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Karma,
Responsibility and Magic
Sometimes
people write me asking for a reading, saying they want to know
what their karmic lessons are in this lifetime. One gentleman
wrote me saying he wanted a "straight" reading, with
no attempt to frame the difficult in positive language. He referred
to this
article in the New York Times in which scientists have proven
that humans have no free will:
The
German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer said, as Einstein paraphrased
it, that a human can very well do what he wants, but cannot
will what he wants.
Einstein,
among others, found that a comforting idea. This knowledge
of the non-freedom of the will protects me from losing my good
humor and taking much too seriously myself and my fellow humans
as acting and judging individuals, he said.
How
comforted or depressed this makes you might depend on what you
mean by free will. The traditional definition is called libertarian
or deep free will. It holds that humans are free
moral agents whose actions are not predetermined. This school
of thought says in effect that the whole chain of cause and
effect in the history of the universe stops dead in its tracks
as you ponder the dessert menu.
At
that point, anything is possible. Whatever choice you make is
unforced and could have been otherwise, but it is not random.
You are responsible for any damage to your pocketbook and your
arteries.
That
strikes many people as incoherent, said Dr. Silberstein,
who noted that every physical system that has been investigated
has turned out to be either deterministic or random. Both
are bad news for free will, he said. So if human actions
cant be caused and arent random, he said, It
must be what some weird magical power?
People
who believe already that humans are magic will have no problem
with that.
It
is this belief in magic that bridges the gap between acceptance
of the mystery of the web of life and a dry skeptical view of
the universe. Astrology strikes a balance between fate and free
will: our birthcharts and underlying personality characteristics
are predetermined, but what we do with those potentialities are
our choice.
Those
who believe in complete predestination, with no lessons and no
purpose, are relieved of any responsibility with respect to their
own life. If everything is predetermined, it doesn't matter what
choice you make at the crossroads of life. Saturn is known as
the Lord of Karma, but he is also the Lord of Responsibility which
reveals the linkage between the two. Karma doesn't exist in a
vacuum; it presents us with difficult situations and then asks
us to make a choice whether to fall back into the instincts that
keep us tied to that karma, or to decide to make different choices
this time.
I
call myself a "transformational" astrologer because
I look at the birthchart from a more alchemical perspective. Here
are the ingredients of the chart; how can we transmute them into
gold? How can we take the difficulties and blocks we are given
and use them to make us stronger, wiser, more attuned with the
rhythms of the universe? It's easy to sit back and say "this
is my karma" and absolve yourself from any responsibility.
The harder path is the one of responsibility and evolution.
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