Ghost Hunters: William James and the Search for Scientific Proof of
Life After Death (2006), by Deborah Blum, is about a remarkable point in late
19th century cultural and scientific history. Although many
scientists had accepted the theory of evolution posited by Charles Darwin, not
everyone had bought in, especially the general population. Some scientists who
accepted the theory did not believe that it necessarily ruled out a spiritual
realm. One of these was William James, the famous psychologist and philosopher,
author of Varieties of Religious Experience
(1902), Essays in Radical Empiricism (1912, posthum.), and other influential texts, and brother of
the novelist Henry James. Another was Alfred Russel Wallace, who co-developed the
theory of evolution. These and other respected scientists, including one Nobel
Prize winner, along with others who did not want to give up belief in the possibility
of a spiritual existence, banded together formally and informally to conduct
research that would, they hoped, prove the existence of a spiritual reality. Their
organization, the American Society for Psychical Research, is still in existence
today, though it lacks the prestige of its founders. James and his colleagues
intended to use scientific methods to uncover spiritualistic frauds and to
identify those mediums who were genuine.
These researchers were often
derided by other scientists who regarded the idea of a spirit realm as
ridiculous. They were made fun of in newspapers
and professional journals. Professional mediums did not particularly appreciate
their efforts either because more often than not many of them were found to be
frauds deceiving the witless multitudes.
A few cases produced tentative
results that suggested something might be out there. The most intriguing
experiment involved three mediums in different locations of the world
attempting to receive messages from a scientist who had died but who had vowed before
his death to make every effort to get in touch. When they compared the
fragmentary messages they believed they had received, they found them tenuous.
It’s unfortunate they did not pursue this experiment further. I would like to
know whether the procedures employed in this research measure up to
contemporary scientific standards.
Blum does not take a stand on
the spirit world. She does take with
serious appreciation the efforts of the scientists involved to learn about or
to disprove it.
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