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Automatic writing

Automatic writing, also called psychography, is a claimed psychic ability allowing a person to produce written words without consciously writing. Practitioners engage in automatic writing by holding a writing instrument and allowing alleged spirits to manipulate the practitioner's hand. The instrument may be a standard writing instrument, or it may be one specially designed for automatic writing, such as a planchette or a ouija board.

A piece of automatic writing produced by trance medium Leonora Piper, claimed to be a message from the spirit of Richard Hodgson

Religious and spiritual traditions have incorporated automatic writing, including Fuji in Chinese folk religion and the Enochian language associated with Enochian magic. In the modern era, it is associated with spiritualism and the occult, with notable practitioners including W. B. Yeats and Arthur Conan Doyle. There is no evidence supporting the existence of automatic writing, and claims associated with it are unfalsifiable. Documented examples are considered to be the result of the ideomotor phenomenon.[1][2][3][4]

History Edit

Early history Edit

Spirit writing, later called Fuji (扶乩/扶箕), has a long tradition in China, where messages from various deities and spirits were received by mediums since the Song dynasty. In the 19th century, messages received through spirit writing led to the foundation of several Chinese salvationist religions.[5] The spread of Chinese cultural techniques, such as printing and painting, introduced the influence of "spirit writing", practiced by Japanese Zen Ōbaku monks, who were said to communicate with an ancient Taoist sage credited with creating the kung fu system.[6]

In the West, an early example of the practice is the 16th-century Enochian language, allegedly dictated to John Dee and Edward Kelley by Enochian angels and integral to the practice of Enochian magic.[7] The language is said to be extremely detailed and complex with its own grammar and rules.[8] Dee also claimed that the Enochian instruction included information regarding the elixir of life in the ruins of Glastonbury Abbey.[8]

Approach Edit

Parapsychologist William Fletcher Barrett wrote that "automatic messages may take place either by the writer passively holding a pencil on a sheet of paper, or by the planchette, or by a 'ouija board'."[9] In spiritualism, spirits are claimed to take control of the hand of a medium to write messages, letters, and even entire books.[10] Automatic writing can happen in a trance or waking state.[11] Some psychical researchers such as Thomson Jay Hudson have claimed no spirits are involved in automatic writing and the subconscious mind is the explanation.[12]

Hoaxes Edit

Paranormal investigator Harry Price exposed the supposed automatic writing in the Borley Rectory as the wall-scrawling of a housewife attempting to hide an extramarital affair.[4]

A prominent alleged example of automatic writing is the Brattleboro hoax. When Charles Dickens died in 1870, he left The Mystery of Edwin Drood unfinished. According to the itinerant printer T. P. James, this angered Dickens' spirit so much that he channeled the rest of the novel through James's hand. This is supposed to have begun on Christmas Eve 1872 and continued in tri-weekly sessions until completion.[13]

Practitioners Edit

Automatic writing as a spiritual practice was reported by Hyppolyte Taine in the preface to the third edition of his De l'intelligence, published in 1878.[14] Besides "ethereal visions" or "magnetic auras", Fernando Pessoa claimed to have experienced automatic writing. He said he felt "owned by something else", sometimes feeling a sensation in the right arm he claimed was lifted into the air without his will.[15] Georgie Hyde-Lees, the wife of William Butler Yeats, also claimed she could write automatically.[16] Sri Aurobindo and his follower, The Mother (Mirra Alfassa), regularly practiced Automatic writing.

Shortly after his 1917 marriage to Georgie Hyde-Lees, the poet W. B. Yeats came to be heavily influenced by her delving into what they referred to as "the automatic script".[17]

In his 1918 book The New Revelation, Arthur Conan Doyle wrote that automatic writing occurs either by the writer's subconscious or by external spirits operating through the writer.[18] Doyle and his wife led an automatic writing séance with Harry Houdini wherein Lady Doyle wrote 15 pages of purported messages from Houdini's mother, although this information was immediately discounted as fraudulent by Houdini.[19]

The essay The Automatic Message (1933), first published in the magazine Minotaure, No. 3-4, (Paris), was one of André Breton's significant theoretical works about automatism. In 1919, Breton and Philippe Soupault had used what later became the Surrealist automatism method to compose Les Champs Magnétiques (The Magnetic Fields).[20] In 1997, "The Magnetic Fields" was also the title of a compilation of surrealist writing of André Breton, Paul Éluard, Philippe Soupault, and others. It included the authorized translation of Breton's The Automatic Message in English by the poet David Gascoyne, whose Man's Life is This Meat (1936) (a collection of his own surrealist writings and translations of the French surrealists) and Hölderlin's Madness (1938) established Gascoyne's reputation as one of a small group of English surrealists. Gascoyne's 1935 A Short Survey of Surrealism for the 1936 London International Surrealist Exhibition also expanded the movement to the English-speaking world. The Surrealist poet Robert Desnos claimed he was among the most gifted in automatic writing.[21] Surrealist automatists, most notably André Masson, adapted these methods to art-making in which the artist suppresses conscious control over the making process, allowing the unconscious mind to have great sway. Prior to the Surrealists, Dadaists, such as Hans Arp, made some use of this method through chance operations.[22]

The medium Pierre L. O. A. Keeler had an alleged spirit writing communication from Abraham Lincoln currently exhibited at the Lily Dale Museum.[23] Despite Lincoln being well-known for his skepticism and Keeler having been known to employ magician's tricks, this is used as one of the many examples of skeptics purportedly endorsing spiritualism posthumously.[24] Skeptical investigator Joe Nickell who conducted a detailed examination of the "spirit" writing, concluded it had no resemblance to Lincoln's handwriting and described the message as "bogus".[25]

There was an apocalyptic cult led by a lapsed Scientologist named Dorothy Martin. She and her followers were waiting for an alien ship to take them to the nonexistent planet Clarion and save them from a worldwide flood that was to commence at midnight on December 20, 1954. When that did not occur, Martin allegedly got an automatic writing message from God calling the whole thing off.[26][27]

Since 1975 Edit

In 1975, Wendy Hart of Maidenhead claimed she wrote automatically about Nicholas Moore, a sea captain who died in 1642.[28] Also in 1975 the CIA attempted to employ remote viewing through the Stargate Project. In the spring of 1989, Angela Dellafiora, a member of Stargate Project's remote viewing unit, claimed to be guided by spirits moving her hand in writing responses about the location of a fugitive DEA agent named Charlie Jordan. In reviewing the matter, Joe Nickell states, "[T]he Charlie Jordan case, touted as one of the most successful examples... in the U.S. government's psychic-spying project is not convincing evidence of anything — save perhaps folly. ...[I]t also illustrates the limitations of anecdotal evidence: conflicting versions, selective reporting, and lack of documentation, together with additional manifestations of faulty memory, bias, and other human foibles."[29]

Conspiracy theorist David Icke said he first became aware of being "Son of the Godhead" via automatic writing.[30] Vassula Ryden claims to receive and transcribe messages from her guardian angel Daniel, Jesus, Yahweh.[31] She has provoked both skepticism and credulity from Catholic laity and clergy, as well as the skeptical community at large.[32] Alleged cases of automatic writing have included Joseph Smith,[33] Patience Worth,[4] Aleister Crowley,[34] Jane Roberts,[35] Helen Schucman[36] and author Neale Donald Walsch.[37][38] Crowley, for instance, compiled the Collected Works over time, which included The Book of the Law as well as transcripts of his visions of the first two Enochian Aethyrs (planes).[39]

Scientific analysis and skepticism Edit

Scientists and skeptics consider automatic writing to be the result of the ideomotor effect.[1][2][3][4]

According to skeptical investigator Joe Nickell, "automatic writing is produced while one is in a dissociated state. It is a form of motor automatism, or unconscious muscular activity."[40] Neurologist Terence Hines has written "automatic writing is an example of a milder form of dissociative state".[41] In 1900, Swiss psychologist Theodore Flournoy studied the case of the French medium Helene Smith, particularly her handwriting during seances.[10] He concluded that the automatic writing phenomenon was an effect of autosuggestion produced by autohypnotization, leading to the emergence of a secondary self.[10]

Paranormal researcher Ben Radford writes in his 2017 book Investigating Ghosts that there is no real way to know if the writing is coming from "outside their bodies," you "must take their word for it. Because the source of the information is at issue and the medium cannot be validated, we must turn to the content of the material." Various psychic mediums have claimed to channel famous dead people, such as Susan Lander, who claimed that Betsy Ross contacted her to say, "I am gay and I fly the flag of pride and liberty for all of us." According to Radford, historians say that there is "no credible historical evidence that Ross ... either made or had a hand in designing the American flag." Without some kind of validation, "anyone can claim to communicate with the spirit of anyone." Radford argues that "Automatic writing should logically hinder, not help spirit communication," given spelling and grammar are more difficult than direct speech. [42]

Scientific studies Edit

In an 1890 paper on hypnotism Morton Prince claims, "automatic writing is not a purely unconscious reflex act, but, the product of conscious individuality," and further claims that the hand that is writing is under the control of a separate hypnotic personality during trances.[43][44] Physician Charles Arthur Mercier in the British Medical Journal (1894) criticized the spiritualist interpretation of automatic writing, concluding, "there is no need nor room for the agency of spirits, and the invocation of such agency is the sign of a mind not merely unscientific, but uninformed."[45]

Psychology professor Théodore Flournoy investigated the claim by nineteenth-century medium Hélène Smith (Catherine Müller) she did automatic writing to convey messages from Mars in Martian language. Flournoy concluded her "Martian" language had a strong resemblance to Ms. Smith's native language of French and her automatic writing was "romances of the subliminal imagination, derived largely from forgotten sources (for example, books read as a child)." He invented the term cryptomnesia to describe this phenomenon.[46]

In 1927, psychiatrist Harold Dearden wrote that automatic writing is a psychological method of "tapping" the unconscious mind and there is nothing mysterious about it.[47]

In 1986, A. B. Joseph investigated two female patients who were found to exhibit ictal hypergraphia.[48]

Automatic writing behavior was discovered by Dilek Evyapan and Emre Kumral in three patients with right hemispheric damage.[49]

A 2012 study of ten psychographers using single photon emission computed tomography showed differences in brain activity and writing complexity during alleged trance states vs. normal state writing.[50]

Pop culture and media Edit

Automatic writing is touted by medium Bonnie Page in a Sentinel and Enterprise article as a method of accessing claircognizance abilities.[51]

Automatic writing is featured prominently in the 1961 episode of Perry Mason, The Case of the Meddling Medium.

Portions of Van Morrison's album Astral Weeks supposedly are inspired by dreams, reveries, and automatic writing.[52]

Czech director Jan Svankmajer claims he concocted the screenplay for his hybrid film Insect (Hmyz) in a fit of automatic writing.[53]

William S. Burroughs has described his book Naked Lunch as "automatic writing gone horribly wrong" and believed he found his subconscious taken over by a hostile entity.[54][55]

In an interview in GQ, David Byrne indicated an interest in automatic writing due to the influence of Brian Eno.[56]

Gallery Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Burgess, C.A., Kirsch, I., Shane, H., Niederauer, K.L., Graham, S.M., & Bacon, A. (1998). Facilitated Communication as an Ideomotor Response. Psychological Science 9: 71-74.
  2. ^ a b Heap, Michael. (2002). Ideomotor Effect (the Ouija Board Effect). In Michael Shermer. The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience. ABC-CLIO. pp. 127–129. ISBN 1-57607-654-7
  3. ^ a b Erickson, Milton H; Hershman, Seymour: Secter, Irving I. (2014). The Practical Application of Medical and Dental Hypnosis. Routledge. pp. 68–69. ISBN 0-87630-570-2
  4. ^ a b c d Stollznow, Karen (2011). "Bad Language". No. 3. Skeptic Magazine.
  5. ^ Wang Chien-ch’uan, “Spirit Writing Groups in Modern China (1840–1937): Textual Production, Public Teachings, and Charity.” In Modern Chinese Religion II 1850–2015, edited by Vincent Goossaert, Jan Kiely and John Lagerwey, Leiden: Brill, vol. 2, 651–684.
  6. ^ Haskel, Peter (2001). Letting Go: The Story of Zen Master Tōsui. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 37–38. ISBN 0-8248-2440-7.
  7. ^ Stollznow, Karen. (2014). Language Myths, Mysteries and Magic. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 114. ISBN 978-1-137-40484-8
  8. ^ a b Da'Neos, Frater (2003). Musings of a Thelemite. Wright City, MO: Alchemy Press. p. 152. ISBN 978-0977691104.
  9. ^ William Fletcher Barrett On the Threshold of the Unseen Cambridge University Press, 2011, p. 162
  10. ^ a b c Kontou, Tatiana (23 March 2016). The Ashgate Research Companion to Nineteenth-Century Spiritualism and the Occult. Routledge. ISBN 9781317042273.
  11. ^ "Dictionary Definition". Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  12. ^ Thomson Jay Hudson, The Law of Psychic Phenomena, Wildhern Press, 2009, p. 252
  13. ^ Heller, Paul. "DICKENS in the SPIRIT WORLD — the Brattleboro hoax". rutlandherald.com. The Rutland Herald. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  14. ^ Taine, Hippolyte (1870). De l'intelligence. p. 252. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
  15. ^ Pessoa, Fernando (1999), Correspondência 1905–1922, Assírio & Alvim, pp. 214–219, ISBN 978-85-7164-916-3.
  16. ^ Marjorie Elizabeth Howes, John S. Kelly, The Cambridge Companion to W.B. Yeats, 2006, p. 11
  17. ^ Hedayati-Rad, Arjang. "W. B. Yeats, George Hyde-Lees, and the Automatic Script". CSUN.edu. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  18. ^ Arthur Conan Doyle The New Revelation 2010 Reprint Edition, p. 47
  19. ^ Loxton, James; Loxton, Daniel. "Great American Skeptics" (PDF). Skeptic.com. Pat Linse. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  20. ^ Chilvers, Ian and Glaves-Smith, John, A Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Art, second edition (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2009), p. 45-46. ISBN 0199239665.
  21. ^ Thacker, Eugene (16 October 2013). "THE PERIOD OF THE SLEEPING FITS". Metamute.org. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  22. ^ The Surrealists: Revolutionaries in art & writing 1919–1935, Jemma Montagu
  23. ^ Lily Dale Museum
  24. ^ Nickell, Joe (September 2004). "Abraham Lincoln: An Instance of Alleged 'Spirit Writing'". csicop.org. Skeptical Inquirer. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  25. ^ Nickell, Joe. (2007). Adventures in Paranormal Investigation. University Press of Kentucky. pp. 42–47. ISBN 978-0-8131-2467-4.
  26. ^ Sharps, Matthew J.; Liao, Schuyler W.; Herrera, Megan R. (November 2014). "Remembrance of Apocalypse Past: The Psychology of True Believers When Nothing Happens". csicop.org. Skeptical Inquirer. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  27. ^ Debies-Carl, Jeffrey S. (November 2017). "Pizzagate and Beyond: Using Social Research to Understand Conspiracy Legends". csicop.org. Skeptical Inquirer. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  28. ^ Rabey, Arthur Ivan (1979). The book of St Columb & St Mawgan - the story of two ancient parishes. Buckingham - Barracuda Books. ISBN 978-0860230588. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
  29. ^ Nickell, Joe (March 2001). "Remotely Viewed? The Charlie Jordan Case". csicop.org. Skeptical Inquirer. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  30. ^ Richardson, Andy (28 March 2018). "Controversial conspiracy theorist David Icke is doing a secret gig in Birmingham". birminghammail.co.uk. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  31. ^ Curty, Christian. "A Letter of Our Lord to His Church". True Life in God. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  32. ^ Nickell, Joe (March 2011). "Heaven's Stenographer: The 'Guided' Hand of Vassula Ryden". Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. Center for Inquiry. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  33. ^ Dunn, Scott C. (2002). "Automaticity and the Dictation of the Book of Mormon". American Apocrypha: Essays on the Book of Mormon. Vogel, Dan, and Metcalfe, Brent Lee, Eds. Salt Lake City, Utah: Signature Books. ISBN 978-1560851516. OCLC 47870060.
  34. ^ Crowley, Aleister. "The Book of the Law". Archive.org. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
  35. ^ Seth (Spirit); Roberts, Jane; Butts, Robert F. (1994). Seth Speaks: The Eternal Validity of the Soul. New World Library. ISBN 9781878424075. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
  36. ^ A Course in Miracles. A Course in Miracles (1975). 1975. ISBN 9780670869756. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
  37. ^ Walsch, Neale D. (29 October 1996). Conversations with God: An Uncommon Dialogue Book 1. Tarcher Perigee. ISBN 9780399142789. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
  38. ^ Sue Lim Good Spirits, Bad Spirits: How to Distinguish Between Them 2002, p. 82
  39. ^ Churton, Tobias (2012). Aleister Crowley: The Biography – Spiritual Revolutionary, Romantic Explorer, Occult Master and Spy. London: Watkins Media Limited. p. 148. ISBN 9781780283845.
  40. ^ Nickell, Joe. (2007). "A Case of Automatic Writing From Robert G. Ingersoll's Spirit?". Csicop.org. Retrieved 2014-10-11.
  41. ^ Hines, Terence. (2003). Pseudoscience and the Paranormal. Prometheus Books. p. 48. ISBN 1-57392-979-4
  42. ^ Radford, Ben (2017). Investigating Ghosts: The Scientific Search for Spirits. Corrales, New Mexico: Rhombus Publishing Company. pp. 182–185. ISBN 9780936455167.
  43. ^ Prince, Morton (1975). Psychotherapy and Multiple Personality: Selected Essays, Volume 2. Harvard University Press. pp. 37–60. ISBN 978-0674722255. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  44. ^ Prince, Morton (15 May 1890). "Some of the Revelations of Hypnotism – Post-Hypnotic Suggestion, Automatic Writing and Double Personality". Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. CXXII (20): 463–467. doi:10.1056/NEJM189005151222001.
  45. ^ Mercier, Charles Arthur (1894). "Automatic Writing". British Medical Journal. 1 (1726): 198–199. doi:10.1136/bmj.1.1726.198. PMC 2403845. PMID 20754638.
  46. ^ Randi, James. (1995). An Encyclopedia of Claims, Frauds, and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural. St. Martin's Press. p. 22. ISBN 0-312-15119-5
  47. ^ Dearden, Harold. (April 9, 1927). How Spiritualists are Deluded. The Graphic pp. 50–51.
  48. ^ Joseph, A. B. (1986). "A hypergraphic syndrome of automatic writing, affective disorder, and temporal lobe epilepsy in two patients". The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. 47 (5): 255–257. PMID 3084454. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  49. ^ Evyapan, Dilek; Kumral, Emre, (2001). Visuospatial Stimulus-Bound Automatic Writing Behavior: A Right Hemispheric Stroke Syndrome. Neurology 56: 245–247.
  50. ^ Perez, Julio Fernando; Moreira-Almeida, Alexander; Caixeta, Leonardo; Leao, Frederico; Newberg, Andrew (16 November 2012). "Neuroimaging during Trance State: A Contribution to the Study of Dissociation". PLOS ONE. 7 (11): e49360. Bibcode:2012PLoSO...749360P. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0049360. PMC 3500298. PMID 23166648.
  51. ^ Page, Bonnie (17 April 2018). "'Know' something without knowing why? You could be claircognizant". Sentinel & Enterprise. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  52. ^ Michaud, Jon (7 March 2018). "The Miracle of Van Morrison's "Astral Weeks"". The New Yorker. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  53. ^ Mintzer, Jordan (2 February 2018). "'Insect' ('Hmyz'): Film Review - Rotterdam 2018". hollywoodreporter.com. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  54. ^ "William S. Burroughs & Surrealist Writing Methods". knowledgelost.org. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  55. ^ Wills, David S. (21 September 2017). "What the Beats can teach us about writing". beatdom.com. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  56. ^ Pappademas, Alex (16 April 2018). "This Must Be David Byrne". Gq. Retrieved 24 April 2018.

Further reading Edit

  • Carpenter, William Benjamin (12 March 1852). "On the Influence of Suggestion in Modifying and directing Muscular Movement, independently of Volition". Notices of the Meetings. Royal Institution of Great Britain. Retrieved 2 March 2011. (The document is in English but the linked website is in German.)
  • Downey, June E.; Anderson, John E. (1915). "Automatic Writing". American Journal of Psychology. 26 (2): 161. doi:10.2307/1413248. JSTOR 1413248.
  • Joseph, A. B. (1986). "A hypergraphic syndrome of automatic writing, affective disorder, and temporal lobe epilepsy in two patients". The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. 47 (5): 255–257. ISSN 0160-6689. PMID 3084454.
  • Walsh, E.; Mehta, M.A.; Oakley, D.A.; Guilmette, D.N.; Gabay, A.; Halligan, P.W.; Deeley, Q. (2014). "Using suggestion to model different types of automatic writing". Consciousness and Cognition. 26: 24–36. doi:10.1016/j.concog.2014.02.008. ISSN 1053-8100. PMID 24657632. S2CID 5200153.
  • Zusne, Leonard; Jones, Warren H. (1989). Anomalistic psychology: a study of magical thinking (2nd ed.). Hillsdale, N.J.: L. Erlbaum Associates. ISBN 0-8058-0507-9. OCLC 19264110.
  • Carroll, Robert Todd (2003). The skeptic's dictionary: a collection of strange beliefs, amusing deceptions, and dangerous delusions. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley. ISBN 0-471-48088-6. OCLC 55751218.
  • Randi, James (1997). An encyclopedia of claims, frauds, and hoaxes of the occult and supernatural: James Randi's decidedly skeptical definitions of alternative realities (1st ed.). New York: St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 0-312-15119-5. OCLC 35978760.
  • Shermer, Michael (1 February 2011). "Houdini's Skeptical Advice: Just Because Something's Unexplained Doesn't Mean It's Supernatural". Scientific American. 304 (2): 89. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0211-89. PMID 21319549. Retrieved 13 May 2020.

External links Edit

automatic, writing, confused, with, free, writing, other, uses, disambiguation, also, called, psychography, claimed, psychic, ability, allowing, person, produce, written, words, without, consciously, writing, practitioners, engage, automatic, writing, holding,. Not to be confused with Free writing For other uses see Automatic writing disambiguation Automatic writing also called psychography is a claimed psychic ability allowing a person to produce written words without consciously writing Practitioners engage in automatic writing by holding a writing instrument and allowing alleged spirits to manipulate the practitioner s hand The instrument may be a standard writing instrument or it may be one specially designed for automatic writing such as a planchette or a ouija board A piece of automatic writing produced by trance medium Leonora Piper claimed to be a message from the spirit of Richard HodgsonReligious and spiritual traditions have incorporated automatic writing including Fuji in Chinese folk religion and the Enochian language associated with Enochian magic In the modern era it is associated with spiritualism and the occult with notable practitioners including W B Yeats and Arthur Conan Doyle There is no evidence supporting the existence of automatic writing and claims associated with it are unfalsifiable Documented examples are considered to be the result of the ideomotor phenomenon 1 2 3 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Approach 1 3 Hoaxes 2 Practitioners 2 1 Since 1975 3 Scientific analysis and skepticism 3 1 Scientific studies 4 Pop culture and media 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory EditEarly history Edit Spirit writing later called Fuji 扶乩 扶箕 has a long tradition in China where messages from various deities and spirits were received by mediums since the Song dynasty In the 19th century messages received through spirit writing led to the foundation of several Chinese salvationist religions 5 The spread of Chinese cultural techniques such as printing and painting introduced the influence of spirit writing practiced by Japanese Zen Ōbaku monks who were said to communicate with an ancient Taoist sage credited with creating the kung fu system 6 In the West an early example of the practice is the 16th century Enochian language allegedly dictated to John Dee and Edward Kelley by Enochian angels and integral to the practice of Enochian magic 7 The language is said to be extremely detailed and complex with its own grammar and rules 8 Dee also claimed that the Enochian instruction included information regarding the elixir of life in the ruins of Glastonbury Abbey 8 Approach Edit Parapsychologist William Fletcher Barrett wrote that automatic messages may take place either by the writer passively holding a pencil on a sheet of paper or by the planchette or by a ouija board 9 In spiritualism spirits are claimed to take control of the hand of a medium to write messages letters and even entire books 10 Automatic writing can happen in a trance or waking state 11 Some psychical researchers such as Thomson Jay Hudson have claimed no spirits are involved in automatic writing and the subconscious mind is the explanation 12 Hoaxes Edit Paranormal investigator Harry Price exposed the supposed automatic writing in the Borley Rectory as the wall scrawling of a housewife attempting to hide an extramarital affair 4 A prominent alleged example of automatic writing is the Brattleboro hoax When Charles Dickens died in 1870 he left The Mystery of Edwin Drood unfinished According to the itinerant printer T P James this angered Dickens spirit so much that he channeled the rest of the novel through James s hand This is supposed to have begun on Christmas Eve 1872 and continued in tri weekly sessions until completion 13 Practitioners EditAutomatic writing as a spiritual practice was reported by Hyppolyte Taine in the preface to the third edition of his De l intelligence published in 1878 14 Besides ethereal visions or magnetic auras Fernando Pessoa claimed to have experienced automatic writing He said he felt owned by something else sometimes feeling a sensation in the right arm he claimed was lifted into the air without his will 15 Georgie Hyde Lees the wife of William Butler Yeats also claimed she could write automatically 16 Sri Aurobindo and his follower The Mother Mirra Alfassa regularly practiced Automatic writing Shortly after his 1917 marriage to Georgie Hyde Lees the poet W B Yeats came to be heavily influenced by her delving into what they referred to as the automatic script 17 In his 1918 book The New Revelation Arthur Conan Doyle wrote that automatic writing occurs either by the writer s subconscious or by external spirits operating through the writer 18 Doyle and his wife led an automatic writing seance with Harry Houdini wherein Lady Doyle wrote 15 pages of purported messages from Houdini s mother although this information was immediately discounted as fraudulent by Houdini 19 The essay The Automatic Message 1933 first published in the magazine Minotaure No 3 4 Paris was one of Andre Breton s significant theoretical works about automatism In 1919 Breton and Philippe Soupault had used what later became the Surrealist automatism method to compose Les Champs Magnetiques The Magnetic Fields 20 In 1997 The Magnetic Fields was also the title of a compilation of surrealist writing of Andre Breton Paul Eluard Philippe Soupault and others It included the authorized translation of Breton s The Automatic Message in English by the poet David Gascoyne whose Man s Life is This Meat 1936 a collection of his own surrealist writings and translations of the French surrealists and Holderlin s Madness 1938 established Gascoyne s reputation as one of a small group of English surrealists Gascoyne s 1935 A Short Survey of Surrealism for the 1936 London International Surrealist Exhibition also expanded the movement to the English speaking world The Surrealist poet Robert Desnos claimed he was among the most gifted in automatic writing 21 Surrealist automatists most notably Andre Masson adapted these methods to art making in which the artist suppresses conscious control over the making process allowing the unconscious mind to have great sway Prior to the Surrealists Dadaists such as Hans Arp made some use of this method through chance operations 22 The medium Pierre L O A Keeler had an alleged spirit writing communication from Abraham Lincoln currently exhibited at the Lily Dale Museum 23 Despite Lincoln being well known for his skepticism and Keeler having been known to employ magician s tricks this is used as one of the many examples of skeptics purportedly endorsing spiritualism posthumously 24 Skeptical investigator Joe Nickell who conducted a detailed examination of the spirit writing concluded it had no resemblance to Lincoln s handwriting and described the message as bogus 25 There was an apocalyptic cult led by a lapsed Scientologist named Dorothy Martin She and her followers were waiting for an alien ship to take them to the nonexistent planet Clarion and save them from a worldwide flood that was to commence at midnight on December 20 1954 When that did not occur Martin allegedly got an automatic writing message from God calling the whole thing off 26 27 Since 1975 Edit In 1975 Wendy Hart of Maidenhead claimed she wrote automatically about Nicholas Moore a sea captain who died in 1642 28 Also in 1975 the CIA attempted to employ remote viewing through the Stargate Project In the spring of 1989 Angela Dellafiora a member of Stargate Project s remote viewing unit claimed to be guided by spirits moving her hand in writing responses about the location of a fugitive DEA agent named Charlie Jordan In reviewing the matter Joe Nickell states T he Charlie Jordan case touted as one of the most successful examples in the U S government s psychic spying project is not convincing evidence of anything save perhaps folly I t also illustrates the limitations of anecdotal evidence conflicting versions selective reporting and lack of documentation together with additional manifestations of faulty memory bias and other human foibles 29 Conspiracy theorist David Icke said he first became aware of being Son of the Godhead via automatic writing 30 Vassula Ryden claims to receive and transcribe messages from her guardian angel Daniel Jesus Yahweh 31 She has provoked both skepticism and credulity from Catholic laity and clergy as well as the skeptical community at large 32 Alleged cases of automatic writing have included Joseph Smith 33 Patience Worth 4 Aleister Crowley 34 Jane Roberts 35 Helen Schucman 36 and author Neale Donald Walsch 37 38 Crowley for instance compiled the Collected Works over time which included The Book of the Law as well as transcripts of his visions of the first two Enochian Aethyrs planes 39 Scientific analysis and skepticism EditScientists and skeptics consider automatic writing to be the result of the ideomotor effect 1 2 3 4 According to skeptical investigator Joe Nickell automatic writing is produced while one is in a dissociated state It is a form of motor automatism or unconscious muscular activity 40 Neurologist Terence Hines has written automatic writing is an example of a milder form of dissociative state 41 In 1900 Swiss psychologist Theodore Flournoy studied the case of the French medium Helene Smith particularly her handwriting during seances 10 He concluded that the automatic writing phenomenon was an effect of autosuggestion produced by autohypnotization leading to the emergence of a secondary self 10 Paranormal researcher Ben Radford writes in his 2017 book Investigating Ghosts that there is no real way to know if the writing is coming from outside their bodies you must take their word for it Because the source of the information is at issue and the medium cannot be validated we must turn to the content of the material Various psychic mediums have claimed to channel famous dead people such as Susan Lander who claimed that Betsy Ross contacted her to say I am gay and I fly the flag of pride and liberty for all of us According to Radford historians say that there is no credible historical evidence that Ross either made or had a hand in designing the American flag Without some kind of validation anyone can claim to communicate with the spirit of anyone Radford argues that Automatic writing should logically hinder not help spirit communication given spelling and grammar are more difficult than direct speech 42 Scientific studies Edit In an 1890 paper on hypnotism Morton Prince claims automatic writing is not a purely unconscious reflex act but the product of conscious individuality and further claims that the hand that is writing is under the control of a separate hypnotic personality during trances 43 44 Physician Charles Arthur Mercier in the British Medical Journal 1894 criticized the spiritualist interpretation of automatic writing concluding there is no need nor room for the agency of spirits and the invocation of such agency is the sign of a mind not merely unscientific but uninformed 45 Psychology professor Theodore Flournoy investigated the claim by nineteenth century medium Helene Smith Catherine Muller she did automatic writing to convey messages from Mars in Martian language Flournoy concluded her Martian language had a strong resemblance to Ms Smith s native language of French and her automatic writing was romances of the subliminal imagination derived largely from forgotten sources for example books read as a child He invented the term cryptomnesia to describe this phenomenon 46 In 1927 psychiatrist Harold Dearden wrote that automatic writing is a psychological method of tapping the unconscious mind and there is nothing mysterious about it 47 In 1986 A B Joseph investigated two female patients who were found to exhibit ictal hypergraphia 48 Automatic writing behavior was discovered by Dilek Evyapan and Emre Kumral in three patients with right hemispheric damage 49 A 2012 study of ten psychographers using single photon emission computed tomography showed differences in brain activity and writing complexity during alleged trance states vs normal state writing 50 Pop culture and media EditAutomatic writing is touted by medium Bonnie Page in a Sentinel and Enterprise article as a method of accessing claircognizance abilities 51 Automatic writing is featured prominently in the 1961 episode of Perry Mason The Case of the Meddling Medium Portions of Van Morrison s album Astral Weeks supposedly are inspired by dreams reveries and automatic writing 52 Czech director Jan Svankmajer claims he concocted the screenplay for his hybrid film Insect Hmyz in a fit of automatic writing 53 William S Burroughs has described his book Naked Lunch as automatic writing gone horribly wrong and believed he found his subconscious taken over by a hostile entity 54 55 In an interview in GQ David Byrne indicated an interest in automatic writing due to the influence of Brian Eno 56 Gallery Edit nbsp Automatic writing of Mina Crandon nbsp Automatic writing of Helene Smith nbsp Automatic writing of Mrs Thomas Everitt nbsp Example of automatic writing cited by magician William Marriott nbsp Automatic writing of Francis Ward MonckSee also EditAlien hand syndrome Neuropsychiatric disorder Automatic drawing Artistic inspiration Asemic writing Automatic speech Memoirs of a Suicide Chico Xavier Fuji planchette writing Joseph Sieber Benner Bicameral mentality Hypothesis in psychology Divided consciousness Dowsing Dual consciousness Graphology Left brain interpreter List of topics characterized as pseudoscience Matthew Manning British Author and HealerPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Oahspe A New Bible claimed to be written via automatic writing Spiritism Spiritism Spiritualist art Speaking in tongues Surrealist automatism Table turning XenoglossyReferences Edit a b Burgess C A Kirsch I Shane H Niederauer K L Graham S M amp Bacon A 1998 Facilitated Communication as an Ideomotor Response Psychological Science 9 71 74 a b Heap Michael 2002 Ideomotor Effect the Ouija Board Effect In Michael Shermer The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience ABC CLIO pp 127 129 ISBN 1 57607 654 7 a b Erickson Milton H Hershman Seymour Secter Irving I 2014 The Practical Application of Medical and Dental Hypnosis Routledge pp 68 69 ISBN 0 87630 570 2 a b c d Stollznow Karen 2011 Bad Language No 3 Skeptic Magazine Wang Chien ch uan Spirit Writing Groups in Modern China 1840 1937 Textual Production Public Teachings and Charity In Modern Chinese Religion II 1850 2015 edited by Vincent Goossaert Jan Kiely and John Lagerwey Leiden Brill vol 2 651 684 Haskel Peter 2001 Letting Go The Story of Zen Master Tōsui University of Hawaii Press pp 37 38 ISBN 0 8248 2440 7 Stollznow Karen 2014 Language Myths Mysteries and Magic Palgrave Macmillan p 114 ISBN 978 1 137 40484 8 a b Da Neos Frater 2003 Musings of a Thelemite Wright City MO Alchemy Press p 152 ISBN 978 0977691104 William Fletcher Barrett On the Threshold of the Unseen Cambridge University Press 2011 p 162 a b c Kontou Tatiana 23 March 2016 The Ashgate Research Companion to Nineteenth Century Spiritualism and the Occult Routledge ISBN 9781317042273 Dictionary Definition Retrieved 13 May 2020 Thomson Jay Hudson The Law of Psychic Phenomena Wildhern Press 2009 p 252 Heller Paul DICKENS in the SPIRIT WORLD the Brattleboro hoax rutlandherald com The Rutland Herald Retrieved 25 April 2018 Taine Hippolyte 1870 De l intelligence p 252 Retrieved 23 April 2018 Pessoa Fernando 1999 Correspondencia 1905 1922 Assirio amp Alvim pp 214 219 ISBN 978 85 7164 916 3 Marjorie Elizabeth Howes John S Kelly The Cambridge Companion to W B Yeats 2006 p 11 Hedayati Rad Arjang W B Yeats George Hyde Lees and the Automatic Script CSUN edu Retrieved 24 April 2018 Arthur Conan Doyle The New Revelation 2010 Reprint Edition p 47 Loxton James Loxton Daniel Great American Skeptics PDF Skeptic com Pat Linse Retrieved 24 April 2018 Chilvers Ian and Glaves Smith John A Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Art second edition Oxford and New York Oxford University Press 2009 p 45 46 ISBN 0199239665 Thacker Eugene 16 October 2013 THE PERIOD OF THE SLEEPING FITS Metamute org Retrieved 24 April 2018 The Surrealists Revolutionaries in art amp writing 1919 1935 Jemma Montagu Lily Dale Museum Nickell Joe September 2004 Abraham Lincoln An Instance of Alleged Spirit Writing csicop org Skeptical Inquirer Retrieved 25 April 2018 Nickell Joe 2007 Adventures in Paranormal Investigation University Press of Kentucky pp 42 47 ISBN 978 0 8131 2467 4 Sharps Matthew J Liao Schuyler W Herrera Megan R November 2014 Remembrance of Apocalypse Past The Psychology of True Believers When Nothing Happens csicop org Skeptical Inquirer Retrieved 25 April 2018 Debies Carl Jeffrey S November 2017 Pizzagate and Beyond Using Social Research to Understand Conspiracy Legends csicop org Skeptical Inquirer Retrieved 25 April 2018 Rabey Arthur Ivan 1979 The book of St Columb amp St Mawgan the story of two ancient parishes Buckingham Barracuda Books ISBN 978 0860230588 Retrieved 23 April 2018 Nickell Joe March 2001 Remotely Viewed The Charlie Jordan Case csicop org Skeptical Inquirer Retrieved 25 April 2018 Richardson Andy 28 March 2018 Controversial conspiracy theorist David Icke is doing a secret gig in Birmingham birminghammail co uk Retrieved 24 April 2018 Curty Christian A Letter of Our Lord to His Church True Life in God Retrieved 24 April 2018 Nickell Joe March 2011 Heaven s Stenographer The Guided Hand of Vassula Ryden Committee for Skeptical Inquiry Center for Inquiry Retrieved 25 April 2018 Dunn Scott C 2002 Automaticity and the Dictation of the Book of Mormon American Apocrypha Essays on the Book of Mormon Vogel Dan and Metcalfe Brent Lee Eds Salt Lake City Utah Signature Books ISBN 978 1560851516 OCLC 47870060 Crowley Aleister The Book of the Law Archive org Retrieved 23 April 2018 Seth Spirit Roberts Jane Butts Robert F 1994 Seth Speaks The Eternal Validity of the Soul New World Library ISBN 9781878424075 Retrieved 23 April 2018 A Course in Miracles A Course in Miracles 1975 1975 ISBN 9780670869756 Retrieved 23 April 2018 Walsch Neale D 29 October 1996 Conversations with God An Uncommon Dialogue Book 1 Tarcher Perigee ISBN 9780399142789 Retrieved 23 April 2018 Sue Lim Good Spirits Bad Spirits How to Distinguish Between Them 2002 p 82 Churton Tobias 2012 Aleister Crowley The Biography Spiritual Revolutionary Romantic Explorer Occult Master and Spy London Watkins Media Limited p 148 ISBN 9781780283845 Nickell Joe 2007 A Case of Automatic Writing From Robert G Ingersoll s Spirit Csicop org Retrieved 2014 10 11 Hines Terence 2003 Pseudoscience and the Paranormal Prometheus Books p 48 ISBN 1 57392 979 4 Radford Ben 2017 Investigating Ghosts The Scientific Search for Spirits Corrales New Mexico Rhombus Publishing Company pp 182 185 ISBN 9780936455167 Prince Morton 1975 Psychotherapy and Multiple Personality Selected Essays Volume 2 Harvard University Press pp 37 60 ISBN 978 0674722255 Retrieved 24 April 2018 Prince Morton 15 May 1890 Some of the Revelations of Hypnotism Post Hypnotic Suggestion Automatic Writing and Double Personality Boston Medical and Surgical Journal CXXII 20 463 467 doi 10 1056 NEJM189005151222001 Mercier Charles Arthur 1894 Automatic Writing British Medical Journal 1 1726 198 199 doi 10 1136 bmj 1 1726 198 PMC 2403845 PMID 20754638 Randi James 1995 An Encyclopedia of Claims Frauds and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural St Martin s Press p 22 ISBN 0 312 15119 5 Dearden Harold April 9 1927 How Spiritualists are Deluded The Graphic pp 50 51 Joseph A B 1986 A hypergraphic syndrome of automatic writing affective disorder and temporal lobe epilepsy in two patients The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 47 5 255 257 PMID 3084454 Retrieved 24 April 2018 Evyapan Dilek Kumral Emre 2001 Visuospatial Stimulus Bound Automatic Writing Behavior A Right Hemispheric Stroke Syndrome Neurology 56 245 247 Perez Julio Fernando Moreira Almeida Alexander Caixeta Leonardo Leao Frederico Newberg Andrew 16 November 2012 Neuroimaging during Trance State A Contribution to the Study of Dissociation PLOS ONE 7 11 e49360 Bibcode 2012PLoSO 749360P doi 10 1371 journal pone 0049360 PMC 3500298 PMID 23166648 Page Bonnie 17 April 2018 Know something without knowing why You could be claircognizant Sentinel amp Enterprise Retrieved 24 April 2018 Michaud Jon 7 March 2018 The Miracle of Van Morrison s Astral Weeks The New Yorker Retrieved 24 April 2018 Mintzer Jordan 2 February 2018 Insect Hmyz Film Review Rotterdam 2018 hollywoodreporter com Retrieved 24 April 2018 William S Burroughs amp Surrealist Writing Methods knowledgelost org Retrieved 25 April 2018 Wills David S 21 September 2017 What the Beats can teach us about writing beatdom com Retrieved 25 April 2018 Pappademas Alex 16 April 2018 This Must Be David Byrne Gq Retrieved 24 April 2018 Further reading EditCarpenter William Benjamin 12 March 1852 On the Influence of Suggestion in Modifying and directing Muscular Movement independently of Volition Notices of the Meetings Royal Institution of Great Britain Retrieved 2 March 2011 The document is in English but the linked website is in German Downey June E Anderson John E 1915 Automatic Writing American Journal of Psychology 26 2 161 doi 10 2307 1413248 JSTOR 1413248 Joseph A B 1986 A hypergraphic syndrome of automatic writing affective disorder and temporal lobe epilepsy in two patients The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 47 5 255 257 ISSN 0160 6689 PMID 3084454 Walsh E Mehta M A Oakley D A Guilmette D N Gabay A Halligan P W Deeley Q 2014 Using suggestion to model different types of automatic writing Consciousness and Cognition 26 24 36 doi 10 1016 j concog 2014 02 008 ISSN 1053 8100 PMID 24657632 S2CID 5200153 Zusne Leonard Jones Warren H 1989 Anomalistic psychology a study of magical thinking 2nd ed Hillsdale N J L Erlbaum Associates ISBN 0 8058 0507 9 OCLC 19264110 Carroll Robert Todd 2003 The skeptic s dictionary a collection of strange beliefs amusing deceptions and dangerous delusions Hoboken NJ Wiley ISBN 0 471 48088 6 OCLC 55751218 Randi James 1997 An encyclopedia of claims frauds and hoaxes of the occult and supernatural James Randi s decidedly skeptical definitions of alternative realities 1st ed New York St Martin s Griffin ISBN 0 312 15119 5 OCLC 35978760 Shermer Michael 1 February 2011 Houdini s Skeptical Advice Just Because Something s Unexplained Doesn t Mean It s Supernatural Scientific American 304 2 89 doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0211 89 PMID 21319549 Retrieved 13 May 2020 External links EditChisholm Hugh ed 1911 Automatic Writing Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Automatic writing amp oldid 1173723778, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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