1906 SOCIETY FOR PSYCHICAL RESEARCH - OCCULT SPIRITS PSYCHIC PROPHECY TELEPATHY
1906 SOCIETY FOR PSYCHICAL RESEARCH - OCCULT SPIRITS PSYCHIC PROPHECY TELEPATHY
1906 SOCIETY FOR PSYCHICAL RESEARCH - OCCULT SPIRITS PSYCHIC PROPHECY TELEPATHY
1906 SOCIETY FOR PSYCHICAL RESEARCH - OCCULT SPIRITS PSYCHIC PROPHECY TELEPATHY
1906 SOCIETY FOR PSYCHICAL RESEARCH - OCCULT SPIRITS PSYCHIC PROPHECY TELEPATHY

1906 SOCIETY FOR PSYCHICAL RESEARCH - OCCULT SPIRITS PSYCHIC PROPHECY TELEPATHY

Regular price $135.00 Sale

PROCEEDINGS OF THE SOCIETY FOR PSYCHICAL RESEARCH - 1906, Volume 20 


 Book Details + Condition: Robert MacLehose & Company (Glasgow, Scotland). First Edition, 1906. Hardcover. 432 pages, with Index to rear. Illustrated. Scarce first edition, original copy of PROCEEDINGS OF THE SOCIETY OF PSYCHICAL RESEARCH from 1906. Publisher's original green cloth boards with gilt title, etc. to spine. Contents of this volume include: General Description and Verifiable Matter of the Scripts; References to Past and Future Events; Cross-Correspondences with Sensitives; Experiments in Telepathy; and much more. Please see our other listings for more first editions of THE SOCIETY OF PSYCHICAL RESEARCH, as well as information about the organization below. Firm binding; rubbed corners and spine ends; some darkening to boards; London Spiritualist Alliance Library sheet on front endpaper, with similar plates on inside front board; text is clean and free of markings.

The Society for Psychical Research was created in 1882, with Henry Sidgwick serving as its first president. Its stated purpose was to apply scientific methods to the investigation of psychic phenomena and the paranormal. Areas of study included hypnotism, dissociation, thought-transference, mediumship, spirit possession, apparitions and haunted houses and the physical phenomena associated with séances. The SPR were the first to introduce a number of neologisms which have entered the English language, such as 'telepathy', which was coined by Frederic Myers. Much of the early work involved investigating, exposing and in some cases duplicating fake phenomena. Among its most renowned members were Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Harry Price, and William T. Stead.