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Ghost Hunters: William James and the Search for Scientific Proof of Life After Death | 
enlarge | Author: Deborah Blum Publisher: Penguin Press HC, The Category: Book
List Price: $25.95 Buy New: $6.19 You Save: $19.76 (76%)
New (15) Collectible (1) from $6.19
Avg. Customer Rating: 39 reviews Sales Rank: 346220
Format: Bargain Price Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 384 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.2 x 1.1
Dewey Decimal Number: 133.909034 ASIN: B000VPP9RI
Publication Date: August 3, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description A Pulitzer Prizewinning author tells the amazing story of William Jamess quest for empirical evidence of the spirit world
What if a world -renowned philosopher and professor of psychiatry at Harvard suddenly announced he believed in ghosts? At the close of the nineteenth century, the illustrious William James led a determined scientific investigation into unexplainable incidences of clairvoyance and ghostly visitations. James and a small group of eminent scientists staked their reputations, their careers, even their sanity on one of the most extraordinary quests ever undertaken: to empirically prove the existence of ghosts, spirits, and psychic phenomena. What they pursued and what they foundraises questions as fascinating today as they were then.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 34 more reviews...
Neat book October 1, 2008 This book provides a unique glimpse into a fascinating chapter in the history and philosophy of science. It details the work of a small circle of scientists who tried to apply the scientific method to the question of the afterlife. I was impressed by this group's relentless skepticism of individual "paranormal" events. The only precept that they left up to faith was their belief that the scientific method provided appropriate tools with which to approach the question. They formulated and tested hypotheses, attempted to do repeated experiments with appropriate controls, and statistically analyzed their data. Despite this meticulous approach, their critics dismissed them out of hand, usually without reading their papers. Regardless of your stance on the afterlife, this book is an enjoyable and informative read.
A must read for anyone interested in the history of "ghost hunting" June 29, 2008 A book of this magnitude was long overdue. Filling in a wide historiographical gap, Deborah Blum has masterfully retold the story of the birth of spiritualism and the scientific pursuit of "psychical research." Along with Raymond Moody's The Last Laugh, this book is required reading for any aspiring investigator of the paranormal.
The cast of characters in Ghost Hunters reads like a who's who of late nineteenth and early twentieth century luminaries. Blum, however, leaves no one out of her narrative. Scientists, theologians, performers, mediums, lovers, poets, working class families, and con men all share the same stage. Biographic surprises lurk behind every page. Even those familiar with the renowned father of pragmatism, William James, are usually ignorant of his role in the investigation of paranormal phenomenon at the turn of the previous century.
Other names crop up to startle the reader. Alfred Russel Wallace, the forgotten coauthor of Darwin's theory of natural selection, the poet Alfred Lord Tennyson, Charles L. Dodgson (aka Lewis Carroll, author of Alice in Wonderland), and even Samuel Clemens were all members of the British Society for Psychical Research.
Blum was very adept at laying bare long forgotten antidotes of history. In Ghost Hunters, she approached her brilliant and influential subjects as they were; as human beings who experimented with narcotics, believed they had attained enlightenment under the influence of nitrous oxide, fell in love with their test subjects, and traveled to other continents to interview and test mediums and self-professed psychics of all shapes and colors.
She also weaved a detailed picture of a field of research constantly under siege by fellow scientists, journalists, and subjected to unending embarrassment caused by fraud and suspect conclusions at a time when England was ground zero in the battle between science and faith.
In the United States, William James led the charge at the helm of the American Society for Psychical Research, but his investigations seemed no more fruitful than those of his British counterparts. By 1886, Blum wrote, "their annual report... had degenerated into a list of exposures of professional practitioners." (pg.117) Their experiments dismantled spiritualist claims one after another, and many members began to conclude that mental illness lay at the heart of ghost sightings.
Finally, one medium, who claimed to have received messages from deceased British Society for Psychical Research member Richard Hodgson, ultimately boosted their morale. In one message, the spirit of Hodgson revealed the name of a woman who he had proposed to years earlier, but who had spurned his advances. William James contacted the woman, who, to his surprise, confirmed the story. This new phenomenon, known as cross-correspondence, continued to yield remarkable results, results that were not easy to dismiss as mere coincidence. James hesitantly concluded that, as evidence of an afterlife, that was as close as they were likely to get.
As a journalist, Deborah Blum failed to document her sources as thoroughly as a historian would demand. Never-the-less, her years of experience writing about science has given her the ability to weave a wonderful narrative without getting bogged down in technicalities and jargon. When it comes down to it, Ghost Hunters is both entertaining and informative, which is a rare combination these days!
(This review originally appeared in the July 2008 issue of the Legends and Lore of Illinois, located at www.blackoakmedia.org/legendsandlore.html)
fascinating book, a must read for people really into the science of ghosts. April 28, 2008 This book is also a must read into the world of ghosts - going back into the history of people who really tried to study the science of ghosts. These were not people trying to convince others ghosts existed - and they did not seem convinced that they did. They simply wanted to study the science, and to expose frauds - of which there were many. For even considering studying the subject, the scientific world treated them poorly, to say the least. To me, these were courageous people, and dedicated true scientests.
This book does not try to convince you that ghosts exist - it simply tells of people who were exposed as frauds - and the people who the scientests could never show any way of fraud being perpetrated - the ones that may well have had a genuine "gift".
Well-balanced Investigation April 24, 2008 Ms. Blum has written a very fine book. Instead of approaching this topic with an axe to grind, she has taken a tolerant view of the scientific observations done by a variety of well-respected academics during the late 1800s and early 1900s. This period was when science began to challenge religion as the dominant force within the industrialized world. The inevitable collision and pigheadedness displayed by some atheistic scientists and spiritual zealots is clearly explained. Ego and insecurity were the primary motivators of the intractable beliefs of these two groups. The academics that stepped unknowingly into this maelstrom paid dearly for it. Ms. Blum's own perspectives as a science writer had been affected during the development of this book and so has mine. Sadly, the rigid and warring mind-sets depicted by both spiritualists and atheists are still very much with us today. Highly recommended for anyone with an open mind.
Compelling Story; Drily Written February 18, 2008 This is an historical account of late 19th century researchers including credible academics who investigated paranormal phenomena attemtping to find out if there was a spirit world, mental telepathy and other like occurrences. The author researched the history and the personalities thoroughly and the academic quality seems, to me, outstanding. But I struggled to get through this book. I would have thought that a history regarding seances, mediums, spiritis, and fascinating characters of the era like William James, a father of modern psychology, would have made for enormously compelling and entertaining reading. Instead, I slogged through the book giving it up several times returning to finish despite what seemed to me a turgid telling of a powerful story. The story and the characters were what forced me to read on despite the prose which did not match the vigor of the subject.
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