The human body interacts with solar radiation through six physically distinct pathways (Gaspervic, 2026b). Still, the efficiency of each pathway varies constitutionally: different bodies receive, process, and distribute solar photon input with different degrees of effectiveness depending on their electromagnetic baseline. This article proposes that the four classical temperaments — Choleric (Hot/Dry), Sanguine (Hot/Wet), Melancholic (Cold/Dry), and Phlegmatic (Cold/Wet) — can be physically characterised by their predicted tissue dielectric profiles as indexed by the Gabriel et al. (1996) tissue database, and that these predicted profiles generate testable hypotheses about constitutional vulnerability to specific solar pathway deficits. The temperament tally is a clinical observation; the dielectric profile is its proposed physical correlate; the four predictions in Section VI are the test of whether the correlation holds. The Hot/Cold axis corresponds to mitochondrial thermogenic capacity and CCO photosensitivity; the Wet/Dry axis corresponds to tissue water content, EZ water capacity, and dielectric permittivity. Each classical planetary organ rulership corresponds to a specific electromagnetic function within the body's phototronic architecture, and the natal chart's four-layer structure (Voltage/Current/Calibration/Quality) provides a clinically applicable framework for identifying constitutional vulnerabilities in the solar pathway and generating specific therapeutic recommendations. The model is speculative but generates testable predictions distinguishable from both conventional nutritional medicine and traditional medical astrology.
Masen Clark Gaspervic (Thu,) studied this question.