Author: Sepharial
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
ISBN: 1465599509
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 77
Book Description
It would perhaps be premature to make any definite pronouncement as to the scientific position in regard to the psychic phenomenon known as "scrying," and certainly presumptuous on my part to cite an authority from among the many who have examined this subject, since all are not agreed upon the nature and source of the observed phenomena. Their names are, moreover, already identified with modern scientific research and theory, so that to associate them with experimental psychology would be to lend colour to the idea that modern science has recognized this branch of knowledge. Nothing, perhaps, is further from the fact, and while it cannot in any way be regarded as derogatory to the highest scientist to be associated with others, of less scientific attainment but of equal integrity, in this comparatively new field of enquiry, it may lead to popular error to institute a connection. It is still fresh in the mind how the Darwinian hypothesis was utterly misconceived by the popular mind, the suggestion that man was descended from the apes being generally quoted as a correct expression of Darwin's theory, whereas he never suggested any such thing, but that man and the apes had a common ancestor, which makes of the ape rather a degenerate lemur than a human ancestor. Other and more prevalent errors will occur to the reader, these being due to the use of what is called "the evidence of the senses"; and of all criteria the evidence of sensation is perhaps the most faulty. Logical inference from deductive or inductive reasoning has often enough been a good monitor to sense-perception, and has, moreover, pioneered the man of science to correct knowledge on more than one occasion. But as far as we know or can learn from the history of human knowledge, our senses have been the chiefest source of error. It is with considerable caution that the scientist employs the evidence from sense alone, and in the study of experimental psychology it is the sense which has first to be corrected, and which, in fact, forms the great factor in the equation. A person informs me that he can see a vision in the crystal ball before him, and although I am in the same relation with the "field" as he, I cannot see anything except accountable reflections. This fact does not give any room for contradicting him or any right to infer that it is all imagination. It is futile to say the vision does not exist. If he sees it, it does exist so far as he is concerned. There is no more a universal community of sensation than of thought. When I am at work my own thought is more real than any impression received through the sense organs. It is louder than the babel of voices or the strains of instrumental music, and more conspicuous than any object upon which the eye may fall. These external impressions are admitted or shut out at will. I then know that my thought is as real as my senses, that the images of thought are as perceptible as those exterior to it and in every way as objective and real. The thought-form has this advantage, however, that it can be given a durable or a temporary existence, and can be taken about with me without being liable to impost as "excess luggage." In the matter of evidence in psychological questions, therefore, sense perceptions are only second-rate criteria and ought to be received with caution.
Second Sight: A Study of Natural and Induced Clairvoyance
Author: Sepharial
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
ISBN: 1465599509
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 77
Book Description
It would perhaps be premature to make any definite pronouncement as to the scientific position in regard to the psychic phenomenon known as "scrying," and certainly presumptuous on my part to cite an authority from among the many who have examined this subject, since all are not agreed upon the nature and source of the observed phenomena. Their names are, moreover, already identified with modern scientific research and theory, so that to associate them with experimental psychology would be to lend colour to the idea that modern science has recognized this branch of knowledge. Nothing, perhaps, is further from the fact, and while it cannot in any way be regarded as derogatory to the highest scientist to be associated with others, of less scientific attainment but of equal integrity, in this comparatively new field of enquiry, it may lead to popular error to institute a connection. It is still fresh in the mind how the Darwinian hypothesis was utterly misconceived by the popular mind, the suggestion that man was descended from the apes being generally quoted as a correct expression of Darwin's theory, whereas he never suggested any such thing, but that man and the apes had a common ancestor, which makes of the ape rather a degenerate lemur than a human ancestor. Other and more prevalent errors will occur to the reader, these being due to the use of what is called "the evidence of the senses"; and of all criteria the evidence of sensation is perhaps the most faulty. Logical inference from deductive or inductive reasoning has often enough been a good monitor to sense-perception, and has, moreover, pioneered the man of science to correct knowledge on more than one occasion. But as far as we know or can learn from the history of human knowledge, our senses have been the chiefest source of error. It is with considerable caution that the scientist employs the evidence from sense alone, and in the study of experimental psychology it is the sense which has first to be corrected, and which, in fact, forms the great factor in the equation. A person informs me that he can see a vision in the crystal ball before him, and although I am in the same relation with the "field" as he, I cannot see anything except accountable reflections. This fact does not give any room for contradicting him or any right to infer that it is all imagination. It is futile to say the vision does not exist. If he sees it, it does exist so far as he is concerned. There is no more a universal community of sensation than of thought. When I am at work my own thought is more real than any impression received through the sense organs. It is louder than the babel of voices or the strains of instrumental music, and more conspicuous than any object upon which the eye may fall. These external impressions are admitted or shut out at will. I then know that my thought is as real as my senses, that the images of thought are as perceptible as those exterior to it and in every way as objective and real. The thought-form has this advantage, however, that it can be given a durable or a temporary existence, and can be taken about with me without being liable to impost as "excess luggage." In the matter of evidence in psychological questions, therefore, sense perceptions are only second-rate criteria and ought to be received with caution.
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
ISBN: 1465599509
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 77
Book Description
It would perhaps be premature to make any definite pronouncement as to the scientific position in regard to the psychic phenomenon known as "scrying," and certainly presumptuous on my part to cite an authority from among the many who have examined this subject, since all are not agreed upon the nature and source of the observed phenomena. Their names are, moreover, already identified with modern scientific research and theory, so that to associate them with experimental psychology would be to lend colour to the idea that modern science has recognized this branch of knowledge. Nothing, perhaps, is further from the fact, and while it cannot in any way be regarded as derogatory to the highest scientist to be associated with others, of less scientific attainment but of equal integrity, in this comparatively new field of enquiry, it may lead to popular error to institute a connection. It is still fresh in the mind how the Darwinian hypothesis was utterly misconceived by the popular mind, the suggestion that man was descended from the apes being generally quoted as a correct expression of Darwin's theory, whereas he never suggested any such thing, but that man and the apes had a common ancestor, which makes of the ape rather a degenerate lemur than a human ancestor. Other and more prevalent errors will occur to the reader, these being due to the use of what is called "the evidence of the senses"; and of all criteria the evidence of sensation is perhaps the most faulty. Logical inference from deductive or inductive reasoning has often enough been a good monitor to sense-perception, and has, moreover, pioneered the man of science to correct knowledge on more than one occasion. But as far as we know or can learn from the history of human knowledge, our senses have been the chiefest source of error. It is with considerable caution that the scientist employs the evidence from sense alone, and in the study of experimental psychology it is the sense which has first to be corrected, and which, in fact, forms the great factor in the equation. A person informs me that he can see a vision in the crystal ball before him, and although I am in the same relation with the "field" as he, I cannot see anything except accountable reflections. This fact does not give any room for contradicting him or any right to infer that it is all imagination. It is futile to say the vision does not exist. If he sees it, it does exist so far as he is concerned. There is no more a universal community of sensation than of thought. When I am at work my own thought is more real than any impression received through the sense organs. It is louder than the babel of voices or the strains of instrumental music, and more conspicuous than any object upon which the eye may fall. These external impressions are admitted or shut out at will. I then know that my thought is as real as my senses, that the images of thought are as perceptible as those exterior to it and in every way as objective and real. The thought-form has this advantage, however, that it can be given a durable or a temporary existence, and can be taken about with me without being liable to impost as "excess luggage." In the matter of evidence in psychological questions, therefore, sense perceptions are only second-rate criteria and ought to be received with caution.
Second Sight
Author: Sepharial
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Clairvoyance
Languages : en
Pages : 96
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Clairvoyance
Languages : en
Pages : 96
Book Description
Second Sight
Author: Sepharial
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
ISBN: 3752423757
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 50
Book Description
Reproduction of the original: Second Sight by Sepharial
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
ISBN: 3752423757
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 50
Book Description
Reproduction of the original: Second Sight by Sepharial
Second Sight
Author: Sepharial
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Clairvoyance
Languages : en
Pages : 96
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Clairvoyance
Languages : en
Pages : 96
Book Description
Extraordinary Psychic
Author: Debra Lynne Katz
Publisher: Living Dreams Press
ISBN: 0989094154
Category : Body, Mind & Spirit
Languages : en
Pages : 387
Book Description
Take Your Psychic Abilities from Ordinary to Extraordinary! Find out just how easy it is to use your innate psychic abilities to access insightful and helpful information about anything! Whether you're a beginner exploring your psychic abilities or a professional fine-tuning your skills, this warm and practical guide offers proven techniques, true personal stories, and a wealth of fun exercises so that you can quickly experience successful clairvoyant readings for yourself. Professional psychic Debra Lynne Katz, author of the popular introductory guide You Are Psychic, offers clear and engaging instruction on developing your natural intuitive gifts of clairvoyance, clairsentience, clairaudience, and telepathy. She demonstrates how these skills can be used with clients on a professional level or in real-life settings, such as your home or workplace--even in your own relationships. Become the intuitive, extraordinary psychic you truly are Heal yourself and othersView the past, present, and future* Manifest goals for peace, prosperity, and loveUnderstand the difference between clairvoyant reading and Remote Viewing Communicate with your spirit guides and loved ones in spirit Learn how to perform psychic readings professionally or just for fun "Extraordinary Psychic is written in great depth and detail through the author's many years of experience and training. All of Katz's techniques are clear as quartz--and the best thing is that they work!" --New Age Retailer, Holiday Issue 2008
Publisher: Living Dreams Press
ISBN: 0989094154
Category : Body, Mind & Spirit
Languages : en
Pages : 387
Book Description
Take Your Psychic Abilities from Ordinary to Extraordinary! Find out just how easy it is to use your innate psychic abilities to access insightful and helpful information about anything! Whether you're a beginner exploring your psychic abilities or a professional fine-tuning your skills, this warm and practical guide offers proven techniques, true personal stories, and a wealth of fun exercises so that you can quickly experience successful clairvoyant readings for yourself. Professional psychic Debra Lynne Katz, author of the popular introductory guide You Are Psychic, offers clear and engaging instruction on developing your natural intuitive gifts of clairvoyance, clairsentience, clairaudience, and telepathy. She demonstrates how these skills can be used with clients on a professional level or in real-life settings, such as your home or workplace--even in your own relationships. Become the intuitive, extraordinary psychic you truly are Heal yourself and othersView the past, present, and future* Manifest goals for peace, prosperity, and loveUnderstand the difference between clairvoyant reading and Remote Viewing Communicate with your spirit guides and loved ones in spirit Learn how to perform psychic readings professionally or just for fun "Extraordinary Psychic is written in great depth and detail through the author's many years of experience and training. All of Katz's techniques are clear as quartz--and the best thing is that they work!" --New Age Retailer, Holiday Issue 2008
Clairvoyance, Thought Transference, Auto Trance, and Spiritualism
Author: L. W. de Laurence
Publisher: Cosimo, Inc.
ISBN: 1602066612
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 133
Book Description
Publisher: Cosimo, Inc.
ISBN: 1602066612
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 133
Book Description
The Kabala of Numbers ...
Author: Sepharial
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Symbolism of numbers
Languages : en
Pages : 220
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Symbolism of numbers
Languages : en
Pages : 220
Book Description
Clairvoyance for Psychic Empowerment
Author: Carl Llewellyn Weschcke
Publisher: Llewellyn Worldwide
ISBN: 0738733474
Category : Body, Mind & Spirit
Languages : en
Pages : 866
Book Description
A complete training course in the ancient Tantric and Western techniques of clairvoyance that will allow you to manifest love, happiness, health, knowledge, wealth, spirituality, and more.
Publisher: Llewellyn Worldwide
ISBN: 0738733474
Category : Body, Mind & Spirit
Languages : en
Pages : 866
Book Description
A complete training course in the ancient Tantric and Western techniques of clairvoyance that will allow you to manifest love, happiness, health, knowledge, wealth, spirituality, and more.
Second Sight
Author: Adam Mars-Jones
Publisher: Reaktion Books
ISBN: 1789141826
Category : Performing Arts
Languages : en
Pages : 312
Book Description
The film review can be a little work of art, not just a consumer guide—as is manifest in this collection by one of the United Kingdom’s foremost doyennes of the contemporary silver screen. Covering more than thirty years of film releases, celebrated critic Adam Mars-Jones guides us through the most entertaining, most appalling, and most fantastic films of his viewing lifetime, interweaving his original film reviews with new insights and reflections. Mars-Jones answers the questions that no other critic has even bothered to ask. What is Twister really about? How many Steven Spielbergs are there? (Spoiler: he counts thirteen). How many of them are worth anything? Who had the greatest slow-burn career in the movies? (Clue: he taught Montgomery Clift how to roll a cigarette.) And which science-fiction film features the most haunting use of slime? Funny, combative, and revealing, Second Sight is a celebration of the artform that maintains the strongest hold on the modern imagination.
Publisher: Reaktion Books
ISBN: 1789141826
Category : Performing Arts
Languages : en
Pages : 312
Book Description
The film review can be a little work of art, not just a consumer guide—as is manifest in this collection by one of the United Kingdom’s foremost doyennes of the contemporary silver screen. Covering more than thirty years of film releases, celebrated critic Adam Mars-Jones guides us through the most entertaining, most appalling, and most fantastic films of his viewing lifetime, interweaving his original film reviews with new insights and reflections. Mars-Jones answers the questions that no other critic has even bothered to ask. What is Twister really about? How many Steven Spielbergs are there? (Spoiler: he counts thirteen). How many of them are worth anything? Who had the greatest slow-burn career in the movies? (Clue: he taught Montgomery Clift how to roll a cigarette.) And which science-fiction film features the most haunting use of slime? Funny, combative, and revealing, Second Sight is a celebration of the artform that maintains the strongest hold on the modern imagination.
Reference Catalogue of Current Literature
Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : English literature
Languages : en
Pages : 1850
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : English literature
Languages : en
Pages : 1850
Book Description