The Book on Mediums: Guide for Mediums and Invocators
The classic guide for all who entertain a genuine determination to understand the spirit world—both mediums and seekers—from the founder of Spiritism.

Covering all aspects of Spiritism—from haunted places to pneumatography, somnambulic mediums and healing mediums to mediumship in animals—this all-encompassing reference gives advice to those looking to hone their talents and a way to root out charlatans and frauds for those seeking a go-between to the other side.

The Book on Mediums features:
  • The special instruction of the spirits on the theory of all kinds of manifestations
  • The means of communicating with the invisible world
  • The development of mediumship
  • The difficulties and the dangers that are to be encountered in the practice of Spiritism
1130610007
The Book on Mediums: Guide for Mediums and Invocators
The classic guide for all who entertain a genuine determination to understand the spirit world—both mediums and seekers—from the founder of Spiritism.

Covering all aspects of Spiritism—from haunted places to pneumatography, somnambulic mediums and healing mediums to mediumship in animals—this all-encompassing reference gives advice to those looking to hone their talents and a way to root out charlatans and frauds for those seeking a go-between to the other side.

The Book on Mediums features:
  • The special instruction of the spirits on the theory of all kinds of manifestations
  • The means of communicating with the invisible world
  • The development of mediumship
  • The difficulties and the dangers that are to be encountered in the practice of Spiritism
26.99 In Stock
The Book on Mediums: Guide for Mediums and Invocators

The Book on Mediums: Guide for Mediums and Invocators

by Allan Kardec
The Book on Mediums: Guide for Mediums and Invocators

The Book on Mediums: Guide for Mediums and Invocators

by Allan Kardec

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Overview

The classic guide for all who entertain a genuine determination to understand the spirit world—both mediums and seekers—from the founder of Spiritism.

Covering all aspects of Spiritism—from haunted places to pneumatography, somnambulic mediums and healing mediums to mediumship in animals—this all-encompassing reference gives advice to those looking to hone their talents and a way to root out charlatans and frauds for those seeking a go-between to the other side.

The Book on Mediums features:
  • The special instruction of the spirits on the theory of all kinds of manifestations
  • The means of communicating with the invisible world
  • The development of mediumship
  • The difficulties and the dangers that are to be encountered in the practice of Spiritism

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781609257897
Publisher: Red Wheel/Weiser
Publication date: 06/23/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 463
File size: 1 MB

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The Book on Mediums

Guide for Mediums and Invocators


By Allan Kardec, EMMA A. WOOD

Samuel Weiser, Inc.

Copyright © 2013 Allan Kardec
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-60925-789-7



CHAPTER 1

ARE THERE SPIRITS?


1. THE doubt respecting the existence of spirits has for its first cause ignorance of their true nature. They are usually thought of as beings apart in the creation, and whose necessity is not demonstrated. Many know them only by the fantastic tales heard in their childhood, almost as one knows history by romances : without seeking to find whether these tales, stripped of ridiculous accessories, rest on a foundation of truth, the absurd side alone strikes them: not taking the trouble to strip off the bitter bark to find the almond, they reject the whole; as, in religion, some persons, shocked by certain abuses, confound all in the same reprobation.

Whatever may be one's idea of spirits, this belief is necessarily founded on the existence of an intelligent principle outside of matter: it is incompatible with the absolute negation of this principle. We take, then, our point of departure from the existence, the survival, and the individuality of the soul, of which Spiritualism is the theoric and dogmatic demonstration, and Spiritism the manifestation. Let us for a moment make an abstraction of the manifestations, properly so called, and, reasoning by induction, let us see to what consequences we shall arrive.

2. From the moment that the existence of the soul is admitted, and its individuality after death, it must also be admitted, first, that it is of a different nature from the body, since, once separated, it no longer has the properties of the latter : secondly, that it enjoys a consciousness of itself, since to it is attributed happiness or suffering; otherwise it would be an inert being, and of no use for us to have one. This admitted, this soul goes somewhere. What becomes of it, and where does it go? According to the common belief it goes to heaven or hell. But where are heaven and hell? It was said, in other times, that heaven was above and hell below : but what is above and what is below in the universe since the roundness of the earth is known; the movement of the stars, which makes what is above at one given moment become below in twelve hours; the infinity of space, into which the eye plunges to immeasurable distances? It is true that by low places we also understand the depths of the earth; but what has become of those depths since they have been searched into by geology? What, too, of those concentric spheres, called "heaven of fire," "heaven of stars"? since it is known that the earth is not the center of the worlds, that our sun itself is only one of the millions of suns which shine in space, and of which each is the center of a planetary system. What becomes of the importance of the earth, lost in this immensity? By what unjustifiable privilege should this imperceptible grain of sand, distinguished neither by its size, its position, nor any particular character, be alone peopled with reasonable beings?

Reason refuses to admit this inutility of the infinite, and everything tells us that these worlds are inhabited. If they are peopled, then they furnish their proportion to the world of souls : but again, what becomes of these souls, since astronomy and geology have destroyed the dwellings that were assigned them? and, above all, since the so rational theory of the plurality of worlds has multiplied them to infinity.

The doctrine of the localization of souls not agreeing with the facts of science, another more logical doctrine assigns to them as domain, not a determined and circumscribed spot, but universal space: it is an entire invisible world, in the midst of which we live, which surrounds us, and is always in close contact with us. Is there in that an impossibility—anything repugnant to reason? Not at all; on the contrary, everything tells us it can not be otherwise.

But, then, future pains and rewards,—what becomes of them, if you take away their special places? Remark that incredulity as to the place of these pains and rewards is generally excited because they are presented in inadmissible conditions: but say, instead, that the souls find their happiness or misery within themselves, that their lot is subordinated to their moral state; that the reunion of good and sympathetic souls is a source of felicity; that, according to the degree of their purification, they penetrate and see into things that vanish before gross souls, —and every one will understand it without trouble. Say, again, that souls reach the supreme degree only through the efforts they make for self-improvement, and after a series of trials which serve for their purification; that the angels are souls that have reached the highest degree, which all may attain by effort; that the angels are God's messengers, charged to watch over the execution of his designs throughout the universe; that they are happy in these glorious missions, —and you give to their felicity a more useful and attractive object than that of a perpetual contemplation, which would be nothing more than a perpetual uselessness. Say, again, that demons are but the souls of the wicked, not yet purified, but which can be, like the others; and that will appear more conformable to the justice and to the goodness of God than the doctrine of being created for evil, and perpetually devoted to evil. Still again, this is what the severest reason, the most exact logic, in a word, good sense, can admit.

But these souls that people space are precisely what are called spirits: spirits, then, are but the souls of men stripped of their corporeal envelope. If spirits were beings apart, their existence would be more hypothetical; but if we admit that there are souls, we must also admit spirits, who are naught else but souls: if we admit that souls are everywhere, we must equally admit that spirits are everywhere. The existence of spirits, then, cannot be denied without denying the existence of souls.

3. This, it is true, is only a theory, more rational than the other: but it is much to have a theory contradicted neither by reason nor science: still more, if it is corroborated by facts, it has for itself the sanction of reasoning and experience. We find these facts in the phenomena of spiritual manifestations, which thus are the proofs patent of the existence of the soul, and its survival of the earthly body. But with many persons belief stops short at that point; they fully admit the existence of souls, and, consequently, of spirits; but they deny the possibility of communicating with them, for the reason, they say, that immaterial beings cannot act on matter. This doubt is founded on ignorance of the true nature of spirits, of which a very false idea is generally conceived; for they are wrongly imagined to be abstract, vague, and indefinite beings, which they are not.

Let us first speak of the spirit in its union with the body. The spirit is the principal being, since it is the being that thinks and survives; the body is, then, only an accessory of the spirit—an envelope, a clothing, which it abandons when worn out. Besides this material envelope, the spirit has a second, semi-material, which unites it to the first: at death, the spirit strips off the first, but not the second, to which we give the name of périsprit. This semi-material envelope in the human form constitutes for the spirit a fluidic vaporous body, but which, invisible to us in its normal state, does not the' less possess some of the properties of matter. The spirit, then, is not a point, an abstraction, but a being, limited and circumscribed, to whom is wanting only the properties of being visible and palpable to resemble human beings. Why, then, can it not act upon matter? Is it because its body is fluidic? But is it not among the most rarefied of fluids, those even regarded as imponderable, —electricity, for instance, —that man finds his most powerful motors? Does not imponderable light exercise a chemical action on ponderable matter? We do not know the specific nature of the périsprit; but let us suppose it formed of electrical matter, or some other equally subtile, why should it not possess the same property when directed by a will?

4. The existence of a soul, and that of God, —the consequence one of the other, —being the base of the whole superstructure, before entering into a spiritual discussion it is necessary to assure ourselves if the interlocutor admits this base.

If to these questions, —

Do you believe in God?

Do you believe you have a soul?

Do you believe in the survival of the soul after death?—he answers negatively, or even if he simply says, "I don't know; I hope it may be so, but I am not sure"—the most frequent equivalent to a polite negation, disguised under less offensive form to avoid shocking too abruptly what are called respectable prejudices, —it would be equally as useless to go further, as to undertake to demonstrate the properties of light to a blind man, who would not admit the existence of light; for, finally, spiritual manifestations are naught else but the effects of the properties of the soul: with such a person quite another order of ideas should be entered upon, if one would not lose one's time.

If the base is admitted, not as a probability, but as a positively declared, incontestable thing, the existence of spirits naturally flows from it.

5. There now remains the question to know if the spirit can communicate with man; that is to say, if he can exchange ideas with man. And why not? What is man, if not a spirit imprisoned in a body? Why should not the free spirit communicate with the captive spirit, as the free man with one who is enchained? While you admit the survival of the soul, is it rational not to admit the survival of the affections? Since souls are everywhere, is it not natural to think that the soul of a being who has loved us during his life should come near to us, and should use for that purpose the means at his disposal? During his life did he not act on the matter of his body? Was it not he who directed its movements? Why, then, after his death, being in accord with another spirit bound to a body, should he not borrow this body to manifest his thought, as a dumb person uses a speaker to make himself understood?

6. Let us for a moment make an abstract of the facts which, for us, render the thing incontestable; let us admit it in the shape of a simple hypothesis; we ask that the skeptical prove to us, not by a simple negation, —for their personal opinion does not make a law, —but by peremptory reasons, that it cannot be.

We plant ourselves on their ground, and since they wish to appraise spiritual facts by the aid of material laws; let them draw from that arsenal some mathematical, physical, chemical, mechanical, physiological demonstration, and prove by a plus b, always beginning from the principle of the existence and survival of the soul, —

First. That the being who thinks in us during life should think no longer after death.

Second. That if he thinks, he should not think of those he has loved.

Third. That if he thinks of those he has loved, he should not wish to communicate with them.

Fourth. That if he can be everywhere, he cannot be by our side.

Fifth. That if he is by our side, he cannot communicate with us.

Sixth. That by his fluidic envelope he cannot act on inert matter.

Seventh. That if he can act on inert matter, he cannot act on an animated being.

Eighth. That if he can act on an animated being, he cannot direct his hand to make him write.

Ninth. That, being able to make him write, he cannot answer his questions, and transmit to him his thoughts.

When the adversaries of Spiritism shall have demonstrated to us that this cannot be, by reasons as patent as those by which Galileo demonstrated that it is not the sun that turns around the earth, then we shall be able to say their doubts are well founded. Unhappily, up to this day all their arguments are comprised in these words: "I do not believe it; therefore it is impossible." They will, doubtless, say that it is for us to prove the reality of the manifestations. We prove it to them by reasoning and by facts : if they admit neither one nor the other, if they deny even what they see, it is for them to prove that our reasoning is false, and our facts impossible.

CHAPTER 2

THE MARVELOUS AND SUPERNATURAL.


7. IF the belief in spirits and in their manifestations were an isolated conception, the product of a system, it could, with some appearance of reason, be suspected of illusion; but we should like to be told why it is constantly found so strongly impressed among all people, ancient and modern, in holy books and in all known religions? It is, say some critics, because man, in all times, has loved the marvelous. What, then, do you consider the marvelous? Whatever is supernatural. What do you understand by supernatural? Whatever is contrary to the laws of nature. You are, then, so thoroughly acquainted with these laws, that it is possible for you to assign a limit to the power of God? Well, prove, then, that the existence of spirits and their manifestations are contrary to the laws of nature; that it is not, and can not be, one of these laws. Follow the spirit doctrine, and see if it has not all the characteristics of an admirable law, which solves all that the laws of philosophy have, until now, been unable to solve.

Thought is one of the attributes of the spirit; the possibility of acting on matter, of making an impression on our senses, and, consequently, of transmitting his thought, results, if we may so express ourselves, from his physiological constitution; then there is nothing in this fact either supernatural or marvelous. When a man dead, thoroughly dead, revives corporeally, —when his dispersed members re-unite to re-form his body, —that is something marvelous, supernatural, fantastical; that would be a veritable derogation, which God could accomplish only by a miracle; but there is nothing of the kind in the spirit doctrine.

8. Nevertheless you admit, it will be said, that a spirit can raise a table, and maintain it in space without support; is not this a derogation of the law of gravity? Yes, to the known law; but has Nature said her last word? Before the ascensional force of certain gases had been discovered, who would have said that a heavy machine, carrying several men, could triumph over the force of attraction? Would not this seem to the eyes of the crowd marvelous, diabolical? A hundred years ago, a person who should have proposed to transmit a despatch five hundred leagues and receive an answer in a few minutes, would have been called a fool: had he done it, it would have been thought he had the devil under his orders; for at that time the devil alone was capable of traveling so rapidly. Why, then, should not an unknown fluid have the property, under given circumstances, to counterbalance the effect of weight, as hydrogen counterbalances the weight of the balloon?

This, let us remark, en passant, is a comparison, but not an assimilation, and simply to show, by analogy, that the fact is not physically impossible. Now, it is precisely when the learned, in the observation of these phenomena, have wished to proceed by assimilation that they have been led astray. As to the rest, the fact is there: all the denials can not make it not be; for to deny is not to prove. For ourselves, there is in it nothing supernatural; that is all we can say at present.

9. If the fact is verified, it may be said we accept it; we accept even the cause you have assigned, —that of an unknown fluid, —but what proves the intervention of spirits? There lies the marvelous, the supernatural.

An entire demonstration would be necessary here, which would not be in place, and besides, would make double work; for it will be found throughout the other parts of the book. Only we will say, to sum it up in a few words, that it is founded, in theory, on this principle—all intelligent effect should have an intelligent cause; in practice, on this observation—that the phenomena called spiritual, having given proofs of intelligence, should have their cause outside of matter; that this intelligence, not being that of the assistants, —this is a result of experience, —must be outside of them : since the acting being can not be seen, it must be an invisible being. It is thus that, from observation to observation, we have learned that this invisible being, to which we have given the name of spirit, is no other than the soul of those who have lived corporeally, and whom death has stripped of their gross, visible envelope, leaving them only an ethereal envelope, invisible in its normal state. Here, then, are the marvelous and the supernatural reduced to their simplest expression.

The existence of invisible beings once proved, their action on matter results from the nature of their fluidic envelope: this action is intelligent, because, in dying, they have lost only their body, but have retained intelligence, which is their essence; that is the key to all the phenomena erroneously reported supernatural. The existence of spirits is not, then, a preconceived system, an imagined hypothesis to explain facts; it is a result of observations, and the natural consequence of the existence of the soul: to deny this cause is to deny the soul and its attributes. Those who may think they can give a more rational solution of these intelligent effects, —above all, giving a reason for all the facts, —let them do so, and then the merits of each may be discussed.
(Continues...)


Excerpted from The Book on Mediums by Allan Kardec, EMMA A. WOOD. Copyright © 2013 Allan Kardec. Excerpted by permission of Samuel Weiser, Inc..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

INTRODUCTION          

PART FIRST. PRELIMINARY IDEAS.          

Chapter I. ARE THERE SPIRITS?          

Chapter II. THE MARVELOUS AND SUPERNATURAL          

Chapter III. METHOD          

Chapter IV. SYSTEMS          

PART SECOND. SPIRIT MANIFESTATIONS.          

Chapter I. ACTION OF SPIRITS ON MATTER          

Chapter II. PHYSICAL MANIFESTATIONS. —TURNING TABLES          

Chapter III. INTELLIGENT MANIFESTATIONS          

Chapter IV. THEORY OF PHYSICAL MANIFESTATIONS          

Chapter V. SPONTANEOUS PHYSICAL MANIFESTATIONS          

Chapter VI. VISUAL MANIFESTATIONS          

Chapter VII. BI-CORPOREITY AND TRANSFIGURATION          

Chapter VIII. LABORATORY OF THE INVISIBLE WORLD          

Chapter IX. HAUNTED PLACES          

Chapter X. NATURE OF COMMUNICATIONS          

Chapter XI. SEMATOLOGY AND TYPTOLOGY          

Chapter XII. PNEUMATOGRAPHY, OR DIRECT WRITING. —PNEUMATOPHONY          

Chapter XIII. PSYCHOGRAPHY          

Chapter XIV. OF MEDIUMS          

Chapter XV. WRITING OR PSYCHOGRAPHIC MEDIUMS          

Chapter XVI. SPECIAL MEDIUMS          

Chapter XVII. FORMATION OF MEDIUMS          

Chapter XVIII. INCONVENIENCES AND DANGERS OF MEDIUMSHIP          

Chapter XIX. RÔLE OF THE MEDIUM IN SPIRIT COMMUNICATIONS          

Chapter XX. MORAL INFLUENCE OF THE MEDIUM          

Chapter XXI. INFLUENCE OF THE SURROUNDINGS          

Chapter XXII. OF MEDIUMSHIP IN ANIMALS          

Chapter XXIII. ON OBSESSION          

Chapter XXIV. IDENTITY OF SPIRITS          

Chapter XXV. ON INVOCATIONS          

Chapter XXVI. QUESTIONS THAT MAY BE ADDRESSED TO SPIRITS          

Chapter XXVII. CONTRADICTIONS AND MYSTIFICATIONS          

Chapter XXVIII. CHARLATANISM AND JUGGLERY          

Chapter XXIX. REUNIONS AND SPIRITIST SOCIETIES          

NOTES          

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