Robert Bradbury correctly answers the factual side of the question; now
that I'm awake, I'll take a shot at the methodological side.<br>
<br>
God and the Singularity are not substitutes for each other. Whether
there is or isn't a God and Heaven is something we can't influence
either way (apart from live a moral life to improve our chances of
getting into Heaven; but we should try to live a moral life anyway
because it's the right thing to do). Furthermore, if there is a God,
the one thing that's clear is that He expects us to solve our problems
using our faculty of reason, not sit on our arses pestering Him to
solve them for us. I don't say you should believe in God or that you
shouldn't, but that whether or not you do shouldn't influence your
attitude to the Singularity.<br>
<br>
As for astrology - honestly, what's the _point_ in believing in that?
What can you do with that belief? Start shifting the planets' orbits
around to improve their influence? But even if you could, which way?
For every astrologer who says move Mars a million kilometers north
there's another one who'll say move it a million kilometers south. What
do you get out of believing in astrology? Nothing.<br>
<br>
The Singularity isn't just something to passively believe in, it's
something to _work towards_. Even if you don't believe in it as
something that'll actually happen in our lifetimes (and I'll certainly
grant we can't put a knowable date on it), it can be thought of as the
horizon of the long road of progress - and every step we take down that
road is one worth taking for the benefits that step can bring us, for
the lives it can save and enrich.<br>
<br>
Maybe "close" only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades - but "forward" counts in life.<br>