Astrology and Astronomy – From Omens to Orbits
How the search for meaning became a science.
By: James Fite | March 24, 2026 | 788 Words
(Photo by Ambir Tolang/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Today, astronomy is one of the core branches of physical science, focusing on the study of objects in space and the vast universe beyond Earth. But long before human eyes ever peered through the first telescope lenses, they gazed upward in wonder.
Modern astronomers study the science of stars, planets, galaxies, and cosmic events; ancient astrologers wove tales of gods, beasts, and heroes and interpreted the various celestial bodies as divine messengers that offered mystic secrets.
Astrology, the Beginning of Understanding
To ancient people, the night sky was a mysterious map that could, if interpreted correctly, predict or even affect human behaviors and outcomes. Early civilizations tracked the movement of the sun, moon, stars, and visible planets and concluded that the consistent patterns must mean something.
And so what we call astrology was born. Like ancient alchemy, it sprang up organically in different cultures independently and was refined and passed down from one to the next generation as time went by.
In Mesopotamia, priests carefully followed planetary paths, believing they hid messages from the gods. In ancient Egypt, observers noted that the rising of certain stars marked seasonal changes. Babylonians believed these patterns foretold earthly events such as floods, harvests, and the rise and fall of empires. In the ancient Americas, the Maya believed time was cyclical and used the night sky to predict life events. Many Native American tribes used moon phases to connect humans to nature and spirits. The ancient Chinese zodiac, or Shengxiao, was used to predict people’s personalities and fortunes and even to influence decisions such as marriage and career choices.
From Horoscopes to Telescopes
These ancient cultures didn’t separate the scientific from the supernatural and superstitious. They kept meticulous records, including star charts, calendars, and histories of both celestial and terrestrial events of significance.
As time stretched on, more advanced civilizations took up the study of the stars. Greek philosophers sought logical explanations for what they saw in the night sky. Many of their assumptions were later disproved, but they formed the basis of the gradual growth into the modern science of astronomy. Still, the mystical and the methodical weren’t considered separate.
Then came astronomers such as Nicolaus Copernicus, who published his heliocentric theory in 1543. He argued that Earth was not, in fact, the center of the universe and that it revolved around the sun rather than the other way around, which was what most astronomers and astrologists believed at the time. Galileo Galilei’s telescopes in the early 1600s opened space wider and refined the images beyond what the naked eye could observe.
Others influenced human belief as well. Tycho Brahe’s precise documentation of a supernova in 1572 disproved the old ideas that the heavens never changed. Johannes Kepler formulated the three laws of planetary motion in the early 1600s, establishing the elliptical orbits of planets around the sun. And what began as religious speculation and had transformed into philosophical theory began to transition once again – this time into modern observational science.
Astronomy – A Modern Science With Ancient Roots
Astronomy and astrology split into separate forms, and by the 17th century, astrology was declining in popularity among educated circles. By the 18th-century Age of Enlightenment, breakthroughs in heliocentrism, physics, and a shift toward rationalism led to astrology losing the last of its academic standing.
Though astrology is no longer considered a true science by most, its cultural influence remains. Zodiac signs and planetary metaphors still appear in everyday language, and many people still read horoscopes and believe notions such as the year or month of one’s birth can determine personality traits.
Astronomy today is split primarily between observational (collecting data via telescopes) and theoretical (modeling physics to explain the observations). The various fields of astronomical study include astrophysics (applying principles of physics and chemistry to celestial bodies to better understand them), stellar astronomy (the study of the lifecycles of stars, including black holes and supernovas), cosmology (the study of the origin, evolution, and ultimate fate of the universe), and even astrobiology (researching the potential for life on other planets), among many others.
As advanced as the science has become, however, modern astronomy still owes its existence to those earlier observers who looked into the heavens, saw gods, and asked what it all means.

- Astronomy is a core branch of physical science, focusing on the study of objects in space and the vast universe beyond Earth.
- The precursor to astronomy was astrology, developed when early civilizations tracked the movement of the sun, moon, stars, and visible planets and concluded that the consistent patterns must mean something.
- The various fields of astronomy include astrophysics (physics and chemistry), stellar astronomy (black holes and supernovas), cosmology (origin and evolution), among many others.

















