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The Mars Effect
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The Mars Effect Tapa blanda - 1996

de Claude Benski


Información de la editorial

Scientists often test the claims of astrology. Efforts to prove the claims, invariably, fall short. The one exception, according to backers of astrology, is the work of Michel and Fran?oise Gauquelin. Despite being strong critics of traditional astrology and horoscopes, the Gauquelins claim to find a correlation between the positions of planets in the heavens, the birth times of individuals, and eminence in their professional careers. They claim, for example, that there is a correlation between military men and Jupiter, scientists and Saturn, sports champions and Mars. Because the Mars effect is alleged to be the strongest evidence for planetary influence, several groups of scientists have attempted to replicate the claim independently. Michel Gauquelin's data is based primarily on French athletes. Dividing the sky into 12 sectors, he maintains that there is a stronger propensity for sports champions to be born when Mars is rising (1st sector) or culminating (4th sector). Seven distinguished French scientists, representing the French Committee for the Study of Paranormal Phenomena, have published a study in which they examine the birth data for 1,066 French sports champions culled from two leading Who's Who anthologies focusing on athletes. They find no statistical evidence for the claim that there is a Mars effect. Moreover, they attribute the so-called effect to selective bias on the part of the chief proponent of the claim, the late Michel Gauquelin (d. 1991), who had attempted to persuade them to add names to or delete names from their study. A publisher's preface, written by Paul Kurtz, provides background information on the significance of this study: No inquiry has evoked more controversy between skeptics and astrologers than the efforts by the scientific community to test the claims of French authors Michel and Fran?oise Gauquelin . . . . This study . . . supports the thesis of skeptical investigators who find insufficient evidence for astrobiology. Among the contributors to this study are noted astronomer Jean-Claude Pecker (professor at the College of France and member of the Academy of Sciences), Evry Schatzman (former president of the French Physical Society and member of the Academy of Sciences), and Jan Willem Nienhuys (Dutch mathematician, who provides a detailed commentary on the study, concurring with its conclusion).

Descripción de contraportada

Noted French writer Michel Gauquelin was a strong critic of traditional astrology, but he maintained that there was a direct correlation between the planetary positions at the time of a person's birth and that individual's personality and eventual achievement. He claimed to find a relationship between Jupiter and military prowess, Venus and artists, Mars and sports greatness - the last of which resulted in the term "Mars Effect". Gauquelin labeled this theory "Astrobiology". The French Committee for the Study of Paranormal Phenomena convened to test his claim and gathered data on 1,066 famous sports figures. The data from the French test is now available for review. Is Gauquelin correct in his claims for an astrological impact on some gifted athletes, or might there be other explanations? Now you can decide for yourself.

Detalles

  • Título The Mars Effect
  • Autor Claude Benski
  • Encuadernación Tapa blanda
  • Edición First Edition
  • Páginas 157
  • Volúmenes 1
  • Idioma ENG
  • Editorial Prometheus Books, Amherst, New York, U.S.A.
  • Fecha de publicación February 1996
  • ISBN 9780879759889 / 0879759887
  • Peso 0.48 libras (0.22 kg)
  • Dimensiones 9.01 x 6.05 x 0.4 pulgadas (22.89 x 15.37 x 1.02 cm)
  • Library of Congress subjects Astrology, Mars (Planet) - Miscellanea
  • Número de catálogo de la Librería del Congreso de EEUU 95044463
  • Dewey Decimal Code 133.508

Acerca del autor

Seven distinguished French scientists, representing the French Committee for the Study of Paranormal Phenomena, led by Claude Benski, have compiled the studies in this volume. Among the contributors are noted astronomer Jean-Claude Pecker (professor at the College of France and member of the Academy of Sciences), Evry Schatzman (former president of the French Physical Society and member of the Academy of Sciences), and Jan Willem Nienhuys (Dutch mathematician, who provides a detailed commentary on the study, concurring with its conclusion).