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Saint Paul (Paperback)
Frederic William Henry Myers
bundle available
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R363
Discovery Miles 3 630
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Poems (Paperback)
Frederic William Henry Myers
bundle available
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R455
Discovery Miles 4 550
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This two-volume work, co-authored by Edmund Gurney (1847 1888),
Frederic W. H. Myers (1843 1901) and Frank Podmore (1856 1910), all
leading members of the Society for Psychical Research, was first
published in 1886. It documents over 700 case studies of
ghost-seeing, and aimed to revolutionise thinking about ghosts by
proposing a theory that explained ghost-seeing through the idea of
telepathy. Volume 1 includes an introduction by Myers and an
explanation of the analytical methods used in the study. It then
focuses on hypnotism, the telepathic transference of ideas, mental
pictures and emotional impressions, dreams, and hallucinations, and
contains an impressive essay on the history of witchcraft. This
pioneering study is an indispensable source for the history of
psychical research. It provides detailed insights into the
Victorian fascination with the occult and the supernatural, and is
still the most extensive collection of ghost-seeing accounts
available.
This two-volume work, co-authored by Edmund Gurney (1847 1888),
Frederic W. H. Myers (1843 1901) and Frank Podmore (1856 1910), all
leading members of the Society for Psychical Research, was first
published in 1886. This collection, containing over 700 case
studies of sensory phantasms and hypnotic experiments, was one of
the first attempts to deal scientifically with the hypothesis of
psychic thought-transference and to catalogue and provide a body of
evidence in its support. Volume 2 presents data and analyses of
auditory, visual, and tactile hallucinations, and those of a
reciprocal or collective nature. It contains addenda and a
conclusion for the two volumes. This pioneering study is an
indispensable source for the history of psychical research and
nineteenth-century attitudes to the idea of telepathy. It provides
detailed insights into the Victorian fascination with the occult
and the supernatural.
Frederic William Henry Myers (1843 1901) was a classical scholar
who in mid-career turned to the investigation of psychic phenomena.
After studying, and later teaching, Classics at Trinity College,
Cambridge he resigned his lectureship in 1869, became an inspector
of schools, and campaigned for women's higher education. With the
encouragement of former colleagues he began a scientific
investigation of spiritualism and related phenomena, and in 1882 he
helped to found the Society for Psychical Research. This volume,
first published in 1893, is a collection of essays that Myers had
previously published in journals. Their topics include Charles
Darwin's religious beliefs, the capacity of contemporary scientific
methods to investigate the existence of the soul after death, and
an unusual interpretation of Alfred Tennyson's poetry. These
fascinating essays show how Myers engaged with the scientific
developments and intellectual currents of his time as he developed
his theory of the 'subliminal self'.
Frederic William Henry Myers (1843 1901) was a classical scholar
who in mid-career turned to the investigation of psychic phenomena.
After studying, and later teaching, Classics at Trinity College,
Cambridge he resigned his lectureship in 1869, became an inspector
of schools, and campaigned for women's higher education. With the
encouragement of former colleagues he began a scientific
investigation of spiritualism and related phenomena, and in 1882 he
helped to found the Society for Psychical Research. This two-volume
work, first published posthumously in 1903, contains the fullest
statement of Myers' influential theory of the 'subliminal self',
which he developed by combining his research into psychic phenomena
with his in-depth reading about the latest advances in psychology
and related fields. His deeply intellectual approach is evident
throughout the book, which analyses a huge amount of interesting
data. Volume 1 introduces his theory and discusses dreams and
sensory automation.
Frederic William Henry Myers (1843 1901) was a classical scholar
who in mid-career turned to the investigation of psychic phenomena.
After studying, and later teaching, Classics at Trinity College,
Cambridge he resigned his lectureship in 1869, became an inspector
of schools, and campaigned for women's higher education. With the
encouragement of former colleagues he began a scientific
investigation of spiritualism and related phenomena, and in 1882 he
helped to found the Society for Psychical Research. This two-volume
work, first published posthumously in 1903, contains the fullest
statement of Myers' influential theory of the 'subliminal self',
which he developed by combining his research into psychic phenomena
with his in-depth reading about the latest advances in psychology
and related fields. His deeply intellectual approach is evident
throughout the book, which analyses a huge amount of interesting
data. Volume 2 discusses apparitions, trances and bodily
possession.
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