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Psypioneer V11 N4-5 Apr-May 2015
PSYPIONEER F JOURNAL Founded by Leslie Price Edited by Archived by Paul J. Gaunt Garth Willey Established 2004 —~§~— Volume 11, No. 04: April & No. 05: May 2015 —~§~— 112 – Conan Doyle Proves His Survival – Maurice Barbanell Direct Voice Phenomena – two views 119 – Mercy Phillimore 124 – Brigadier R. C. Firebrace, C.B.E. 129 – S.N.U. Pioneer – Leslie Price 130 – Some adventures of Bishop Leadbeater – Clara M. Codd 134 – Waite and spiritualism 134 – Mr. A. E. Waite – Charles Richard Cammell Editor of Light 135 – Arthur Edward Waite: An Appreciation – Lewis Spence 137 – L.S.A. Comments and Records – Mercy Phillimore 138 – Shadows of Life and Thought – Arthur Edward Waite 143 – Some books we have reviewed 144 – How to obtain this Journal by email ============================= “Double Issue” 111 CONAN DOYLE PROVES HIS SURVIVAL Note by LP: As a leading Spiritualist, Conan Doyle has often been reported as a communicator. The summary account below omits one of the most striking cases, that through Grace Cooke1 but raises the question – who was the mystery Scottish lady who impressed Lady Conan Doyle? —~§~— Across the Gulf – by Maurice Barbanell, Psychic Press, 1940, pages 49-62: A FEW minutes after he died, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle announced that fact in a dramatic fashion to one of his daughters. Mary Conan Doyle was in her father’s psychic library and bookshop in Victoria, South West London, when, to her surprise, the charwoman became entranced. Sir Arthur spoke through her lips and told Mary that he had passed on a few minutes ago. This was her first news of his death. -
Psychic Phenomena and the Mind–Body Problem: Historical Notes on a Neglected Conceptual Tradition
Chapter 3 Psychic Phenomena and the Mind–Body Problem: Historical Notes on a Neglected Conceptual Tradition Carlos S. Alvarado Abstract Although there is a long tradition of philosophical and historical discussions of the mind–body problem, most of them make no mention of psychic phenomena as having implications for such an issue. This chapter is an overview of selected writings published in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries literatures of mesmerism, spiritualism, and psychical research whose authors have discussed apparitions, telepathy, clairvoyance, out-of-body experiences, and other parapsy- chological phenomena as evidence for the existence of a principle separate from the body and responsible for consciousness. Some writers discussed here include indi- viduals from different time periods. Among them are John Beloff, J.C. Colquhoun, Carl du Prel, Camille Flammarion, J.H. Jung-Stilling, Frederic W.H. Myers, and J.B. Rhine. Rather than defend the validity of their position, my purpose is to docu- ment the existence of an intellectual and conceptual tradition that has been neglected by philosophers and others in their discussions of the mind–body problem and aspects of its history. “The paramount importance of psychical research lies in its demonstration of the fact that the physical plane is not the whole of Nature” English physicist William F. Barrett ( 1918 , p. 179) 3.1 Introduction In his book Body and Mind , the British psychologist William McDougall (1871–1938) referred to the “psychophysical-problem” as “the problem of the rela- tion between body and mind” (McDougall 1911 , p. vii). Echoing many before him, C. S. Alvarado , PhD (*) Atlantic University , 215 67th Street , Virginia Beach , VA 23451 , USA e-mail: [email protected] A. -
Edward F. Kelly, Chapter 1, Beyond Physicalism, Edward F
Supplemental web material for “Empirical Challenges to Theory Construction,” Edward F. Kelly, Chapter 1, Beyond Physicalism, Edward F. Kelly, Adam Crabtree, and Paul Marshall (Eds.). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2015. http://www.esalen.org/ctr-archive/bp © Robert Rosenberg 2015 All rights reserved A SELECT ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY ON PRECOGNITION Robert Rosenberg Introduction Sidgwick, Eleanor 1888–1889: “On the Evidence for Premonitions” Myers, Frederic W. H. 1894–1895: “The Subliminal Self, Chapter VIII: The Relation of Supernormal Phenomena to Time;—Retrocognition” 1894–1895: “The Subliminal Self, Chapter IX: The Relation of Supernormal Phenomena to Time;—Precognition” Richet, Charles 1923: Thirty Years of Psychical Research 1931: L’Avenir et la Prémonition Osty, Eugene 1923: Supernormal Faculties in Man Dunne, J. W. 1927: An Experiment with Time Lyttelton, Edith 1937: Some Cases of Prediction Saltmarsh, H. F. 1934: “Report on cases of apparent precognition” 1938: Foreknowledge Rhine, L. E. 1954: “Frequency of Types of Experience in Spontaneous Precognition” 1955: “Precognition and Intervention” Stevenson, Ian 1970: “Precognition of Disasters” MacKenzie, Andrew 1974: Riddle of the Future Eisenbud, Jule 1982: Paranormal Foreknowledge Conclusions References Introduction Precognition—the appearance or acquisition of non-inferential information or impressions of the future—holds a special place among psi phenomena. Confounding as it does commonsense notions of time and causality, it is perhaps the most metaphysically offensive of rogue phenomena. In the past 130 years, a number of thoughtful investigators—none of them either naïve or foolish—have studied a growing collection incidents, all carefully vetted (excepting Rhine’s popularly solicited cases [below]). With the exception of the first author, Eleanor Sidgwick, who drew on a scant six years of evidence and found it tantalizing but insufficient, these investigators have repeatedly come to the generally reluctant conclusion that true precognition (or something identical to it with a different name) exists. -
Ph.D. THESIS Ewa Błasiak
UNIVERSITY OF WROCŁAW Faculty of Letters Ph.D. THESIS Ewa Błasiak The Return of the Morality Play in Anglophone Drama of the First Half of the Twentieth Century Supervisor prof. dr hab. Ewa Kębłowska-Ławniczak Co-supervisor dr Marcin Tereszewski Wrocław 2020 2 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I wish to express my gratitude to my supervisor, Professor Ewa Kębłowska-Ławniczak, for her mentorship, guidance and constant support throughout the writing process. I am grateful for her patience, encouragement and the time she devoted to helping me develop this project. I would also like to thank her for being an extraordinary academic teacher, for it was the intellectual challenge of her English Literature classes which I attended as a first-year undergraduate student that inspired me to undertake further studies in this direction. I wish to extend my gratitude to my co-supervisor, Doctor Marcin Tereszewski, for the attention he gave to this thesis and for his invaluable suggestions. I am also grateful to the entire Institute of English Studies at the University of Wrocław for providing me with a stable and stimulating academic environment during all the years I spent there as an undergraduate and postgraduate student. I wish to thank all my teachers and lecturers for instilling in me curiosity and equipping me with skills which proved indispensable in working on this thesis. 3 4 Contents Introduction: Within and Beyond the Middle Ages ........................................ 7 Modern reception and assessment of the Middle Ages .................................................... 12 The notion of medievalism ............................................................................................... 18 Part I: The Return of the Morality Play Tradition to Contemporary British, European and American Drama and Its Reception ....................... -
Journal of the Society for Psychical Research
JOURNAL OF THE Society for Psychical Research VOL. XXVIII 1933—1934 For Private Circulation among Members and Associates only THE SOCIETY'S ROOMS 31 TAVISTOCK SQUARE, LONDON, W.C.i. All rights reserved Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2015 https://archive.org/details/journalofsociety28soci CONTENTS PAGB A Veridical Dream - -- -- -- - 3 Annual Report of the Council for the Year 1932 - - - 19 The Question of the Possibility of Proving Survival by J. ; B. Rhine --------- 35 Annual General Meeting - -- -- --50 Hallucinatory Impression of a Relative's Death. (See also Journal XXVII, 326) - ----- 66 Prophecy versus Perspicacity Perovsky-Petrovo- ; by Count Solovovo - -- -- -- --67 Note on An Attempt to Locate in Space the Alleged Direct Voice observed in Sittings with Mrs. Leonard by Th. ; Besterman and G. Heard ------ 84 A Dream of an Explosion ------- 85 Notes on Sittings by Illit Grondahl - - - - - 102 ; The Investigations of Robert Chambers by Th. Besterman 105 r ; • A Sitting with D. D. Home in 1860 ----- 106 A Telepathic Impression - - - .- - - -156 " " A Fire Walking Ceremony in Fiji by S. M. White - ; 170 Annual Report of the Council for 1933 - - - - 187 Annual General Meeting ------- 203 Dream of the Result of a Race - - - - - - 216 Dream of a Monkey - -- -- -- - 236 An Impression Coinciding with an Illness subsequently Fatal 237 A Monition ---------- 239 Premonitory Dream of a Death ------ 249 Veridical Dream of a Present ------ 250 A Collective Visual Hallucination ~ Three Cases of Death-Coincidence - 253 iv Contents ; : - : .~ : . .- - An Impression Coinciding, with IHnfessr- . 256 - - or Coincidence .?. by Burke A. Evans 258 Telepathy ; - Telepathy and Sleepwalking-'; 'l>y A.- Gj. Hansard . *\ 265 Report of a Picture Test by The Rev. -
Mobbing in the Context of a Woman's Life
#24 2014 ISSN 1715-0094 Morrison Kenney, R. (2014). Mobbing in the Context of a Woman’s Life. Workplace, 24, 42-51. RACHEL MORRISON KENNEY MOBBING IN THE CONTEXT OF A WOMAN’S LIFE1 Trauma in Middle Age My conversations with Gertraud took place in 2009, in the peaceful, refined, so very civilized setting of her apartment in one of the tonier high-rise condos in Waterloo, Ontario. I had just moved into an apartment of my own, where I could scarcely see the floor for all the cardboard boxes still unpacked. This impeccably ordered display of European taste was in sharpest contrast to the half-assembled furnishings from big-box stores strewn about my dwelling. Nothing here hinted at the pain and loss that had marked this ninety-year-old woman’s life, much less the nadir in 1976, that I had come to talk to her about. Nor did her personal appearance. Petite, gracious, with honey-coloured hair and the kind of eyes that smile on their own, she wore a blouse with nary a wrinkle, and over it a delicate brooch. She was a picture of what used to be called “good breeding.” That first day, and all the other times we met, Gertraud carried herself with grace and no inkling of self- pity. Her manners, so I was to learn, were a clue to her deep appreciation for the preciousness of life. In counterpoint to the staggering sorrows she had known were even greater joys, moments when she witnessed the power of compassion in the midst of strife. -
July Journal of the S.P.R
July 2012] Further Facets of Indridi Indridason’s Mediumship FURTHER FACETS OF INDRIDI INDRIDASON’S MEDIUMSHIP, INCLUDING ‘TRANSCENDENTAL’ MUSIC, DIRECT SPEECH, XENOGLOSSY AND LIGHT PHENOMENA by ERLENDUR HARALDSSON ABSTRACT The Experimental Society kept a protocol of most séances with Indridi Indridason in the form of Minute Books. They had been lost for over half a century when two of them were rediscovered recently, along with additional pages. This paper describes some phenomena that were not dealt with in the 1989 SPR Proceedings by Gissur- arson and Haraldsson, or that can be described more fully after examination of the Minute Books. An earlier paper (Haraldsson, 2011) dealt with one particular case in Indridason’s mediumship, namely the description of the fire in Copenhagen and the identity of the trance-personality Emil Jensen. The present paper reveals in greater detail how the séances were conducted and deals with the main trance- personalities of Indridason’s mediumship, and the phenomena with which each of them was particularly involved. Particular attention is paid to reports of ‘transcend- ental’ music, foreign direct communicators, including voices of two professional singers (one male and one female) who sang loudly at the same time, and cases of xenoglossy and direct speech. This paper also reports on checks carried out into claimed memories, the reported ‘disappearance’ of the medium’s left arm, light phenomena, the appearance of Emil Jensen in a pillar of light, and the appearance of a monster-like animal. Contemporary criticism of Indridason’s mediumship is reviewed and conclusions drawn as to the relevance of his remarkable phenomena to the question of survival. -
K:\CASC\Public Services\FA Finalized\Political and Social
Manuscript Division des Division manuscrits RT. HON. W.L.M. KING MG 26 J 9 Finding Aid No. 502 / Instrument de recherche no 502 Revised in 1999 and 2000 by Maureen Revisé en 1999 et 2000 par Maureen Hoogenraad of the Political Archives Hoogenraad de la Section des archives Section. politique. W.L.M. King Spiritualism Series MG 26 J 9 INTRODUCTION The W.L.M. King Spiritualism Series contains correspondence, pamphlets, notes and memoranda arranged in nominal and subject files. There is correspondence with various mediums and other friends and acquaintances of King who were interested in spiritualism. Of particular interest are the files of séance records, 1932-1950, in Volume 7. A list of files giving volume number, file number, subject and date of each file is available in the King finding aid, number 502. It should be noted that there is also much information on Mackenzie King and spiritualism in the King Diaries Series (MG 26 J13). It might be useful to look at the correspondence and séance records in the Spiritualism Series in conjunction with the diary entries for the same dates. W.L.M. King, Série spiritisme, MG 26 J 9 INTRODUCTION La série spiritisme du fonds W.L.M. King comprend de la correspondance, des brochures, des notes et des remarques classées dans des dossiers nominatifs et sujets. Il y a de la correspondance avec différents médiums et d’autres amis et connaissances de King qui se sont intéressés au spiritisme. Les dossiers des comptes-rendus des séances de 1932 à 1950 dans le volume 7 sont d’un intérêt particulier. -
Biography of Archie Roy (1924-2012)
ASCS ACADEMY FOR SPIRITUAL AND CONSCIOUSNESS STUDIES, INC. Biography of Archie Roy (1924-2012) rchie E. Roy was a renowned astronomer dition to the SPR affiliation, he was a fellow of the and psychical researcher. At the time of Royal Society of Edinburgh, the Institute of Phys- Ahis death, he was professor emeritus of ics, the Royal Astronomical Society, the British astronomy and honorary research fellow in the Interplanetary Society, and the International As- University of Glasgow. He served as president of tronomical Union, the latter of which honored the Society for Psychical Research (SPR) (1993-95) him for his work in astronomy by naming an as- and was founder of the Scottish Society for Psy- teroid after him. chical Research. Over a 30-year period, he inves- In a 2008 interview, Roy recalled that his in- tigated many paranormal cases, and he authored troduction to psychical research took place soon three books on paranormal subjects – A Sense of after joining the faculty at Glasgow University. “I Something Strange (1990), The Archives of the Mind lost my way in the old university library and (1996) and The Eager Dead (2008). found shelves of books on spiritualism and psy- “The genial Professor Emeritus of Astrono- chical research,” he explained. “My first ignorant my at Glasgow University has been watching the reaction was ‘What is this rubbish doing in a uni- heavens for most of his life, wondering if there is versity library?’ But curiosity made me open life on other planets,” wrote Lorn Macintyre of some of the books. I was surprised to recognize The Glasgow Herald on February 10, 1997. -
Henry Handel Richardson, a Secret Life – by Dr Barbara Finlayson
Henry Handel Richardson, a Secret Life – a talk given by Dr Barbara Finlayson at the Bendigo Philosopher’s Group on July 2, 2018 The background music are songs to which Henry Handel Richardson (HHR mainly from now on) wrote the music, some whilst she was at school, others as a music student at Leipzig. That she wrote music is not well known as was her deep involvement in Spiritualism, the subject of my talk. Firstly though, I shall give a very, very, potted summary about this author Henry Handel Richardson, the nom de plume of Ethel Florence Lindesay Richardson. She was born on the 3rd January 1870 in East Melbourne, the eldest daughter of Dr Walter Richardson and his wife Mary. The family lived in various Victorian towns, as well as Melbourne itself during HHR’s childhood and youth. These included Chiltern, Queenscliff, Koroit, and Maldon after her father’s death. Her mother took the family to Europe in 1888 to enable HHR and her sister Lill to continue her musical studies at the Leipzig Conservatorium. HHR married George Robertson who became chair at the University of London and they moved to that city 1903. She published her first novel, Maurice Guest in 1908 and that is when she adopted her pseudonym. (I have included a list of her writing in the hand out.) The best known are The Getting of Wisdom and The Fortunes of Richard Mahony. She died in 1946, aged 76. In Dorothy Green’s book about Henry Handel Richardson, Ulysses Bound, she said, ‘Richardson’s life-long adherence to Spiritualism is a fact which has largely been ignored.’ This book was first published in 1973, and HHR’s involvement in Spiritualism was largely ignored until 1996 when 2 events occurred. -
L'absence De Généraux Canadiens-Français Combattants
Où sont nos chefs? L’absence de généraux canadiens-français combattants durant la Deuxième Guerre mondiale (1939-1945). Par : Alexandre Sawyer Thèse présentée à la Faculté des études supérieures et postdoctorales À titre d’exigence partielle en vue de l’obtention d’un doctorat en histoire Université d’Ottawa © Alexandre Sawyer, Ottawa, Canada, 2019 ii RÉSUMÉ Le nombre d’officiers généraux canadiens-français qui ont commandé une brigade ou une division dans l’armée active durant la Deuxième Guerre mondiale est presque nul. On ne compte aucun commandant de division francophone dans l’armée outre-mer. Dans les trois premières années de la guerre, seulement deux brigadiers canadiens-français prennent le commandement de brigades à l’entrainement en Grande-Bretagne, mais sont rapidement renvoyés chez eux. Entre 1943 et 1944, le nombre de commandants de brigade francophones passe de zéro à trois. L’absence de généraux canadiens-français combattants (à partir du grade de major-général) durant la Deuxième Guerre mondiale s’explique par plusieurs facteurs : le modèle britannique et l’unilinguisme anglais de la milice, puis de l’armée canadienne, mais aussi la tradition anti-impérialiste et, donc, souvent antimilitaire des Canadiens français. Au début de la Deuxième Guerre mondiale, aucun officier canadien n’est réellement capable de commander une grande unité militaire. Mais, a-t-on vraiment le choix? Ces officiers sont les seuls dont dispose le Canada. Quand les troupes canadiennes sont engagées au combat au milieu de 1943, des officiers canadiens, plus jeunes et beaucoup mieux formés prennent la relève. À plus petite échelle, le même processus s’opère du côté francophone, mais plus maladroitement. -
Historical Perspective
Journal of Scientific Exploration, Vol. 34, No. 4, pp. 717–754, 2020 0892-3310/20 HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE Early Psychical Research Reference Works: Remarks on Nandor Fodor’s Encyclopaedia of Psychic Science Carlos S. Alvarado [email protected] Submitted March 11, 2020; Accepted July 5, 2020; Published December 15, 2020 DOI: 10.31275/20201785 Creative Commons License CC-BY-NC Abstract—Some early reference works about psychic phenomena have included bibliographies, dictionaries, encyclopedias, and general over- view books. A particularly useful one, and the focus of the present article, is Nandor Fodor’s Encyclopaedia of Psychic Science (Fodor, n.d., circa 1933 or 1934). The encyclopedia has more than 900 alphabetically arranged entries. These cover such phenomena as apparitions, auras, automatic writing, clairvoyance, hauntings, materialization, poltergeists, premoni- tions, psychometry, and telepathy, but also mediums and psychics, re- searchers and writers, magazines and journals, organizations, theoretical ideas, and other topics. In addition to the content of this work, and some information about its author, it is argued that the Encyclopaedia is a good reference work for the study of developments from before 1933, even though it has some omissions and bibliographical problems. Keywords: Encyclopaedia of Psychic Science; Nandor Fodor; psychical re- search reference works; history of psychical research INTRODUCTION The work discussed in this article, Nandor Fodor’s Encyclopaedia of Psychic Science (Fodor, n.d., circa 1933 or 1934), is a unique compilation of information about psychical research and related topics up to around 1933. Widely used by writers interested in overviews of the literature, Fodor’s work is part of a reference literature developed over the years to facilitate the acquisition of knowledge about the early publications of the field by students of psychic phenomena.