Now as a Christian
A motherfucking christian lecturing people in scientific process, fuck. And please, please do not use the word science as if you are talking about a person, "science" does not do or say things. "Science" does not deny things or prove things. You wouldn't say "archaeology discovered a fossil". Or "meteorology said it would rain tomorrow". Idk maybe you would you fucking pseud.
Anyway, a posteriori evidence here falls into the realm of psychology, so at the very least you should say pseudo-science, thanks.
OP, if you are trying to prove it wrong you need to get your fucking methodology straight. First of all you need the experimental group where you actually do the numerology shit for them, according to ancient chinese secrets.
Then you need a control group where you give them a random one that isn't anything to do with them (probably best to use the same one for each person in the control group. I don't know if this is possible for people of different ages, maybe you could just make it up if you need to, or make a composite). Afterwards, you can let them know that it was made up and give them their real one if they would like, just don't include that in your results.
And obviously, before you gave them the random one, they must believe that it is genuine. So you probably wouldn't be able to get people from this thread now I've said this.
THEN, you need some sort of quantitative method to measure the accuracy. None of this fucking "yeah well my dad died the year before so I guess" or "oh I'd say there's a 29.3% chance of it being 79.1% somewhat accurate". You need a scale to rate it on, probably either 4-5 points from completely accurate to neither to completely inaccurate. Either get them to score it themselves or ask for qualitative responses and create a score for them.
You'd also need to define your terms, exactly how accurate is "somewhat accurate" and "completely accurate"? Additionally, some of these predictions are vague by nature, so you would generally be unable to describe those as completely accurate.
Then you compare avg accuracy between groups. Your hypothesis is a null hypothesis so the difference should approach zero as number of participants increases.
That's how you do pseudoscience, motherfuckers. If you aren't doing this then don't bother. And don't bother at all because there is obviously no connection between longitude of birthplace and life events anymore than there is between your personality and fucking Jupiter.
Unless you're just doing it for fun and don't believe in it a single tiny bit. I would be amused to see what I would get but I'm under 20 and don't know what time I was born.
Edited 3/23/2014 20:44:30