The Archive
Mission
To hold an accurate, sourced, and lasting public record of the Human Design System — so that a reader years from now can learn what was said, by whom, and when, and check it for themselves.
The Human Design System has a history that its own institutions have not always kept. Teachers who built the work have been written out of the record; dates have shifted; documents have gone missing. This archive exists to preserve that record in one place, from primary sources, and to keep it where anyone can reach it.
What this archive does
It documents. It gathers the founder's own words, the teachers' own accounts, the contracts, the filings, the court and trademark records, and the archived pages, and it links each claim to the source a reader can verify. Where the record is contested, it sets out the documented positions and leaves the weighing to the reader.
What it does not do
It is not a school, a store, or a certifying body. It does not teach the system, sell its materials, or take a side on whether the system is true, valid, or good. It renders no verdicts. It is independent — not an official publication of, and not operated, sponsored, or endorsed by, Jovian Archive, the IHDS, or any Human Design organization.
The standard it holds
Every load-bearing claim on this site is meant to be supportable from a publicly available source. Where a document says something, it is quoted and cited; where it does not, no claim is made. The aim is a record that is restrained, verifiable, and durable — one that earns trust by showing its work rather than asserting its conclusions.
Read more about the archive's purpose, scope, and method, browse the public record, or write to the archive with a correction or a source.