Beyond the Occult

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BEYOND THE
OCCULT

Twenty Years’ Research

into the Paranormal

COLIN WILSON

 

 

 

 

Colin Wilson
is one of the most prolific, versatile and popular writers at work today.
He was born in Leicester in 1931, and left school at sixteen.
After he had spent years working in a wool warehouse, a laboratory, a plastics factory and a coffee bar his first book
The Outsider
was published in 1956.
It received outstanding critical acclaim and was an immediate bestseller.

Since then he has written many books on philosophy, the occult, crime and sexual deviance, plus a host of successful novels which have won him an international reputation.
His work has been translated into Spanish, French, Swedish, Dutch, Japanese, German, Italian, Portuguese, Danish, Norwegian, Finnish and Hebrew.

By the same author

NON-FICTION

The Outsider cycle

The Outsider

Religion and the Rebel

The Age of Defeat

The Strength to Dream

Origins of the Sexual Impulse

Beyond the Outsider

Introduction to the New Existentialism

Books on the Occult and Paranormal

The Occult

Mysteries

Poltergeist

Psychic Detectives

Strange Powers

The Geller Phenomenon

A Dictionary of Possibilities
(with John Grant)

Other Non-Fiction

An Encyclopedia of Murder
(with Pat Pitman)

An Encyclopedia of Modern Murder
(with Donald Seaman)

A Casebook of Murder

Order of Assassins

Rasputin and the Fall of the Romanovs

Bernard Shaw — A Reassessment

New Pathways in Psychology

The Quest for Wilhelm Reich

The War Against Sleep — The Philosophy of Gurdjieff

The Lord of the Underworld — A Study of Jung

The Craft of the Novel

The Strange Genius of David Lindsay

Frankenstein’s Castle

Access to Inner Worlds

Eagle and Earwig
(Essays on books and writers)

Poetry and Mysticism

A Book of Booze

Starseekers

The Brandy of the Damned
(Essays on Music)

Anti-Sartre

The Misfits

AUTOBIOGRAPHY

Voyage to a Beginning

FICTION

The ‘Sorme Trilogy’:

Ritual in the Dark

The Man without a Shadow
(retitled
The Sex Diary of Gerard Sorme
)

The God of the Labyrinth

Other Fiction:

Adrift in Soho

The World of Violence

Necessary Doubt

The Glass Cage

The Mind Parasites

The Killer

The Philosopher’s Stone

The Black Room

The Space Vampires

The Schoolgirl Murder Case

Rasputin: A Novel

Spider World: The Tower

Spider World: The Delta

Analytical Table of Contents

Part One: Hidden Powers

Introduction

I am asked to write a book about ‘the occult’.
The moments of ‘mystical freedom’.
Muz Murray’s experience in Cyprus.
My own experience in Alsace.
Derek Gibson sees inside the trees.
Jacob Boehme’s vision of ‘the signature of all things’.
Yuliya Vorobyeva develops X-ray vision.
Jim Corbett and his ‘jungle sensitiveness’.
Why man has lost his ‘occult faculties’.
Calculating prodigies.
How to gain control of our ‘hidden powers’.
My original scepticism about ‘the occult’.
Impressive consistency of reports.
‘Reading’ through the skin of the stomach.
‘Community of sensation’ under hypnosis.
Buchanan and the discovery of psychometry.
Peter Hurkos and precognition.
My attempts to create a ‘Newtonian theory’ of the occult.
My increasing doubts.

1 Mediums and Mystics

Lawrence LeShan studies Eileen Garrett.
She ‘psychometrizes’ his daughter’s hair.
The case of the missing doctor.
The case of Marmontel’s memoirs.
Eileen Garrett on mediumship:
‘A kind of turning inward’
.
Warner Allen’s ‘timeless moment’ at the Queen’s Hall.
Is time an illusion?
Poets as ‘natural psychics’.
A.
L.
Rowse is almost decapitated.
The ‘superconscious attic’ of the mind.
The mystical experience.
Wendy Rose-Neill lies on her lawn.
Claire Myers Owen and the ‘golden light’.
Bucke’s flash of ‘cosmic consciousness’.
‘A brilliant shaft of light from
out of the sky.’
Vision of God in a cow-barn.
Moyra Caldecott and the ‘Timeless Reality’.
Ouspensky’s vision of ‘connectedness’.
Steppenwolf’s mystical insight.
Henri Bergson is converted from materialism to mysticism.
The inability of thought to grasp experience.
Two ways of grasping reality.
The left and right brain.
Peak experiences.
Anne Bancroft’s mystical experience.
The branch of rhododendron.
Douglas Harding loses his head.
Is it desirable to have no head?
William James’s ‘Suggestion about Mysticism’.
Robert Graves and ‘The Abominable Mr Gunn’.
Another mathematical prodigy.

2 The Other Self

My dream of the amusement park.
Thomson Jay Hudson watches a hypnotic demonstration.
Return of the dead philosophers.
Charcot and hypnosis.
Man’s ‘two minds’ — the subjective and the objective.
The power of the subjective mind: Henry Clay speaks for two hours.
The artist who saw a picture before he painted it.
Puységur and ‘magnetism’.
Councillor Wesermann makes telepathic contact with a friend.
The Verity Case.
Hudson practises ‘distant healing’.
His success.
Doctor Albert Mason performs a miracle.
Why Shakespeare was not Bacon.
Learning to use the right brain.
The Laurel and Hardy theory of consciousness.
The ‘robot’.
Negative feedback.
The power of the Spectre.
Graham Greene and the revolver in the corner cupboard.
The gloominess of the great philosophers.
Schopenhauer complains about life.
Dylan Thomas’s ‘foul mousehole’.
Thomas Mann’s ‘Disillusionment’.
Schizophrenic patients ‘stop seeing things’.
Artsybashev’s
Breaking Point
.
The Master Ikkyu writes, ‘Attention’.
Hesse’s
Journey to the East
.
My experience of being caught in a snowstorm.
Raising consciousness by an act of will.
The journey to Northampton.
Rilke’s solution: ‘To praise in spite of.’

3 Down the Rabbit Hole

Arnold Toynbee’s vision of the battle of Pharsalus.
Frank Smythe’s vision of the massacre near Glen Glomach.
Toynbee’s ‘time-slip’ in Crete.
His experience in the ruins of the
temple at Ephesus.
His vision at Monemvasía.
The destruction of Mistrà.
The nature of Faculty X.
Doctor Johnson and the Happy Valley.
Toynbee’s vision of ‘all history’.
Proust and the madeleine dipped in tea.
Other experiences of Faculty X described in Proust.
‘The past was made to encroach upon the present.’
G.
K.
Chesterton and ‘Absurd good news’.
Helen Keller learns to spell ‘water’.
Why Faculty X is so difficult to achieve.
Sartre and ‘nausea’.
Camus and ‘the Absurd’.
‘Ordinary consciousness is a form of nausea.’
Roquentin is ‘sickened’ by a tree.
Maupassant and sexual failure.
The ‘erase key’.
The demon Screwtape heads off a conversion.
Physical, emotional and intellectual values.
‘Upside-downness’.
Sartre in the French Resistance.
The parable of the emperor and the grand vizier.
The mechanism of ‘upside-downness’.
Arthur Koestler joins the Communist Party.
Koestler’s mystical experience in a Spanish jail.
Einstein on science and mysticism.
‘Holiday consciousness’.

4 The Information Universe

Mr Chase sees a cottage that no longer exists.
‘Time-slips’.
The English ladies at Versailles.
Jane O’Neill and Fotheringhay Church.
Falling ‘down the rabbit hole’.
J.
B.
Priestley on Faculty X.
Ivan Sanderson’s ‘time-slip’ in Haiti.
Can ‘time-slips’ be explained scientifically.
Lethbridge and the ‘tape-recording’ theory.
The Long Gallery at Hampton Court.
Buchanan and ‘psychic bloodhounds’.
Denton experiments with geological fragments.
Hudson attacks Denton’s results.
‘The memory of the subjective mind seems to be practically limitless.’
Sulla’s villa.
Pascal Forthuny psychometrizes a letter by a murderer.
Pagenstecher’s experiments with Maria de Zierold.
Walter Franklin Prince and the ‘sea bean’.
Maria ‘shares’ Pagenstecher’s consciousness.
Rilke’s experience at Castle Duino.
How to make time stand still.
Bentov’s
Stalking the Wild Pendulum
.
Stephen Jenkins sees a phantom army in Cornwall.
Joan Forman sees ghosts at Haddon Hall.
‘Tape-recording’ of the Battle of Edgehill.
Stephen Jenkins on ley lines.
Doctor Robin Baker’s experiments with earth magnetism.
Is dowsing a superstition?
Harvalik’s experiments with electrical fields.
‘The human body is a magnetic detector.’
Harvalik detects brainwaves.
Lethbridge and the long pendulum.
Tom and Mina Lethbridge throw stones.
Edgar Devaux traces a missing housewife.
Edison invents the gramophone record.
Robert Leftwich and the underground water main.
My wife investigates Bodmin gaol.
Doctor Maximilien Langsner solves a murder case.
Is reality ‘out there’?
‘The holo-gramatic universe.’
Karl Pribram and David Bohm.
Could the world be a hologram?
Bohm’s theory of reality as ‘implicate order’.
Wing Commander Goddard flies over Drem airfield and sees into the future.
Eileen Garrett on clairvoyance.

5 Intrusions?

J.
B.
Priestley’s dream of being shot.
Visions seen on the edge of sleep.
Wilson Van Dusen on hypnagogic images.
Woman who murdered a useless husband.
Her powers of prediction.
The ‘Feminine Aspect of the Divine’ writes in Greek.
Doctor Houston’s patient talks to Socrates.
An illiterate servant girl speaks Greek, Latin and Hebrew.
‘Sleep learning’.
Mavromatis and hypnagogic images.
Could they be telepathy?
Upton Sinclair experiments with ‘mental radio’.
Guy Playfair learns to induce hypnagogic states.
Playfair transmits mental pictures to an audience.
The powers of Marcel Vogel.
The girl who woke up in bed with a male colleague.
Rudolf Steiner and ‘inner space’.
Steiner and Faculty X.
Blake on imagination.
The Akashic Records.
Denton’s son travels to Mars.
Cosmic memory.
Swedenborg and the ‘spirit world’.
The Dutch Ambassador’s wife.
Jung falls ‘down the rabbit hole’.
Active imagination.
‘Thoughts are like animals in a forest.’
‘Some intelligent entity … .’
Nelson Palmer solves the murder of Joy Aken.
Jung’s patient commits suicide.
Ghosts dictate
Seven Sermons to the Dead
.
Jung and the haunted cottage.
Jung and the
I Ching
.
Jung on synchronicity.
Pauli’s power to cause accidents.
My own experiences of synchronicity.
Jacques Vallee and the cult of Melchizedec.
Rebecca West in the London Library.
Camille Flammarion and M.
Fortgibu.
Helmut Schmidt’s experiments
in psychokinesis.
‘As above, so below.’
Can the human mind ‘make things happen’?

6 Memories of the Future

Wilbur Wright’s best friend foresees his own death.
Wilbur Wright dreams winners.
Earl Attlee dreams the winner of the Grand National.
Lord Kilbracken wins £450.
Peter Fairley develops second sight.
Wilbur Wright’s dreams of the future: the red airliner.
J.
W.
Dunne and
An Experiment with Time
.
Dunne’s theory of ‘serial time’.
Lethbridge’s dreams of the future.
Dunne’s ‘real time’.
J.
B.
Priestley’s theories of time.
Ouspensky’s ‘three-dimensional time’.
Arthur Osborne’s experiences of precognition.
Can the future be altered?
Air Marshal Goddard and ‘the night my number came up’.
Is the future predetermined?
G.
K.
Chesterton on predetermination.
Premonitions about the
Titanic
.
Amazing ‘coincidences’ of identical twins.
The ‘Jim twins’.
Glimpses of future romance: Arthur Osborne, J.
B.
Priestley.
Parallel time?
Priestley’s archives.
Woman foresees her son’s death.
‘A dog is going to bark a long way off.’
The ‘super-computer’ theory.
Priestley’s ‘three selves’.
Wilbur Wright’s theory of time.
Robert Morris is killed by a salute.
Wilbur Wright’s ‘Fixed Time Field’.
The paradoxes of quantum physics.
Can a photon interfere with itself?
Erratic behaviour of electrons.
Einstein exclaims, ‘God does not play dice.’
Einstein proves to be mistaken.
Bell’s inequality theorem.
Identical twins again.
The Allans go to Wotton Hatch.
Their ‘time-slip’ experience.
Do human beings possess freedom?

7 Minds Without Bodies?

Mrs McAlpine’s vision of a suicide.
‘Paralysis’.
Robert Cracknell’s
experience of ‘paralysis’.
Sylvan Muldoon and
Projection of the Astral Body
.
‘Out-of-the-body experience’.
Miss Z reads a five-digit number in the next room.
Robert Monroe floats out of his body.
Goethe sees his
doppelgänger
.
W.
B.
Yeats and accidental astral projection.
Cases from
Phantasms of the Living
.
Susie Bauer’s experience of astral projection.
The girl and the ‘magician’.
Cases cited by Camille Flammarion.
Arthur Ellison’s experience of ‘astral projection’.
Ellison’s experiments in the laboratory.
Jack Seale is bitten by a twelve-foot black mamba.
He recovers eight days after ‘dying’.
Van Eeden and ‘lucid dreams’.
The ‘dream body’.
Albert Heim falls from a ledge.
Caresse Crosby is almost drowned.
Lyall Watson’s ‘out-of-the-body experience’.
‘Seeing with the eyes of the spirit.’
Alexis Didier and ‘astral travel’.
Didier solves a crime.
Mesmer ‘influences’ a man through a brick wall.
Doctor Gibert hypnotizes a woman from a distance.
Is it possible to hypnotize someone against his will?
The case of Timotheus Castellan.
The case of Franz Walter.
Hypnosis in animals.
Lady Abercrombie’s ability to influence other minds.
‘In betweenness’.
Robert Monroe visits Andrija Puharich.
Divided consciousness.
Rosalind Heywood splits into ‘White Me’ and ‘Pink Me’.
Sir Auckland Geddes leaves his body.
Do we have ‘a whole collection of consciousnesses’?

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