Martin,

Do you have details about when, how and or whom it was coined? I can tell you that in 1974, during a stay in Paris, I met a disciple of Bkaktivedanta Swami that practiced Indian astrology and he called it Vedic astrology. So it has to be earlier that the 80s.

Luis
_____

On 11/9/2016 12:28 AM, Martin Gansten wrote:
To me, the really interesting phenomenon is when Tājika, which in its own source texts admits to being of mleccha or yavana origin and based on 'Persian-language' (actually, almost exclusively Arabic) works, is claimed as a branch of 'Vedic astrology'.

Patrick, I'd be very interested to hear more about your exchanges with 'Vedic astrologers' at some point. To the best of my knowledge, the term was coined in North America in the 1980s and then exported to India, where it first appeared in the 1990s.

Martin Gansten


Den 2016-11-09 kl. 09:10, skrev Valerie Roebuck:
I prefer the expression ‘Indian Astrology’, since the tradition was certainly not restricted to Hinduism either.

Valerie J Roebuck
Manchester, UK

On 9 Nov 2016, at 00:27, patrick mccartney <psdmccartney@gmail.com> wrote:

Robert, 

The term 'Vedic astrology' is certainly interesting. I have been contacting astrologers in the West who use this term on their websites. Their responses as to what they actually mean by it are revealing of a certain discomfort and cognitive dissonance. One particular respondent said they did not like the term but it was something of an 'industry standard', so not using the term was counter productive to their own vocational interest. They also said that 'Hindu astrology' sounded even 'less authentic'. This is while knowing that the predictive aspects of 'Vedic astrology' developed well past the Vedic period. 





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