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Books > Social sciences > Psychology > Parapsychological studies
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Warkon
(Paperback)
Sam Beckett
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R668
R602
Discovery Miles 6 020
Save R66 (10%)
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A definitive, factual, A-Z reference guide offering a global
perspective on the role of prophecy in world history, religion,
folklore, and literature. From at least 1200 B.C. and probably long
before, prophets have attempted to see into the future. Most-from
ancient oracles to modern astrologers, from doomsday sects to
telephone psychics-have been wrong the majority of the time, says
British researcher Geoffrey Ashe. True foreknowledge is rare, but
those rare occurrences are impressive. In this fascinating
reference work, the first to encompass the entire 3,000 year span
of recorded prophecy, Ashe examines the predictions of both good
prophets and bad, including seers like Jacques Cazotte, who
forecast the Reign of Terror in the French Revolution, and Morgan
Robertson, who described the Titanic disaster 14 years before it
happened. He refutes many of the far-fetched claims of Nostradamus,
and highlights those that foreshadow events after his lifetime. He
also examines failed prophecies that have been influential,
including the many end-of-the-world forecasts, along with the
surprisingly accurate visions of some science-fiction authors. More
than 100 entries on prophets and prophecies from the Antichrist to
Yevgeny Zamyatin, the Russian author whose writings influenced
Aldous Huxley's Brave New World and George Orwell's 1984 Extensive
illustrations with drawings and diagrams including engravings from
William Blake's so-called prophetic books and depictions of the ten
incarnations of Vishnu Numerous photographs of writers such as D.
H. Lawrence, H. G. Wells, and E. M. Forster; spiritual leaders such
as Madame Blavatsky, founder of Theosophy; and Theodor Herzl,
founder of Zionism A bibliography as a guide for extended research
The belief in telepathy is still widely held and yet it remains much disputed by scientists. Roger Luckhurst explores the origins of the term in the late nineteenth century. Telepathy mixed physical and mental sciences, new technologies and old superstitions, and it fascinated many famous people in the late Victorian era: Sigmund Freud, Thomas Huxley, Henry James, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Oscar Wilde. This is an exciting and accessible study, written for general readers as much as scholars and students.
This book is the first systematic and comprehensive critical
evaluation of reincarnation by a professional philosopher in any
language. Several chapters deal with the alleged evidence for
reincarnation -- child prodigies, deja vu experiences, hypnotic
regressions and spontaneous memories of earlier lives. The book
shows how reincarnation is incompatible with many well-established
facts such as population increases, the recency of life in the
universe, and the transformation of species. It shows that
reincarnation is committed to belief in the astral body, which is
examined in a particularly amusing chapter. The book is written in
a lucid and witty style by an author renowned for his Voltairean
sense of fun.
Silver Threads shows consciousness studies in the context of
scholarly investigation and liberal thinking. It was written to
celebrate the 25th anniversary of the Parapsychology Research
Group. However, the subject matter is not confined to
parapsychology; the volume is, more generally, a collection of
essays on and experiments in consciousness. It includes theoretical
material on the philosophy of science and experimental reports.
Many of the contributors are recognized as outstanding original
researchers in the field of parapsychology, such as Targ, Honorton,
Tart, Harman, Krippner, and Grof. The contributors conclude that:
(1) psychic phenomena are genuine and can be subject to scientific
investigation; (2) science is changing to adapt to new categories
of phenomena, including those which are considered paranormal; and
(3) paranormal function is an innate human ability that everyone
possesses and uses.
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Entities
(Hardcover)
Joe Nickell
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R780
R629
Discovery Miles 6 290
Save R151 (19%)
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Guardian angels, demonic spirits, extraterrestrial visitorsare
these entities figments of the imagination, or is there evidence
for their existence? Famed psychic detective Joe Nickell answers
these questions in his lively book.
From the "Newberry Demon" of 1679 and the strange phenomena
produced by 19th-century spiritualist mediums to such modern
enigmas as alien abductions, bigfoot sightings, and the bizarre
mystery of Atlanta's "House of Blood," Entities examines eyewitness
accounts and other evidence for strange beings worldwide.
Without dismissing or advocating any particular view, Nickell takes
a detective's approach to controversial claims, shedding light on
dozens of otherwise perplexing mysteries. An afterword by acclaimed
psychologist Robert A. Baker adds an authoritative voice to the
discussion and explains the impact that beings of whatever variety
can have on our lives.
Entities will challenge, anger, amuse, and fascinate but, most
importantly, it will enlighten. Believers and skeptics alike will
benefit from the careful analysis that appears on every page.
Utilizing their experience as professional crime-solvers, authors
Joe Nickell and John F Fischer delve into the labyrinth of the
unknown armed with open minds and the remarkable array of
information sources and scientific methods available to the modern
investigator. Examined are such classic enigmas as the haunting of
Mackenzie House (Toronto's rebel statesman is said to tread noisily
upon the stairs of his historic home); the question of the 'Crystal
Skull' (the 'grand-daddy of all crystal balls'); the case of 'The
Two Will Wests' (two prison inmates with the same name, identical
features, and similar fingerprints); plus bleeding doors, phantom
pictures, restless coffins, disappearing footprints, human
fireballs, and miraculous portraits - a fascinating panoply of
mind-bogglers, riddles, and ambiguities. The methods, procedures,
and sources used by Nickell and Fischer to solve these 'mysteries'
included forensic and microchemical analysis, controlled testing,
archaeology, instrumental analyses, iconographic studies, genetics,
deductive logic, photography, art history, pathology, engineering,
genealogy, police records, and plain common sense. Neither a mere
collection of stories nor a categorical debunking, this book goes
beyond the spine-tingling to focus on details of available
evidence, appropriate investigative strategies, and convincing
explanations for these intriguing 'occult' mysteries. The answers
provided may disappoint the determined believer in the supernatural
- but the solutions, and the fascinating methodology used by the
authors, are as unique and interesting as the perplexing cases on
which they are based.
Contents: a packet for Ezra Pound; stories of Michael Robartes and
his friends: an extract from a record made by his pupils; phases of
moon; great wheel; completed symbol; soul in judgment; great year
of ancients; dove or swan; all soul's night, an epilogue. With many
figures and illustrations.
Parapsychology is a science made controversial by its subjects:
extrasensory perception, psychokinesis (mind over matter) and
disembodied minds, which imply life after death. Moreover, these
parapsychological phenomena (called "psi") challenge physicalism,
the philosophy that everything can be completely understood in
terms of physics. This book is a snapshot of the parapsychological
field, with essays written by authors of diverse academic
backgrounds and experiences. Essays examine parapsychological
phenomena from prehistory, through the founding of the science by
intellectuals distressed by physicalism, to the postmodern present.
It includes both experimental and theoretical evaluations of the
phenomena. Parapsychology is a science which may overturn the
philosophy which has dominated science since Newton and may inspire
curious readers who are disheartened by the consequent denial of
the spirit.
Every week thousands of people in Europe and the USA consult
psychic practitioners. Communication is crucial to the performance
of psychic powers in a range of settings. Psychic practitioners use
language to demonstrate their powers, whether they are reporting
the words of their spirit contacts or interpreting the spread of
Tarot cards. Their clients also accept or reject this information
through talk. This book presents the first sustained study of the
verbal interaction between the various kinds of psychic
practitioners and their clients. Using conversation analysis, Robin
Wooffitt examines the structure of the interaction, focusing on the
ways in which psychic practitioners and their clients establish the
authenticity of the claimed paranormal powers. Adopting a neutral
standpoint towards the status of the claims of psychic
practitioners, the book raises important issues about the role of
social science in understanding the activities of psychic
practitioners and other kinds of parapsychological phenomena. This
highly original study will appeal to students and scholars of
discourse studies, and to sociologists interested in conversation
analysis. It is written in a style accessible to non-specialists,
and will also interest parapsychologists and social scientists
studying psychic phenomena and the paranormal.
Presents an accessible and engaging introduction to the field of
parapsychology, uniquely situating it within a discussion of the
nature of science and the scientific paradigm Considers the
implications of paranormal findings in terms of our understanding
of human consciousness Includes coverage of topics not seen in all
textbooks in the field, including energy healing and psychokinesis
Exploring the paranormal through musical phenomena, this
encyclopedia covers a range of anomalies, from musical mediumship
to locations throughout the world where music has been heard with
no obvious source. Other manifestations, such as the abilities of
musical savants and the anesthetic use of music during surgical
procedures, are included with a focus on paraphysical aspects.
Entries describe examples from earliest history up to the
present-interpretation is left to the reader. Broader themes and
concepts are discussed in appendices, with additional references
provided for further study.
- The first student-focused textbook on Transpersonal Psychology -
Introduces students and instructors to contemporary developments of
the field and anticipates future advances - Suitable as a core text
for Transpersonal Psychology/Humanistic Psychology modules, or as a
supplementary text for core Psychology modules
Examining the Psychological Foundations of Science and Morality is
a progressive text that explores the relationship between
psychology, science and morality, to address fundamental questions
about the foundations of psychological research and its relevance
for the development of these disciplines. Supported by original
empirical evidence, the book analyses the relationship of folk
psychology to rational knowledge, outlining an original theory that
connects psychology and natural sciences through the mind which
creates a psychological foundation for scientific knowledge and
morality. It argues that science and religion have a common
psychological core of subjective experience, which diversifies into
knowledge, beliefs and morality. The book considers how subjective
space and time are converted into physical space and time, and how
subjective 'sense of causation' is shaped into physical causality
and human communication. Further, it explores the mind as a complex
system of contrasting realities, with the main function being
existence attribution (EXON). The chapters delve into a range of
topics including theoretical analysis of consciousness, the
internal self, unexplainable phenomena, analysis of empirical
research into causality, morality and the mind. The book will be of
great interest to postgraduate and upper-level undergraduate
students studying foundations of psychology, consciousness,
philosophy of science, morality, as well as professionals who deal
with influence on mass consciousness or are interested in the link
between human psychology, scientific knowledge and morality.
First published in 1982, Intrusions examines a wide range of cases
down through history, showing how ordinary people have regarded the
paranormal in contrast with 'official' attitudes, and how society
as a whole has attempted to deal with happenings that are
inexplicable in terms of current scientific or religious theory. He
discusses questions such as What did Shakespeare's audience feel
about Hamlet's father's ghost? Why did a renewed interest in magic
follow 'the age of enlightenment?' How did Victorian science
respond to spiritualism, and why has scientific psychical research,
when it finally came, encountered continued opposition? Drawing on
reports and accounts of very kind, Mr. Evans gives an authentic
account of prevailing attitudes, focussing for the first time
directly on the experiences and points of view of ordinary people.
He demonstrates that society has been, and still is, badly served
by the intellectual establishment in matters relating to the
paranormal. Although there are signs that the situation is
improving, there is still a dismaying degree of reluctance even to
investigate, let alone accept, these phenomena, yet they continue
to occur, and people continue to seek explanations for them. This
book will be of interest to anyone interested in the mysteries of
the paranormal as well as to students of parapsychology, history
and literature.
Human Interaction with the Divine, the Sacred, and the Deceased
brings together cutting-edge empirical and theoretical
contributions from scholars in fields including psychology,
theology, ethics, neuroscience, medicine, and philosophy, to
examine how and why humans engage in, or even seek spiritual
experiences and connection with the immaterial world. In this
richly interdisciplinary volume, Plante and Schwartz recognize
human interaction with the divine and departed as a cross-cultural
and historical universal that continues to concern diverse
disciplines. Accounting for variances in belief and human
perception and use, the book is divided into four major sections:
personal experience; theological consideration; medical,
technological, and scientific considerations; and psychological
considerations with chapters addressing phenomena including prayer,
reincarnation, sensed presence, and divine revelations. Featuring
scholars specializing in theology, psychology, medicine,
neuroscience, and ethics, this book provides a thoughtful,
compelling, evidence-based, and contemporary approach to gain a
grounded perspective on current understandings of human interaction
with the divine, the sacred, and the deceased. Of interest to
believers, questioners, and unbelievers alike, this volume will be
key reading for researchers, scholars, and academics engaged in the
fields of religion and psychology, social psychology, behavioral
neuroscience, and health psychology. Readers with a broader
interest in spiritualism, religious and non-religious movements
will also find the text of interest.
Examining the Psychological Foundations of Science and Morality is
a progressive text that explores the relationship between
psychology, science and morality, to address fundamental questions
about the foundations of psychological research and its relevance
for the development of these disciplines. Supported by original
empirical evidence, the book analyses the relationship of folk
psychology to rational knowledge, outlining an original theory that
connects psychology and natural sciences through the mind which
creates a psychological foundation for scientific knowledge and
morality. It argues that science and religion have a common
psychological core of subjective experience, which diversifies into
knowledge, beliefs and morality. The book considers how subjective
space and time are converted into physical space and time, and how
subjective 'sense of causation' is shaped into physical causality
and human communication. Further, it explores the mind as a complex
system of contrasting realities, with the main function being
existence attribution (EXON). The chapters delve into a range of
topics including theoretical analysis of consciousness, the
internal self, unexplainable phenomena, analysis of empirical
research into causality, morality and the mind. The book will be of
great interest to postgraduate and upper-level undergraduate
students studying foundations of psychology, consciousness,
philosophy of science, morality, as well as professionals who deal
with influence on mass consciousness or are interested in the link
between human psychology, scientific knowledge and morality.
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