Guest guest Posted January 27, 2001 Report Share Posted January 27, 2001 Dear Sarajit, SP> Sorry for the delayed response. It seems there is no problem in taking he SP> length of production process to be the gestation period of the product. But SP> here the problem is that the producttion process for most of the products SP> is veryy small ranging from few minutes in case of productts like soaps SP> etc. and a few hours for consumer durables like TV, Fridge or Automobile. SP> Can these short times be taken as the gestation period? What is the problem with short gestation times? The accuracy of measuring? It can be probably measured to an accuracy of difference of times required for producing two individual items of the product in question. Which should be OK, I assume, as with the humans it is also not exactly 9 months for everyone, with small (sometimes as large as 2 months, or is this a separate issue?) individual differences. Vahe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 27, 2001 Report Share Posted January 27, 2001 Om Hrim Hamsa Soham Swaha Dear Vahe & Sarajit, The problem is finding the " Average Gestation Period " or " Natural Gestation period " . Further, this can be different for different products or even for different routes or processes for the same product giving us different Shoola Sub-periods for the same product. Thus approach is not advised. Think again and think afresh. Go to the basics again. Can gestation period be the determining method for 'artificial objects'? If not then we need to think about how we can correlate Human activity (Dasamsa) to the chart of a product. This is where Manu Smriti can come to our rescue when " One dasamsa in the lives of the demi-Gods is equal to a human life " . Demi-Gods produce artificial products and not Human beings. Human beings are produced by the Gods where " One day in the lives of the Gods equals a year in Human lives " . Thus, if we are talking about artificial products then the life cycle of 36 years with elongated longevity for some products is also to be considered. Yogini Dasa would fit into this scheme very well. Try this now and let us see one product data with this exercise. With Best Wishes Sanjay Rath - " Vahe Ganapetyan " <vahe " Sarajit Poddar " <varahamihira > Saturday, January 27, 2001 5:24 AM Re[2]: [sri Guru] Re: Marketing and Vedic Astrology > Dear Sarajit, > > SP> Sorry for the delayed response. It seems there is no problem in taking he > SP> length of production process to be the gestation period of the product. But > SP> here the problem is that the producttion process for most of the products > SP> is veryy small ranging from few minutes in case of productts like soaps > SP> etc. and a few hours for consumer durables like TV, Fridge or Automobile. > SP> Can these short times be taken as the gestation period? > > What is the problem with short gestation times? The accuracy of measuring? > It can be probably measured to an accuracy of difference of times > required for producing two individual items of the product in > question. Which should be OK, I assume, as with the humans it is also > not exactly 9 months for everyone, with small (sometimes as large as 2 > months, or is this a separate issue?) individual differences. > > Vahe > > > > OM TAT SAT > Archive: varahamihira > Info: varahamihira/info.html > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.