Michael Tymn has published in his blog an excellent summary description of the work of the extraordinary physical medium Daniel Dunglas Home and prime examples of the inept debunking attempts that have repeatedly been attempted over the years. They are a sad commentary on the willful disregard of facts and common sense resorted to by skeptics dedicated to defending their world view at all costs. This is at http://whitecrowbooks.com/michaeltymn/en...moustache/ .
One of the most famous phenomena produced by Home was the disembodied and beautiful playing of an accordion.
The following is an example of one of those skeptics who are willing to go so far as to simply deny the reality that they were witness to, in order to maintain their materialist ideology. Akin to those skeptics who are fully capable of denying the reality of a personally experienced NDE because it is "impossible" according to their fixed in stone belief system.
One of the most famous phenomena produced by Home was the disembodied and beautiful playing of an accordion.
Quote:"Sir William Crookes, a world-famous chemist and physicist who discovered the element thallium and was a pioneer in x-ray technology, reported seeing an accordion, its keys untouched by human hands, play beautiful music in the presence of Home on several occasions. Home would hold the end of the accordion with his fingertips, allowing the instrument to hang. Apparently, the “psychic force” required for the spirits to play the instrument was transmitted through Home’s body and fingers."
Quote:"According to Wikipedia, magician/debunker James “The Amazing” Randi has a simple explanation for it: Home had a mouth organ hidden in his thick moustache. Randi apparently knew someone who told him that a harmonica was found among Home’s personal belongings after his death in 1886. Such evidence!!!
When I read Randi’s theory, I immediately thought of the book The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, the author being the late Oliver Sacks. Perhaps Randi could author a book about Home titled The Man who played Divine Music from his Moustache.
Other skeptical “authorities” – most of them not even born until well after Home’s death – are cited at Wikipedia, one theorizing that Home had a music box tied to his leg, another suggesting that he used hooks and black silk which were not observable in the candlelight of the day to make it appear that the accordion was floating. Still another suggested the semblance of a keyboard concealed on his coat sleeve. Another suspected an accomplice hidden in the room while playing another accordion. There are many “might have” or “could have” speculations as to Home’s “conjuring.”
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According to one debunker cited at Wikipedia, the vibrations and moving furniture at the Crookes’s home might best be explained by the fact that there were train tracks not far from his home and that the trains passing by caused the movement. Some of the other “tricks” might be explained by Home having holes in his socks and manipulating objects with his toes. Wikipedia seems to give more credibility to people who weren’t even alive when Home was than to the intelligent people, like Crookes, Wallace, Adare, and Dunraven, who witnessed the phenomena time and time again. Crookes carried out 29 separate experiments with Home over a three-year period, again, most of them in his own home and under lighted conditions. Randi would likely explain it by saying that it takes a magician to understand it all and Crookes was a scientist, not a magician."
The following is an example of one of those skeptics who are willing to go so far as to simply deny the reality that they were witness to, in order to maintain their materialist ideology. Akin to those skeptics who are fully capable of denying the reality of a personally experienced NDE because it is "impossible" according to their fixed in stone belief system.
Quote:"Sir David Brewster, a physicist known for his contributions to the optics field, is said to have witnessed Home being levitated. Although seemingly quite impressed at the time, he later concluded that the only explanation was a trick he did not understand, or a delusion. “Spirit is the last thing I will give in to,” he was quoted. Such a mindset continues to exist, especially with Wikipedia writers."