Is physical mediumship fraudulent?
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Sorry I didn't realize I posted to the wrong forum I've moved my post about the evidence for physical mediumship that used to be here to a different forum:
http://psiencequest.net/forums/thread-249.html plesase review the forum rules before contributing to that new thread. Thanks
The first gulp from the glass of science will make you an atheist, but at the bottom of the glass God is waiting for you - Werner Heisenberg. (More at my Blog & Website)
(This post was last modified: 2017-09-01, 08:48 AM by Jim_Smith.)
Jim, are you arguing Helen Duncan was a genuine medium? She was exposed as a fraud by the London Spiritualist Alliance:
(This post was last modified: 2017-08-31, 02:00 PM by Fake Leuders.)
Quote:By far the best illustration of irrational faith in a proven charlatan, however, is provided by the followers of the notorious materialization medium, Helen Duncan. The first serious investigation of Mrs Duncan was by the London Psychical Laboratory (the research department of the London Spiritualist Alliance) in 1931. In consequence of impressive accounts of her mediumship that body invited Mrs Duncan to sit exclusively for them for a period of eighteen months, and signed a contract with her to that effect-a contract, incidentally, which she made no scruple to break. The investigating committee made particular efforts to discover the nature of the 'ectoplasm' said to come from the medium, from which the materializations were supposed to have been formed. Source: Simeon Edmunds. (1966). Spiritualism: A Critical Survey. Aquarian Press. pp. 137-138 Her ectoplasm was made of paper, cloth or eggs. Quote:The Physical Mediumship of Einer Nielsen "This tribute comes from a pastor of the Swedish State Church ... 'Twice I have sat in the cabinet and kept hold of the medium’s hands. The ectoplasm came directly through his clothes. One figure that of Rita, rose up from the ectoplasm grasped my arm, and we went out together to the sitters and talked with them.'" Einer Neilsen was exposed as a fraud at Kristiania University by members of the Danish Society for Psychical Research in 1922. Do you dispute their findings? Universitetskomiteen, Mediet Einer Nielsen, kontrolundersøkelser av universitetskomiteen i Kristiania (Kristiania 1922). Anonymous. Rapport fra den av Norsk Selskab for Psykisk Forskning nedsatte Kontrolkomité. Norsk Tidsskrift for Psykisk Forskning 1 (1921–1922), pp. 110–125. Quote:Houdini was invited to investigate Mina Crandon; in a series of sittings he was unable to debunk her. Finally, in one sitting, just as Mina was about to start she suddenly said (while allegedly in a trance and controlled by her spirit guide Walter) that Houdini's assistant had planted a folding ruler in the cabinet that she occupied and that he meant to produce this ruler as evidence that she was cheating. You are not reporting the entire story. Houdini denied planting the ruler. The story that his assistant planted the ruler was second-hand. It is taken from a biography by William Lindsay Gresham years after Houdini had died. It is likely Crandon utilized the ruler to cheat during the seance. Crandon was exposed as a fraud by the Boston Society for Psychical Research in 1932. The fingerprints of 'Walter' were discovered to belong to Crandon's dentist... You do not mention this. Walter Franklin Prince (1933). The Case Against Margery. Scientific American 148: 261-263. Quote:Medium Jack Webber Zerdini: "Leon Isaacs, who took the photographs at Webber’s circles, used two cameras placed at different angles…shots using this two-camera technique showed the disposition of trumpets and other objects, establishing that they were not held aloft by any material agency." There is a problem with the Jack Webber photographs that appear in Harry Edwards book. According to Michael Coleman in the Journal of the Society for Psychical Research: Quote:"Edwards's book is essentially anecdotal, written from memory, often long after the events described. Thus we do not know where, when or for how long the individual sittings were held. We do not know how many sitters were present at each sitting, and we know the names of very few of them. But most importantly, we do not have those detailed sequences of events, with timings, that are necessary to arrive at a realistic assessment of any supposedly paranormal occurrences. Most of Edwards's account is unsupported by any independent witnesses". Coleman, Michael (1998). Letter to the Editor. Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 62: 372-374. Quote:You should demand the same high level of proof from skeptics claiming fraud as you demand from people claiming evidence of paranormal phenomena. Sometimes people accept any accusation of fraud at face value but too often the assertions of skeptics do not hold up under close scrutiny (http://sites.google.com/site/chs4o8pt/sk...sdirection). Your website is useful but it is well out of date. Many of the website sources you link to are no longer active (answers.com etc). You also cherry-pick certain pieces of information but ignore the negative. You are not giving the full story. You quote magician Will Goldston as endorsing Rudi Schneider but you ignore the negative. Will Goldston's Tricks of the Masters (1942) describes on a few pages how he detected Helen Duncan's slate-writing trickery. If you are going to quote Goldston should you not quote him on the negative as well?
Some of you might find these old illustrations and pictures useful:
If you want to see anymore let me know. They are all in public domain and out of copyright as they were published a long time ago. (2017-08-31, 03:16 PM)Chris Wrote: I can't understand why the men in the top pictures didn't just each hold one of the medium's wrists, then he'd have been stumped! Seems like this information could be a bit out of date, wouldn't you say? This was done almost before photography for god sake. I'm thinking those lessons were learned and protocols corrected close to 100 years ago. I would paste a picture of the Wright Flyer and point out the mistakes in aerodynamic design, but figured the point is too obvious to need amplification. (2017-08-31, 03:23 PM)jkmac Wrote: Seems like this information could be a bit out of date, wouldn't you say? Yes - I didn't realise the "medium" in the pictures is actually Houdini! https://books.google.com/books?id=aycDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA12 (2017-08-31, 03:48 PM)Chris Wrote: Yes - I didn't realise the "medium" in the pictures is actually Houdini!OK. So it was a joke. Sorry,,, right over my head I guess. (2017-08-31, 04:15 PM)jkmac Wrote: OK. So it was a joke. Sorry,,, right over my head I guess. Maybe it was a joke on Leuders's part. I don't know. I was tempted to make a kind of joke by saying "Is that a luminous button on the end of a collapsible rod, or are you just pleased to see me?" But thankfully I managed to resist the temptation. |
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