Blog Archives

The Meaning of Pluto: Part 2 – Further analyses of Dwyer’s data

Further analyses of Dwyer’s data, using aggregation to improve reliability, confirmed the conclusions of Part 1. No evidence was found that Pluto by aspect or angularity means power, suppression or transformation. The sensitivity was more than adequate to detect a worthwhile effect.

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Sun Sign and Discipline of Study

The authors tested the astrological claim that positions of planets in astrological signs at birth are related to a choice for a specific professional career. The frequencies for the position of the Sun, Mercury, Venus and Mars in sign were assessed for 5174 psychology students and 3232 engineering students. The frequencies were compared with expected frequencies but no significant relation between sun sign and profession was found. Special attention was given to the calculation of the expected frequencies. This calculation is the cause of problems in research into astrology because one has to correct for astrological factors (the time when a planet remains in a sign is not equal for all signs) and for demographic variables (births are not distributed evenly over a year). When such a correction is made figures that are striking at face value do not prove to be statistically significant. These necessary, but rather complex, corrections often are overlooked and may explain the discrepancy between lay-people who believe in astrology and researchers who cannot find any empirical evidence for astrology.

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Further grading of eminence: planetary correlations with musicians, painters, writers

This is the second study of a series dealing with the so-called eminence hypothesis first put forward by Michel Gauquelin. Planetary effects, it was hypothesised, co-vary in extent with fame/success within samples of professions. A previous study relating degrees of sporting eminence, determined by citation frequencies, to percentages of births with Mars in key sectors had revealed a steady increase of deviation from chance for critical birth percentages with increasing eminence of sportsmen. In the present study the eminence slope hypothesis is tested with Gauquelin musicians (n=866), painters (n=1381) and writers (n=813). Increases in deviations from chance level with eminence were expected for those planet/profession combinations which had show, as a whole, in previous Gauquelin studies, significant key sector deviation. The results supported the hypotheses for Mars as well as for Saturn, in general. Overall consistent trends were also found for the Moon and for Venus. Surprisingly, however, the directions of the Venus trends were reversed for the three professions tested. This exceptional observation notwithstanding, the results remove final tenacious suspicion that planetary effects, as reported by the Gauquelins, could perhaps be due to data selection bias and/or fraud.

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Gender of Notables Related to Planetary Positions

An analysis of Gauquelin’s professional data revealed significant gender effects: female professionals (actors, athletes, writers) outdo their male colleagues regarding birth frequencies in sensitive sectors for Mars ( p = .01) and, marginally, for the Moon (p = .09). The significance level for the two planets combined is p = .006. In addition, G-sector births of women were generally more frequent than those of men when summed across all five Gauquelin planets ( p = .01). Eleven issues pertinent to these results are discussed. It is concluded that any theory that might be suggested to explain Gauquelin’s planetary effect for professions will also have to account for planetary effects associated with gender.

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Harmonic analysis of the diurnal distributions of Gauquelin’s professional groups

Harmonic analysis of the Gauquelin planetary distributions for professional groups is used to show that the phase angles of individual harmonics for each planet are closely clustered. This is used to demonstrate that any planetary “influence” is travel ling at the velocity of light. Other supporting evidence is offered and the supposition advance that the observed associations occur because of awareness by the developing embryo or fetus

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A Further Look at Jung’s Astrological Experiment in the Context of his Theory of Synchronicity

The authors look, in some depth, at both the development and the publishing history of Jung’s concept of synchronicity in general and Jung’s astrological experiment in particular. This paper addresses possible serious misunderstandings which appear to have arisen regarding the concept of synchronicity and Jung’s astrological experiment and how this might account for the apparent relationship between planetary movements and mundane events.

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Can Astrology Predict E and N? 3. Discussion and further research

The validity of E (extraversion) and N (emotionality) for testing astrology is reviewed in detail (60 references) and is found to be adequate in every respect. The conclusions of Parts 1 and 2 are confirmed after the most critical scrutiny, comparison with other studies, and investigation of issues raised by readers. Much previously unpublished work is presented including a survey of the perceived discernibility of human characteristics in birth charts, Pierce’s factor analysis of astrological symbolism, a meta-analysis of 14 studies of astrologer agreement, the distribution of variance between astrologers and charts, a meta-analysis of 31 Vernon Clark results, a new Vernon Clark test of everyday topics, a comparison of the reliability and validity of astrology with that of other diagnostic tests, and an extension of Startup’s power analysis of astrological effects. The picture that emerges consistently from all of this work is that astrology as applied by astrologers using the whole chart has negligible reliability and validity. Aggregating astrologers improved the reliability as expected but had no effect on the hit rate, which remained close to chance level. The upper bound to the variance accounted for by astrological effects is orders of magnitude smaller than that required to meet the claims of astrologers.

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Birth Time Precision and the Gauquelin Effect

The Gauquelin effect (G%) should increase with increased birth time precision. The data, however, do not bear this out, on the contrary, G% even tends to diminish with better birth time recordings, at least from AD 1880 onwards. The expected positive effect might have been overridden by psychological/sociological variables depressing G% and enhancing birth record precision at the same time. Until now, however, such intervening variables remain enigmatic.

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Why the Character Trait Hypothesis Still Fails: resolving the conflict between the Fresno and Gottingen Studies

Gauquelin & Tracz (1991) rejected Ertel’s (1990) and Rodenbeck’s (1990) conclusion that the Gauquelin character trait hypothesis (CTH) does not hold. They repeated our former biographical trait counts and reported results supporting CTH. The contradiction was explained in terms of sloppy vs. careful trait extraction: our students’ extractions were deemed poor, whereas their students’ extractions were taken as reliable. A close look at procedures and output of extractions, however, indicates that our students had worked at least as carefully as theirs. Evidence shows, instead, that Gauquelin’s own care left something to be desired in that he selected duplicates of traits extracted by his helpers excluding from analysis all non-duplicates. Since he was generally aware of planetary positions he was liable to biased selections and deletions. Our conclusion is backed by results from three statistical comparison on Fresno/Gottingen data. Gauquelin & Tracz’s study therefore does not invalidate our contention that the character trait hypothesis is wrong. Since Gauquelin’s basic planetary effect has continuously gained support, failures with CTH are a challenge to find an explanation for the persistent main effect in entirely different terms.

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Improving the Application of Astrology to Individuals: probabilistic models using Item Response Theory

If the stars incline but do not compel, then astrological outcomes are innately probabilistic. Therefore only probabilistic models are appropriate but hitherto their use has been neglected. This is unfortunate because they promise to revolutionise the everyday practice of working astrologers regardless of whether astrology is used as a language or as an information source. Probabilistic models examine each chart factor (without limit on number or complexity) using modern computer techniques of item response theory, and then produce the best synthesis by maximum likelihood estimation. They do what an astrologer does but include what no astrologer can do, namely address astrology’s inherent uncertainty directly. In effect, they allow astrologers and techniques to be separated from clients, thus delivering astrology freed from the quirks of a particular approach and armed with an objective evaluation of predictive reliability, meaning an end to hedging bets with ifs and buts. Probabilistic models require the use of a computer but are otherwise easy to apply. They are perhaps the most obvious way of improving the application of astrology to individuals.

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