Cosmophilia: An Approach to Astrology and Existence

In 1984, an evolutionary biologist named Edward O. Wilson published a book called Biophilia. As he developed and used the term, he meant it to describe the affinity of life for itself — of living creatures for other living creatures. The word, and the idea, was first used in a 1964 book called the Heart of Man by psychologist Erich Fromm (also author of The Art of Loving and Escape From Freedom).

Edward O. Wilson, author of Biolphila. Photo by Jim Harrison - Wikimedia commons.

A friendly soul — Edward O. Wilson, author of Biophilia. Photo by Jim Harrison – Wikimedia.

Bjork picked up the theme and for four years developed a concept album, dance performance, multimedia art and set of apps centered on (and called) Biophilia, published in 2011.

Wilson in his book describes biophilia as an instinctive bond that exists among everything that’s alive. While you might look out at the world and see so much strife, division and competition to really make you wonder how that might be true. You might think the planet was overcome by biophobia.

Yet there’s plenty of evidence that he’s right — such as how people feel about their kids, dogs, cats, bunny rabbits, goats, gardens and house plants. Wilson, by the way, is a specialist in ants. He spends plenty of his book describing the incredible ways that ants work together as a kind of superorganism, then extends that idea to all of the life that surrounds us.

We know there are people who can subvert biophilia within themselves, somewhat like a high-wire artist subverts the fear of falling. For the most part, we all crave life, and we want to be surrounded by life. This may be reduced down to a very narrow flow of appreciation, perhaps of a single person or of a tree or any one living entity…but at some point everyone feels this, many people profoundly.

Toward the end of his book, Wilson describes what it might be like in a landscape painstakingly made to look like it was alive — but where everything was inanimate, fake, molded and lifeless. Lakes with no fish or algae. Plastic trees with no birds. It would be like living in a tomb, the experience of total desolation. There would be nobody, nothing, to relate to.

The Coxing, on the Grandmother Land, Ulster County, NY.

The Coxing, on the Grandmother Land, Ulster County, NY.

I read Wilson’s book sitting out by a stream in a forest where I feel a strong affinity for life — in particular, the life of the forest itself, with whom I’ve had a long and beautiful love affair. As I went through Wilson’s examples and illustrations of what is possible, it occurred to me that humanity has a similar affiliation with the cosmos. We don’t just live on Earth. We live on a planet that orbits a star that is part of a galaxy that is part of a vast cluster of galaxies.

That humans look to the heavens for information, ideas and inspiration — and we do, dependably — is a clue that there is something larger at work — a tropism for the cosmos. That astrology works at all describes an affinity for that cosmos. If “the medium is the message,” the message of astrology is that the cosmos is alive, responsive, dancing with us just like we are dancing with it.

From the standpoint of rational thinking, it’s a little strange that someone can describe what your life will be like, or what kinds of choices you will be facing, based on some gas bubbles floating around in space. How is that even possible? Yet it is. We’ve all experienced it — anyone who is following, using or benefiting from astrology.

This rather large toad posed for a photo for about five minutes, letting me come right up to him.

This rather large toad posed for a photo for about five minutes, letting me come right up to him.

Watch astrology long enough and it can seem like a person’s character traits, their mission, their karma and the trajectory of their life is described in their chart — using a map of the planets. Follow any competent newspaper horoscope and it’s clear that you don’t even need that map; the planets in their courses can guide, describe, assist and offer inspiration. You can see Jupiter high over your head and feel protected. You can look at a distant constellation and make up a story about it.

We can guide ourselves by the stars in ways so practical as navigating a ship or getting out of the wilderness. Our biological rhythms are connected to the cosmos — the phases of the Moon, the rising and setting of the Sun, the movement of the seasons. We often take all of this for granted. Yet the biosphere is set within the cosmos. The phenomenon of life is possible because the cosmic conditions are correct.

The recent history of humanity is a story that in many ways is about alienation. The rise of technology has distracted many humans from our connection to the biosphere and the cosmos. We live in the midst of mechanical time, measured down to nanoseconds that are tracked against an atomic clock somewhere. We divide our lives up into hours, days, weeks and years, often oblivious to the cycles of nature that surround us all the time. Who even knows what an atomic clock is? (It’s a clock that keeps time based on the decay of a radioisotope, the most predictable intervals that exist in physical space).

The Coxing, an ancient glacial melt-off stream, at full flood stage after Hurricane Irene in late summer 2011.

The Coxing, an ancient glacial melt-off stream, at full flood stage after Hurricane Irene in late summer 2011.

Astrology beckons us to consider natural cycles of time — actual seasons rather than the ones in civil calendars (summer does not begin on Memorial Day, it begins at the Cancer solstice). Astrology reminds us of the phases of the Moon, and reminds us that they really do have distinct feeling tones. Astrology reminds us of the phases of our lives — with its own ideas about the development of children into adults, and adults into mature people.

In this year’s edition of the Planet Waves annual, I’ve taken up the idea that we belong in the cosmos. I’ve read the charts from that point of view, and formulated my readings around what we can do to dissolve the boundaries that exist between being here and truly feeling like we belong here.

Following a new approach to astrology, that it’s a form of environmental studies, I’ve done my best to describe your inner process and the environment you may find yourself in, and to help you move and create within the place where the two meet.

Astrology can go a long way toward getting you out of false individuality, and take you to the shores of existence where your soul meets the wider universe around you — be that your community, your planet or your sense of purpose. Astrology helps us recall the memory that Being is the one thing that all the universe shouts.

In this spirit, I offer you Cosmophilia: You Belong Here, the 2015 annual edition of Planet Waves.

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5 Responses to Cosmophilia: An Approach to Astrology and Existence

  1. Kelly Parratt says:

    After reading your intro to Cosmophilia, I feel more connected to life and everything around me. I’ve been following you for years and it still amazes me how your words can bring me right back home – to my soul. And to feel a part of something much bigger than myself. Thank you, Eric, for helping us all to stop our crazy whirlwind lives long enough to appreciate them and remind us that we are more than just these physical bodies. You truly have a gift and I, for one, feel very blessed that you share it so lovingly and beautifully. My deepest gratitude!

  2. Stacy says:

    Eric, have I told you lately that I philia you? Well, I do. Love you! Stacy

  3. Susy C says:

    “Part of what was holding you back was indeed the unwillingness of others to change or to grow. But even they have come under the thrall of the tectonic power of your evolutionary process.” From my Cancer reading. And I confess, I resent it. I resent that I have had to be alone so much in my thinking and awareness. And now that others are catching up, I don’t want to be with them. Where were they when? Why should I be with them now, when they refused to be with me then? I get over it I guess, but that is how I feel in this present moment.

  4. Aiyana Winn says:

    “The whole world whispered, at the right time.”

    ~Paul Simon’s words, beautiful and inspiring. I’m waiting for when the world comes together once again, to whisper at the right time, or maybe sing out loud and shout out in joy and bring about a new pulse to the Universe, reverberate into the deep core of our Earth and crescendo like waves into everyone’s soul.

  5. In this peaceful moment the world is spiraling into a cosmic kiss in the wind, the ocean, in a volcano crater, in the garden of all time.

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