|
CD-B DIRECTORY
|
COSMIC DATA-BANK PROJECT 10: ADAMS & EVES In many ways this is the most important project of the first ten finished at the Cosmic Data-Bank because this project looks at the planetary patterns of women and men who are not members of a distinct group such as doctors, nurses, Nobel Prize winners, top fashion designers, NHL players or distinguished Canadian writers. This project looks at individuals who might deliver your mail, serve you as clerks or cashiers at The Bay department store, wait on you in restaurants or as receptionists, clerks and secretaries for companies small and large. This group serves as the "comparison" group for the other nine projects and so the results will be very interesting to know. THE DATA There are 1,010 individuals in the project, most with timed birthcharts. The data has been collected over the years and each working person used in the data-base has worked for a minimum of three years at a job or jobs that would allow them to be included in the study. Some of the members of the study are no longer with us. Some of the members of the group have never worked but remained at home to look after their children. The ratio of women to men is 60:40. The range of individual births is shown below with the total number in each particular birth group.
None of the members of this study has achieved eminence. It may be that they own or operate the best restaurant in the town in which they live, or may be the best mechanic, the best house painter or waiter but outside of their family, friends and neighbors are unknown to the world at large. The lack of eminence has nothing at all to do with their personal happiness. Some of the happiest people I have ever met are in this group. They live completely anonymous lives, totally unknown to all but a few and they prefer it that way. The birth information for many of the participants in this study came from random selection of my own database and others were sent to me by outside organizations. Some of the participants did not want their name used and so are referred to as M107 or F33 etc. dependent upon their gender. The purpose of this study is to provide a comparison to some of the other groups, most of which include very high achievers. The following link will take you to the summary page which compares the results for all the projects published on this website. SUMMARY PAGE MERCURY IN THE SECTORS Mercury is the planet closest to the Sun and orbits the Sun every 88 days, spending between 4 and 11 days in each sector. The count for the heliocentric position of Mercury in the 12 sectors are shown below for the 1,010 subjects in this study with the final analysis shown as "births per day".
Mercury is found distributed through the sectors with a distinct low found in sector 2 and the highest frequency found in sector 7 for this control group with sector 3 close behind. VENUS IN THE SECTORS Venus orbits the Sun every 244 days, spending 19 days in each sector in an almost perfectly circular orbit. The count for each sector for heliocentric Venus is shown below.
The position of Venus in the 12 sectors varies from a high of 9.4% in sector 3, to a low of 6.5% in sector 10. If perfect randomness were in operation one would find 8.3% of the total count in each sector. Sectors 1, 4, 6, 10 and 11 fall below expected and the remainder of the sectors have counts which exceed the expected with the highest count found in sector 3. MARS IN THE SECTORS Planet Mars orbits the Sun in an elliptical orbit every 687 days, spending an average of 57 days in each sector. The count for Mars in the 12 sectors is shown below.
The highest count for Mars is found in sectors 6 and 8 while the lowest count is found in sector 3. EARTH IN THE SECTORS The Earth orbits the Sun every 365 days, spending approximately 30 days in each of the 12 sectors. I have randomly selected equal numbers of participants from each season of the year for this study and you can observe the final counts in the table below. The count is slightly higher in sector 6 and slightly lower in sector 10. A perfect randomness would find 84 participants in each sector. Those included in this study varied widely in the career choices from laborers in the construction industry to owners of small businesses such as barber shops and coffee shops. This is not a group with the same ambition such as NHL players, astronauts, etc.; do not place any importance on the position of the Earth in this study. In all the other projects, the position of the Earth in the sectors is random and not chosen.
HELIOGRAM TYPES AND PLANETARY PATTERNS The heliograms were sorted first by "Type" and then by the "Planetary Patterns" found within the type. There are 8 basic heliogram "types" and 5 basic "planetary patterns". The planetary patterns may be found in many different combinations within the heliogram type or as a single pattern within the heliogram type. 1. EIGHT HELIOGRAM TYPES For a review of the eight heliogram types use the following link: Heliogram Types The table below shows the counts for the various heliogram types in this particular study of Adams & Eves.
2. PLANETARY PATTERNS FOUND WITHIN HELIOGRAM TYPES
Let me describe an example; a participant may have a Bowl type chart and within that general bowl shape may be found a t-square, a kite and a stellium, or it may not have any of those sub-patterns at all. Don't read anything good or bad into this first impression, the entire heliogram must be examined: first by identifying the heliogram type, then noting the planetary patterns or lack thereof, and finally by assessing the planetary aspects not involved in a larger pattern. The planetary patterns are presented below in two formats; one format shows the frequency of the pattern "only" with no other patterns present and the second format displays the frequency of the patterns in various combinations. For example, the stellium is found in 23.4% of the heliograms with no other patterns present, and in 46.1% of the heliograms in combination with other patterns. This means that the stellium pattern is found in 69.5% of the members of the Adams & Eves project group.
While 9.6% of the total group had none of the requested patterns present in their heliograms, 69.5% (23.4 + 46.1) had a stellium present, by far the largest count for a planetary pattern. The solo T-square pattern is found in only 7.1% of the total while a T-square plus some other pattern is found in 23.1% of the participant total, an overall total of 30.2%. The Adams & Eves group has been included as a comparison to all the other groups studied and presented on this website. The Adams & Eves group are not distinguished by eminence and are not a homogeneous group. It includes people from all walks of life; some have never worked outside the home or in a paying job while others have successfully managed to create a small business for themselves. There has not been the intense competition for position within the A & E group that is found in the other groups but that is not to say that each of the participants have not faced some competition in their career decisions. Some of the happiest people I have ever met are included in this group and none has achieved more than local fame. |