Book Review: A Scheme of Heaven: The History of Astrology and The Search for Our Destiny in Data By Alexander Boxer W. W. Norton, New York, 2020; 319pp
Review by Kirk Little 27 April 2023
A
lexander Boxer’s smart, attractive book is almost certain to frustrate the astrologically informed reader. The exact nature of their frustration may be encapsulated by the book’s subtitle, or rather how the author chooses to meet its promise. At the time of its publication, three years ago, it was greeted with breathless enthusiasm by the astrological press. In the Astrological Journal, Victor Olliver pondered whether “astrology is on the cusp of being intellectually fashionable again. Do I exaggerate? Just possibly a little…but no”.1 In the same issue, Ronnie Grishman quoted with approval John Carey of The Sunday Times of London: “Astrology’s inNinite complexities are enthralling”. Moreover, “The Observer reviewer added to the cause for celebration: ‘Boxer sees a direct link between the algorithms used by ancient astrologers for drawing up horoscopes and making predictions, and those used today by companies and data analysts to anticipate our behaviour and life trajectory’”.2 Boxer’s status as a physicist – among that fraternity of the hardest of hard sciences – was responsible in part for all the excitement. While he has a PhD in physics, he describes himself as a data scientist. Unfortunately, Boxer’s historical approach is limited by his thralldom to scientiNic data, with his understanding of stats the sole prism through which all astrological acts are Niltered and judged. With his professed “knowledge of both math and dead languages”,3 Boxer lacks an appreciation for the cultural and historical factors which are central to understanding such a protean subject as astrology. A close reading of this book reveals a rationalist critique of astrology threaded throughout his historical account, and no real search for anyone’s destiny.
Early on, Boxer acknowledges “Being frustrated in my search for a simple yet competent overview of astrology, I decided I might just as well write one myself”. Glibly, he states his interest stems from my “enchantment with any sufNiciently musty book from the history of science that nudged me to investigate astrology in a more detailed way”.4 Neither of these statements can be taken at face value since there are many competent overviews of astrology5 and Boxer’s reading list is quite selective. However, they do provide a window on the author’s attitude towards his subject, and offer a sample of his authorial style, which can be faintly condescending, in that “we know better now” attitude adopted by many scientists discussing subjects considered beneath them. All of which being said, Boxer is a genial and knowledgeable host; his matter-of-fact, informed approach appears to be aimed not at astrologers but at open-minded, mildly skeptical readers who know little about the subject. One imagines him impressing his dinner party friends with his smarts and easy manner. As a data scientist, Boxer is intent on schooling his reader in his empirical approach to all issues and along the way showing them where astrologers went wrong by ignoring the cumulative knowledge brought about by the scientiNic revolution of the 17th and 18th centuries. Their wrong turn is a pity, he seems to say. Boxer understands and appreciates the efforts of ancient astrologers as the Nirst real attempt to devise a grand encompassing theory of nearly everything. If only they had had the wise counsel, along with banks of computers, of data scientists like himself… It never crosses his mind that astrologers, both ancient and modern, might be after something else, and may be guided by philosophical assumptions at variance with those embedded in contemporary scientiNic thought.
1 Astrological Journal, March/April 2020, Editor’s Letter, p.3. 2 Ibid., p.7.
3 Alexander Boxer, A Scheme of Heaven: The History of Astrology and the Search for Our Destiny in Data, (W. W. Norton, New York, 2020), p.6. 4 Ibid., p.2.
5 Among others, I might mention Peter WhitJield’s Astrology: A History (The British Library, London, 2001); P. G. Maxwell-Stuart’s Astrology: From Ancient Babylon to the Present, (Amberley, Chalford, 2010); James Herschel Holden’s A History of Horoscopic Astrology, (AFA, Tempe, AZ, 1996); Nicholas Campion’s two volume A History of Western Astrology: The Ancient and Classical Worlds, (Continuum, London, 2008) and The Medieval and Modern Worlds (Continuum, London, 2009). There is a growing list of academic books and articles written over the past twenty years that Boxer chooses to ignore.
Published online at skyscript.co.uk/rev_boxer.html - May, 2023