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CD-B DIRECTORY
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COSMIC DATA-BANK PROJECT 6: THE DICTATORS OF FASHION, page 2 THE PLANETS The positions of all the planets for each individual in the Fashion Group are calculated in heliocentric format which is the view of the planets as seen from the Sun. The heliocentric position of Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars is noted for each individual and accumulated in a Microsoft Access database. All the counts are made from that database. Mercury speeds around the Sun every 88 Earth days, approximately every 3 months on our calendar but it does not spend an equal number of days in each of the 12 sectors. For this reason the counts are corrected for this factor. Because there are so many opportunities for Mercury to be in any of the 12 astrobiology sectors it is always interesting to see if it bunches up in any of them for any given professional group. If pure chance were to be operating, one should see each sector with 8% of the total of the group. The outcome for the 176 fashion gurus is shown in the table below. 1. Mercury
Sector 10 shows the highest count with 12.0% of the total; sector 12 represents the lowest count with 4% of the group, less than half what would be expected by chance. Sectors 3, 5, 7, 10 and 11 show frequency counts higher than expected if perfect randomness was operating. 2. Venus The planet Venus orbits the Sun in an almost perfectly circular path between the Earth and Mercury. The following table shows the results of the count in the sectors for this planet. Group total = 176.
Sector 6 ranks highest with 13.6% of the total group and sector 8 has the least number with only 5.1% of the total group. 3. Mars The planet Mars orbits the Sun every 686 Earth-days in an elliptical path between Earth and Jupiter. On August 27, 2003 the Earth and Mars made their closest encounter in recorded history. The next time Mars and Earth are this close together will be in the year 2287. Mars does not spend an equal amount of time in each of the sectors. As Mars approaches the Sun it goes faster and as it moves away from the Sun it goes more slowly. This was considered and the table below shows the range of placement for Mars in the sectors.
Sector 12 ranks highest for the planet Mars and sector 5 ranks the lowest. 4. Heliogram Types There are 8 major heliogram types. For a review of theme use this link: Heliogram Types There are other heliogram types but they are seen so seldom that I have omitted them for the sake of brevity and simplicity. A&E is the control group used as a comparison in all the projects.
5. Planetary Patterns The patterns that the planets make with each other are forming and collapsing constantly as the planets orbit the Sun. In all the projects completed to date, 5 planetary patterns have been seen far more frequently than others. For a review of the planetary patterns use this link: Planetary Patterns
The counts are very similar between the two groups except for the t-square pattern which is observed much more frequently in the designer group than in the general population. I think that the patterns are linked to human consciousness and the inner drive of the individual. The t-square pattern is seen in high achievers and even in paedophiles far more often than in the general population and I think this relates to the intense motivation and persistence directing their own lives shown by those who have a t-square on their heliogram. Of the 176 top fashion designers used in this project, five of them did not have any of the five major planetary patterns in their heliograms. They did have other planetary patterns in their heliograms but not the five seen in the above table. Here they are.
6. Summary
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