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Gunter Sachs

 
Wikipedia: Gunter Sachs
Gunter Sachs
Born November 14, 1932 (1932-11-14) (age 77)
Schloss Mainberg nr. Schweinfurt, Bavaria, Germany
Spouse(s) Annemarie Faure (m. 1956–1958) «start: (1956)–end+1: (1959)»"Marriage: Annemarie Faure to Gunter Sachs" Location: (linkback:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunter_Sachs)
Brigitte Bardot (m. 1966–1969) «start: (1966)–end+1: (1970)»"Marriage: Brigitte Bardot to Gunter Sachs" Location: (linkback:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunter_Sachs)
Mirja Larsson (m. 1969–present) «start: (1969)»"Marriage: Mirja Larsson to Gunter Sachs" Location: (linkback:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunter_Sachs)

Fritz Gunter Sachs (born November 14, 1932 in Mainberg near Schweinfurt) is a German mathematician, photographer, author and multi-millionaire industrialist. Gunter Sachs’ mother was the daughter of Wilhelm von Opel; his father was Willy Sachs, sole owner of Fichtel & Sachs AG Fichtel & Sachs, a leading manufacturer of ball bearings and one of Germany’s biggest automobile suppliers. Willy Sachs was known to Hermann Göring and Heinrich Himmler[1][2] and arrested by the American military after the war but finally declared a follower and released. Gunter Sachs has commented on his father’s past in several publications.[3]

A playboy in his early years, Sachs was married to Brigitte Bardot from 1966–1969. He also was the lover of former Iranian queen Soraya Esfandiary. He is now married to Swedish former model, Mirja Larsson. A trained mathematician and economist, Sachs was an investor and industrialist, and latterly as head of an institute that researches the claims of astrology. As a young man he became a sportsman, then gained international fame as a documentary film-maker and documentary photographer. He has always been "passionately interested" in astrology and its connection with mathematics/statistics.

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Sport

Since 1969, Sachs has been chair of the St. Moritz Bobsleigh Club. Turn 12 of the St. Moritz-Celerina Olympic Bobrun is named in his honor.

Astrological research

More recently Sachs made the international newspapers again after he commissioned major research into sun sign astrology using large samples, and came up with results that overturned[citation needed] some prejudices. Sachs set out to test the assumptions of astrologers by gathering a team of scientists and statisticians which, over two years, analysed the lives of nearly one million men and women.

"In every case, there were significant results, way beyond what is explicable through mere coincidence." he is quoted as saying by the Daily Mail newspaper on November 6, 1997.

To facilitate the research he set up the "Institute for the Empirical and Mathematical Examination of the Possible Truth of Astrology in Relation to Human Behaviour". Then, using established statistical techniques and with help from the official statistics office in Switzerland (where the authorities have recorded the date and hour of birth of every citizen since 1875), his team gathered statistics on every aspect of human life.

Sachs' rules

  • The team was to start with no assumptions at all.
  • The study must be based exclusively on empirical data.
  • Astrologers were not to be consulted.
  • The results were to be independently controlled.

Once the data was compiled he brought in a German research expert and two statisticians, who checked the figures for distortions. The team's extraordinary findings on thousands of topics can be seen in his book The Astrology File, a bestseller published in Germany in 1997.

Sachs was also very surprised to discover that no government, institution, or university had ever put up the money for basic astrological research. He said that his investigation had cost "less than the price of a luxury car", and contrasted this with the millions squandered around the world by scientists "every day" on what he called "scientific trivialities."

Criticism

After the preliminary research was published in various articles, Sachs was surprised to receive what he felt was "torrents of abuse and insults" from a number of academics. For example statistician Herbert Basler claimed he had found an abundance of statistical errors in the way the data was interpreted. Psychologist Suitbert Ertel echoed this criticism, but also pointed out that as all the data is tabulated, this would allow the data to be re-analysed in due course by improved methods.

Literature

  • Sachs, Gunter: The Astrology File: Scientific Proof of the Link Between Star Signs and Human Behaviour. Orion Books (December 1999). ISBN 0-7528-1789-2
  • Elwell, Dennis: Cosmic Loom, 2nd edition 1999. The Urania Trust. ISBN 0-04-133027-7. Discussion and interpretation of some of Gunter Sachs results and related material.

References

  1. ^ 'Schweinfurt Under the Swastika' (engl.)
  2. ^ Wilfried Rott: 'Der braune Schatten' (german)
  3. ^ 'Ich stand nie für das Ewig-Gestrige', Sueddeutsche Zeitung, 13.2.2006

External links


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