Ritmxoid
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Free & Easy Biorhythm Calculator Software
Features
• Biorhythm calculator: Physical, Emotional and Intellectual charts
• Additional Intuitive chart
• Secondary biorhythm charts: Wisdom, Mastery and Passion
• Extra rhythms: Perception, Psychic and Success new!
• I ching charts: Aesthetic, Awareness, Spiritual
• Celebrities Database. Check your compatibility with a Star!
• Critical days for basic biorhythm chart
• Integral bar chart for basic biorhythms
• Complete day info
• Biorhythm chart: save and print availabilities
• True easy-to-use interface
Download it here:
http://www.whitestranger.com/download/easybio_setup.exe
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Application & Calculation
In the workplace, railroads and airlines have experimented the most with biorhythms. A pilot describes the Japanese and American attitudes towards biorhythms. He acknowledges, researching his pilot logbook, that his greatest errors of judgment occurred during critical days, but concludes that an awareness of one's critical days and paying extra attention is sufficient to ensure safety. A former United Airlines pilot and user of the Biorhythms for Windows program confirms that United Airlines used biorhythms until the mid-1990s, while the Nippon Express air freight still used biorhythms.
Charting biorhythms for personal use was popular in the
The equations for the curves are
- physical: sin(2πt / 23),
- emotional: sin(2πt / 28),
- intellectual: sin(2πt / 33),
- intuitive: sin(2πt / 38),
where t indicates the number of days since birth.
Basic Rhythm DetailsPhysical Cycle
- 23 days, Circavigintan
- Coordination
- Strenght
- Well-being
Emotional Cycle
- 28 days, Circatrigintan
- Creativity
- Sensitivity
- Mood
- Perception
- Awareness
Intelectual Cycle
- 33 days, Circatrigintan
- Alertness
- Analytical Functioning
- Logical Analysis
- Memory or Recall
- Communication
Related Terminology & Plausibility
Biorhythmics is either a protoscientific branch or a pseudoscience, depending on opinion, that studies biorhythms or deal with biorhythms. Biorhythmic study focuses on physiological, emotional, and intellectual processes and its forecasting. Biorhythm phenomena are observable human conditions which can be detailed and explained by biorhythmics. These conditions are bound by the variables that exist in the body. Certain facets of biorhythmics are likened by proponents to concepts found in weather forecasting (commonly known as meteorology).
Chronobiology is a branch of biology that studies rhythms in living beings. Unlike biorhythm, its status as a science is unquestioned.
Biorhythmics has echoes of chronobiology, the study of biological rhythms. Through medical research, doctors have found that there are periodic biological cycles in a person's lifespan, such as the circadian rhythm (from Latin circa diem; literally, "about a day"), but few doctors believe they correspond to those described as "biorhythms". To proponents, these discoveries (among others) demonstrate that people are affected by physiological, emotional and intellectual rhythms, though the exact relationships to the biorhythm cycles are not precisely understood. Studies regarding the effects of biorhythms on the human condition are still conducted.
The Biorhythm theory is often treated as falsely claiming scientific validity. Biorhythm critics' responses range from opposing it as harmful to ignoring it or treating it as entertainment. Some of the criticisms of the various theories in the category of biorhythmics are:
- The choices of periodical function, frequency and phase are arbitrary.
- The assumption is made that the cycles are the same for everyone.
- The frequency is assumed to be constant.
- Evidence tends to be anecdotal.
- Arguments are made based in ignorance of number theory.
- Tests of the hypothesis have basic flaws.
- The quantitative generalizations of complex human behavior are inadequate.
- Hypotheses are not formulated precisely.
- Experimental data fail peer review.
- Experiments cannot be replicated.
- Some unscrupulous practitioners resemble professional fortune-telling fraud artists.
Some biorhythm critics say that biorhythms can be thrown off by such occurrences in the calendar as the beginning of the new year, holidays, or something as simple as the start of the week.
There have been some three dozen studies supporting biorhythm theory but all of them have suffered from methodological and statistical errors. An examination of some 134 biorhythm studies found that the theory is not valid.
History
The classical theory originated at the turn of the 19th century, between 1897 and 1902, from observational research.
Hermann Swoboda, professor of psychology at the
Wilhelm Fliess, a nose and throat specialist and reportedly a numerologist, was independently researching the occurrences of fevers, recurrent illnesses and deaths in his patients. He too came to the conclusion that there was a 23 and a 28-day rhythm. Fliess' theories were of great interest and importance to Sigmund Freud during his early work in developing his psychoanalytic concepts.
Alfred Teltscher, professor of engineering at the
These three biorhythms compose the classical theory. The classical theory has been studied, especially in
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
Basic Theory
Basic rhythms follow certain facets of physiological cycles, though they may include others, and the details may vary depending on the source. The three classical cycles of biorhythms are endogenous infradian rhythms. The theory's basis lies in physiological and emotional cycles. They are often represented graphically as either symmetric or asymmetric waveforms, though most theories rely on symmetric forms. The most commonly used form is the sinusoidal waveform, which is thought to be a plausible representation of a bioelectric activity cycle. Due to this sinusoidal nature, the cyclical flow of bioelectric activity undergoes periodic reverses in direction. Each cycle oscillates between a positive phase [0%..100%] and a negative phase [-100%..0%], during which bioelectric activity strengthens and weakens. The waveforms start, in most theories, at the neutral baseline (0%) at the time of birth of each individual. Each day that the waveform again crosses this baseline is dubbed a critical day, which means that tasks in the domain of the cycle are far more erratic than on other non-critical days. The purpose of mapping the biorhythmic cycles is to enable the calculation of critical days for performing or avoiding various activities.
The classical definition (derivatives of the original theory exist) states that one's birth is an unfavorable circumstantial event, as is the day about 58 years later when the three cycles are again synchronised at their minimum values. According to the classical definition, the theory is assumed to apply only to humans. In the classical theory, the value of each cycle can be calculated at any given time in the life of an individual, and there are web sites that do exactly that.