperature of -50°C. And if we continue comparing planetary characteristics,
Venus emerges as younger, more active, and more dynamic, whereas Mars appears significantly calmer in all respects. And if we incorporate these corrections into the astrological characteristics of the planets, what would we obtain? If we consider one aspect of Venus—girls and young women—and everything associated with them, an analogy becomes apparent. The period of Venus’s exploration coincides with the beginning of women’s active struggle for equal rights with men in society (including sexual rights: the sexual revolution occurred approximately during these years). At present, women have displaced men in nearly all spheres. Now everything previously accessible to men has become equally accessible to women. Perhaps in interpreting Venus, we should emphasize its active, even aggressive component.
author: Medvedev L.G.



