Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted October 29 Diamond Member Share Posted October 29 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This 19th-Century ‘Toy Book’ Used Science to Prove That Ghosts Were Simply an Illusion If a reader stared at one of Spectropia’s illustrations under a strong light source for about 20 seconds and then gazed at a blank wall in a darkened room, a version of that image in inverted colors appeared. Phillips Library, Peabody Essex Museum In 1864, a book called This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up set out to expose how the brain can trick people into believing they’ve seen a ghost. Across 27 pages, author J.H. Brown ***** out how readers could summon spooky images by staring at one of the book’s 16 illustrations of “specters” and then immediately looking at a blank wall. The resulting optical illusion wasn’t a supernatural apparition: Instead, it was the product of a scientific phenomenon known as This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . Brown wanted Spectropia to act as a bulwark against the rising tide of Spiritualism, a religious movement that This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up the living could commune with the *****, typically through mediums and séances. Brown’s background, including how he came to be so well versed in the science of the time, has been lost to history. But his writings make it clear that he was ardently anti-Spiritualist. As Brown argued in Spectropia: It is a curious fact that, in this age of scientific research, the absurd follies of Spiritualism should find an increase of supporters; but mental epidemics seem at certain seasons to affect our minds, and one of the oldest of these moral afflictions—witchcraft—is once more prevalent in this 19th century, under the contemptible forms of spirit-rapping and table-turning. The cover of Spectropia Phillips Library, Peabody Essex Museum Despite Brown’s serious intentions, Spectropia’s publisher marketed the book as a fun parlor game, a way for folks to stave off boredom for an evening. “Ghosts everywhere,” one contemporary This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . The notice promised that buyers would conjure up “ghosts of all sizes, all styles, all colors, at 60-second notice.” The “toy book,” as Spectropia was also described, proved popular, This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up and This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up and then in the This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , where it sold for $1 (around $20 today). While This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up heralded the work as an “elegant volume [that] may familiarize even the thoughtless with optical laws, and thus abate the tendency to superstitious impressions,” Spectropia’s success as an anti-Spiritualist tool is difficult to measure. Indeed, another critic This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up the publication as a “philosophical plaything intended to amuse children and youth.” The science behind the “specters” Brown implicitly acknowledged that many readers would open Spectropia and skip all text besides the directions for creating This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , as the illusions are now known. But for “those who may wish to know more,” he included a “brief and popular, as well as a scientific, description of the manner in which the specters are produced.” The afterimage of Spectropia‘s figure five (on the right) would appear in green, the complementary ****** of red. Phillips Library, Peabody Essex Museum In that section, says This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , a neuroscientist at the This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up in Massachusetts, Brown correctly described why, if a person stared at one of the book’s images under a strong light source for about 20 seconds and then gazed at a blank wall in a darkened room, a version of that image in inverted colors appeared. Today, psychologists know that This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up occurs because the ******-sensing cells, or cones, in humans’ retinas decrease in sensitivity to a certain ****** after looking at an object of that hue for an extended ******* of time. Let’s say you stare at the This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up in Spectropia—a wizened individual, ******** entirely in red, with their arm ominously raised—for about half a minute. If you then look at a white wall, you’ll see a green version of the figure, which will start to break up before disappearing entirely. This ****** change takes place because your retinas’ ability to see red is temporarily fatigued. Since white light contains all ****** wavelengths, you’ll still see the This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up of blue and yellow, which, when mixed together, yield red’s complementary ******, green. In addition to reversing the ****** of an image, afterimages can This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up that an object has changed in shape or size. All told, Brown argued in Spectropia, “There can be little doubt but that many of the reputed ghosts originate in this manner.” The Colour After Image Illusion (best full screen) Many of the 19th-century readers who enjoyed a fun night creating ghostly images with Spectropia undoubtedly also believed in supernatural spirits. “[Brown] is saying our minds and our eyes [can] play tricks on us, and this is a well-known scientific principle,” says This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , an illusion designer and historian. “[He’s asking], ‘Can’t I demonstrate to you that you can’t trust your senses?’ And overall, that somehow never works, because anyone who’s really convinced just says, ‘Well, it doesn’t make any difference [in what I believe].’” Asher, who wrote an essay about Spectropia for a This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up accompanying one of the Peabody Essex’s current exhibitions, “ This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up ,” says that three processes shape people’s beliefs. Humans perceive something, attribute personal meaning to it and then act on it accordingly. “People have real needs that drive the way they choose to understand the world and their experiences in it,” Asher explains. “Certain aspects of any visual input are going to be salient and stand out to a given individual for one reason or another. You connect those dots—literally or figuratively—to generate a particular need. It’s similar to how two dots and a half circle under them causes a smiley face, even without a bounded circle around it. It’s the way our brains take bits of information and weave together a narrative.” The power of belief, whether in spirits, the afterlife or mediums, is likely why Spectropia did little to stave off the Spiritualism movement. Scientific diagrams explaining how Spectropia‘s optical illusions worked Phillips Library, Peabody Essex Museum The “mental epidemic” of Spiritualism Spectropia came out during the first wave of Spiritualism, which many trace to upstate New York in 1848. That year, a pair of young ****** named Maggie and Kate Fox convinced the public that spirits communicated with them through mysterious rapping noises. Though the Fox sisters eventually admitted to faking the sounds with their knuckles, joints and toes, the movement they spawned quickly gained a fervent following. In the U.S., Spiritualism remained influential into the 1860s, in part because the This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up left many grieving over the loss of loved ones they couldn’t properly bury. The movement inspired other fraudsters to claim they could commune with unnatural forces, too: Siblings Ira Erastus Davenport and William Henry Harrison Davenport, for example, made a name for themselves stateside before traveling to England in September 1864, the same year that Spectropia arrived on bookshelves. On September 28, the This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up held a séance at a private residence in London. The act This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up tied up inside a large cabinet. Once the doors were closed, various musical instruments, including a guitar and a trumpet, started playing and ******** against the cabinet’s walls. An assistant “quickly dashed to open the doors, catching the instruments almost airborne as the two brothers were revealed, sitting quietly and tied up tightly,” writes Steinmeyer in This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . Many of the spectators believed the Davenports were true mediums, but the press was far from convinced. A drawing of the Davenport brothers’ act This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up “These ********* brethren, we are informed, can keep up an excitement for several hours successively,” the This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up reported a few days after the séance. “It was all ‘spiritual,’ they say; but might we, under the circumstances, be permitted to suggest that it was all from beginning to end a piece of flagrant jugglery?” Referencing an illusion popularly known as This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , in which performers create a transparent image of a person onstage by having them stand behind a pane of glass that is strategically angled and lit offstage, the Standard noted, “White ghosts are in fashion. We have seen them at the theaters. We know how they are made. Sorcery of that kind is, in our day, excusably popular.” The newspaper argued, however, that the Davenports’ “vulgar legerdemain,” or sleight of hand, represented “an intellectual poison and intoxication.” Against this backdrop of skepticism versus passionate belief, Spectropia aimed to use science, delivered via the promise of This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up “weird and ghostly figures,” to explain how acts like the Davenports’ worked. Ironically, part of the appeal of Spiritualism was that it claimed to take a scientific approach to ghosts. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , curator of “Conjuring the Spirit World,” says there were those like Brown, “who believed science could be used to show that there’s nothing to Spiritualism, [and] those who were actually using it to test mediums and ‘prove’ that they did have supernatural abilities that could be scientifically tested.” Spectropia features 16 illustrations of specters. Phillips Library, Peabody Essex Museum The chemist This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , for example, held so-called This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up in the mid-1870s. During these get-togethers, he asked well-known mediums like This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up to grasp a device called a galvanometer. If the supposed clairvoyant took their hands off the apparatus’ two handles, the electric current running through it would break, and observers—sitting in the next room with a mere curtain separating them from the medium—would know via the device’s readings. Several participants passed the test by circumventing the current, most likely using a coil of wire to replace their body resistance so they could move freely in the room and make various items levitate or change location. Armed with supposedly scientific proof that clairvoyants were real, Spiritualists were often reluctant to accept alternative explanations for mediums’ abilities, however thoroughly researched they might be. Spectropia “bridged the connection between the scientific world and the supernatural early on,” blurring the line between fun novelty and anti-Spiritualist screed, Schwartz says. In that way, the book was similar to the perennially popular Ouija board, which to this day is advertised as a toy, though some still believe it has true mystical capabilities. Ouija Board: The Mysterious Origins of a Cultural Obsession Beginning in the late 1860s, a few decades before the Ouija board debuted, the This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , a small, usually heart-shaped board that spirits purportedly moved when people lightly touched its surface, took the U.S. by storm. As Spectropia’s popularity petered out, planchettes appeared in homes across the nation, where holding an impromptu séance to summon a deceased loved one was a common way to spend an evening. Perhaps the playful ambiguity of how planchettes worked made them more appealing than a book that sought to provide a rational explanation for a seemingly otherworldly phenomenon. In the words of England’s This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , which reported on the Davenport brothers’ séances in October 1864, “When one delusion is ***** bare, a large section of the public will run just as eagerly after another, and rather resent than approve any attempt to undeceive them.” Get the latest History stories in your inbox? Filed Under: ********* History, Art Meets Science, Books, Civil War, ******, ******, Halloween, Magic, Neuroscience, Psychology, Rituals and Traditions, Supernatural, Superstitions, Toys This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #19thCentury #Toy #Book #Science #Prove #Ghosts #Simply #Illusion This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/156763-this-19th-century-%E2%80%98toy-book%E2%80%99-used-science-to-prove-that-ghosts-were-simply-an-illusion/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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