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Wikipedia

Ghost

In folklore, a ghost is the soul or spirit of a dead person or non-human animal that is believed to be able to appear to the living. In ghostlore, descriptions of ghosts vary widely, from an invisible presence to translucent or barely visible wispy shapes to realistic, lifelike forms. The deliberate attempt to contact the spirit of a deceased person is known as necromancy, or in spiritism as a séance. Other terms associated with it are apparition, haunt, phantom, poltergeist, shade, specter, spirit, spook, wraith, demon, and ghoul.

An engraving of the Hammersmith Ghost appears in Roger Kirby's Wonderful and Scientific Museum, a magazine published in 1804. The "ghost" turned out to be an old local cobbler who used a white sheet to get back at his apprentice for scaring his grandchildren.[1]

The belief in the existence of an afterlife, as well as manifestations of the spirits of the dead, is widespread, dating back to animism or ancestor worship in pre-literate cultures. Certain religious practices—funeral rites, exorcisms, and some practices of spiritualism and ritual magic—are specifically designed to rest the spirits of the dead. Ghosts are generally described as solitary, human-like essences, though stories of ghostly armies and the ghosts of animals other than humans have also been recounted.[2][3] They are believed to haunt particular locations, objects, or people they were associated with in life. According to a 2009 study by the Pew Research Center, 18% of Americans say they have seen a ghost.[4]

The overwhelming consensus of science is that there is no proof that ghosts exist.[5] Their existence is impossible to falsify,[5] and ghost hunting has been classified as pseudoscience.[6][7][8] Despite centuries of investigation, there is no scientific evidence that any location is inhabited by the spirits of the dead.[6][9] Historically, certain toxic and psychoactive plants (such as datura and hyoscyamus niger), whose use has long been associated with necromancy and the underworld, have been shown to contain anticholinergic compounds that are pharmacologically linked to dementia (specifically DLB) as well as histological patterns of neurodegeneration.[10][11] Recent research has indicated that ghost sightings may be related to degenerative brain diseases such as Alzheimer's disease.[12] Common prescription medication and over-the-counter drugs (such as sleep aids) may also, in rare instances, cause ghost-like hallucinations, particularly zolpidem and diphenhydramine.[13] Older reports linked carbon monoxide poisoning to ghost-like hallucinations.[14]

In folklore studies, ghosts fall within the motif index designation E200–E599 ("Ghosts and other revenants").

Terminology

The English word ghost continues Old English gāst. Stemming from Proto-Germanic *gaistaz, it is cognate with Old Frisian gāst, Old Saxon gēst, Old Dutch gēst, and Old High German geist. Although this form is not attested in North Germanic and East Germanic languages (the equivalent word in Gothic is ahma, Old Norse has andi m., önd f.), it appears to be a dental suffix derivative of pre-Germanic *ghois-d-oz ('fury, anger'), which is comparable to Sanskrit héḍas ('anger') and Avestan zōižda- ('terrible, ugly'). The prior Proto-Indo-European form is reconstructed as *ǵʰéys-d-os, from the root *ǵʰéys-, which is reflected in Old Norse geisa ('to rage') and *geiski ('fear'; cf. geiskafullr 'full of fear'), in Gothic usgaisjan ('to terrify') and usgaisnan ('to be terrified'), as well as in Avestan zōiš- (cf. zōišnu 'shivering, trembling').[15][16][17]

The Germanic word is recorded as masculine only, but likely continues a neuter s-stem. The original meaning of the Germanic word would thus have been an animating principle of the mind, in particular capable of excitation and fury (compare óðr). In Germanic paganism, "Germanic Mercury", and the later Odin, was at the same time the conductor of the dead and the "lord of fury" leading the Wild Hunt.

Besides denoting the human spirit or soul, both of the living and the deceased, the Old English word is used as a synonym of Latin spiritus also in the meaning of "breath" or "blast" from the earliest attestations (9th century). It could also denote any good or evil spirit, such as angels and demons; the Anglo-Saxon gospel refers to the demonic possession of Matthew 12:43 as se unclæna gast. Also from the Old English period, the word could denote the spirit of God, viz. the "Holy Ghost".

The now-prevailing sense of "the soul of a deceased person, spoken of as appearing in a visible form" only emerges in Middle English (14th century). The modern noun does, however, retain a wider field of application, extending on one hand to "soul", "spirit", "vital principle", "mind", or "psyche", the seat of feeling, thought, and moral judgement; on the other hand used figuratively of any shadowy outline, or fuzzy or unsubstantial image; in optics, photography, and cinematography especially, a flare, secondary image, or spurious signal.[18]

The synonym spook is a Dutch loanword, akin to Low German spôk (of uncertain etymology); it entered the English language via American English in the 19th century.[19][20][21][22] Alternative words in modern usage include spectre (altn. specter; from Latin spectrum), the Scottish wraith (of obscure origin), phantom (via French ultimately from Greek phantasma, compare fantasy) and apparition. The term shade in classical mythology translates Greek σκιά,[23] or Latin umbra,[24] in reference to the notion of spirits in the Greek underworld. The term poltergeist is a German word, literally a "noisy ghost", for a spirit said to manifest itself by invisibly moving and influencing objects.[25]

Wraith is a Scots word for ghost, spectre, or apparition. It appeared in Scottish Romanticist literature, and acquired the more general or figurative sense of portent or omen. In 18th- to 19th-century Scottish literature, it also applied to aquatic spirits. The word has no commonly accepted etymology; the OED notes "of obscure origin" only.[26] An association with the verb writhe was the etymology favored by J. R. R. Tolkien.[27] Tolkien's use of the word in the naming of the creatures known as the Ringwraiths has influenced later usage in fantasy literature. Bogey[28] or bogy/bogie is a term for a ghost, and appears in Scottish poet John Mayne's Hallowe'en in 1780.[29][30]

A revenant is a deceased person returning from the dead to haunt the living, either as a disembodied ghost or alternatively as an animated ("undead") corpse. Also related is the concept of a fetch, the visible ghost or spirit of a person yet alive.

Typology

 
Relief from a carved funerary lekythos at Athens showing Hermes as psychopomp conducting the soul of the deceased, Myrrhine into Hades (ca. 430-420 B.C.)

Anthropological context

A notion of the transcendent, supernatural, or numinous, usually involving entities like ghosts, demons, or deities, is a cultural universal.[31] In pre-literate folk religions, these beliefs are often summarized under animism and ancestor worship. Some people believe the ghost or spirit never leaves Earth until there is no-one left to remember the one who died.[32]

In many cultures, malignant, restless ghosts are distinguished from the more benign spirits involved in ancestor worship.[33]

Ancestor worship typically involves rites intended to prevent revenants, vengeful spirits of the dead, imagined as starving and envious of the living. Strategies for preventing revenants may either include sacrifice, i.e., giving the dead food and drink to pacify them, or magical banishment of the deceased to force them not to return. Ritual feeding of the dead is performed in traditions like the Chinese Ghost Festival or the Western All Souls' Day. Magical banishment of the dead is present in many of the world's burial customs. The bodies found in many tumuli (kurgan) had been ritually bound before burial,[34] and the custom of binding the dead persists, for example, in rural Anatolia.[35]

Nineteenth-century anthropologist James Frazer stated in his classic work The Golden Bough that souls were seen as the creature within that animated the body.[36]

Ghosts and the afterlife

Although the human soul was sometimes symbolically or literally depicted in ancient cultures as a bird or other animal, it appears to have been widely held that the soul was an exact reproduction of the body in every feature, even down to clothing the person wore. This is depicted in artwork from various ancient cultures, including such works as the Egyptian Book of the Dead, which shows deceased people in the afterlife appearing much as they did before death, including the style of dress.

Fear of ghosts

 
Yūrei (Japanese ghost) from the Hyakkai Zukan, ca. 1737

While deceased ancestors are universally regarded as venerable, and often believed to have a continued presence in some form of afterlife, the spirit of a deceased person that persists in the material world (a ghost) is regarded as an unnatural or undesirable state of affairs and the idea of ghosts or revenants is associated with a reaction of fear. This is universally the case in pre-modern folk cultures, but fear of ghosts also remains an integral aspect of the modern ghost story, Gothic horror, and other horror fiction dealing with the supernatural.

Common attributes

Another widespread belief concerning ghosts is that they are composed of a misty, airy, or subtle material. Anthropologists link this idea to early beliefs that ghosts were the person within the person (the person's spirit), most noticeable in ancient cultures as a person's breath, which upon exhaling in colder climates appears visibly as a white mist.[32] This belief may have also fostered the metaphorical meaning of "breath" in certain languages, such as the Latin spiritus and the Greek pneuma, which by analogy became extended to mean the soul. In the Bible, God is depicted as synthesising Adam, as a living soul, from the dust of the Earth and the breath of God.

In many traditional accounts, ghosts were often thought to be deceased people looking for vengeance (vengeful ghosts), or imprisoned on earth for bad things they did during life. The appearance of a ghost has often been regarded as an omen or portent of death. Seeing one's own ghostly double or "fetch" is a related omen of death.[37]

 
Union Cemetery in Easton, Connecticut is home to the legend of the White Lady.

White ladies were reported to appear in many rural areas, and supposed to have died tragically or suffered trauma in life. White Lady legends are found around the world. Common to many of them is the theme of losing a child or husband and a sense of purity, as opposed to the Lady in Red ghost that is mostly attributed to a jilted lover or prostitute. The White Lady ghost is often associated with an individual family line or regarded as a harbinger of death similar to a banshee.[38][39][needs context]

Legends of ghost ships have existed since the 18th century; most notable of these is the Flying Dutchman. This theme has been used in literature in The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Coleridge.

Ghosts are often depicted as being covered in a shroud and/or dragging chains.[40]

Locale

A place where ghosts are reported is described as haunted, and often seen as being inhabited by spirits of deceased who may have been former residents or were familiar with the property. Supernatural activity inside homes is said to be mainly associated with violent or tragic events in the building's past such as murder, accidental death, or suicide—sometimes in the recent or ancient past. However, not all hauntings are at a place of a violent death, or even on violent grounds. Many cultures and religions believe the essence of a being, such as the 'soul', continues to exist. Some religious views argue that the 'spirits' of those who have died have not 'passed over' and are trapped inside the property where their memories and energy are strong.

History

 
Ancient Sumerian cylinder seal impression showing the god Dumuzid being tortured in the Underworld by galla demons

Ancient Near East and Egypt

There are many references to ghosts in Mesopotamian religions – the religions of Sumer, Babylon, Assyria, and other early states in Mesopotamia. Traces of these beliefs survive in the later Abrahamic religions that came to dominate the region.[41] Ghosts were thought to be created at time of death, taking on the memory and personality of the dead person. They traveled to the netherworld, where they were assigned a position, and led an existence similar in some ways to that of the living. Relatives of the dead were expected to make offerings of food and drink to the dead to ease their conditions. If they did not, the ghosts could inflict misfortune and illness on the living. Traditional healing practices ascribed a variety of illnesses to the action of ghosts, while others were caused by gods or demons.[42]

 
Egyptian Akh glyph – The soul and spirit re-united after death

There was widespread belief in ghosts in ancient Egyptian culture. The Hebrew Bible contains few references to ghosts, associating spiritism with forbidden occult activities cf. Deuteronomy 18:11. The most notable reference is in the First Book of Samuel (I Samuel 28:3–19 KJV), in which a disguised King Saul has the Witch of Endor summon the spirit or ghost of Samuel.

The soul and spirit were believed to exist after death, with the ability to assist or harm the living, and the possibility of a second death. Over a period of more than 2,500 years, Egyptian beliefs about the nature of the afterlife evolved constantly. Many of these beliefs were recorded in hieroglyph inscriptions, papyrus scrolls and tomb paintings. The Egyptian Book of the Dead compiles some of the beliefs from different periods of ancient Egyptian history.[43] In modern times, the fanciful concept of a mummy coming back to life and wreaking vengeance when disturbed has spawned a whole genre of horror stories and films.[44]

Classical Antiquity

Archaic and Classical Greece

 
Apulian red-figure bell krater depicting the ghost of Clytemnestra waking the Erinyes, date unknown

Ghosts appeared in Homer's Odyssey and Iliad, in which they were described as vanishing "as a vapor, gibbering and whining into the earth". Homer's ghosts had little interaction with the world of the living. Periodically they were called upon to provide advice or prophecy, but they do not appear to be particularly feared. Ghosts in the classical world often appeared in the form of vapor or smoke, but at other times they were described as being substantial, appearing as they had been at the time of death, complete with the wounds that killed them.[45]

By the 5th century BC, classical Greek ghosts had become haunting, frightening creatures who could work to either good or evil purposes. The spirit of the dead was believed to hover near the resting place of the corpse, and cemeteries were places the living avoided. The dead were to be ritually mourned through public ceremony, sacrifice, and libations, or else they might return to haunt their families. The ancient Greeks held annual feasts to honor and placate the spirits of the dead, to which the family ghosts were invited, and after which they were "firmly invited to leave until the same time next year."[46]

The 5th-century BC play Oresteia includes an appearance of the ghost of Clytemnestra, one of the first ghosts to appear in a work of fiction.[47]

Roman Empire and Late Antiquity

 
Athenodorus and the Ghost, by Henry Justice Ford, c.1900

The ancient Romans believed a ghost could be used to exact revenge on an enemy by scratching a curse on a piece of lead or pottery and placing it into a grave.[48]

Plutarch, in the 1st century AD, described the haunting of the baths at Chaeronea by the ghost of a murdered man. The ghost's loud and frightful groans caused the people of the town to seal up the doors of the building.[49] Another celebrated account of a haunted house from the ancient classical world is given by Pliny the Younger (c. 50 AD).[50] Pliny describes the haunting of a house in Athens, which was bought by the Stoic philosopher Athenodorus, who lived about 100 years before Pliny. Knowing that the house was supposedly haunted, Athenodorus intentionally set up his writing desk in the room where the apparition was said to appear and sat there writing until late at night when he was disturbed by a ghost bound in chains. He followed the ghost outside where it indicated a spot on the ground. When Athenodorus later excavated the area, a shackled skeleton was unearthed. The haunting ceased when the skeleton was given a proper reburial.[51] The writers Plautus and Lucian also wrote stories about haunted houses.

In the New Testament, according to Luke 24:37–39,[52] following his resurrection, Jesus was forced to persuade the Disciples that he was not a ghost (some versions of the Bible, such as the KJV and NKJV, use the term "spirit"). Similarly, Jesus' followers at first believed he was a ghost (spirit) when they saw him walking on water.

One of the first persons to express disbelief in ghosts was Lucian of Samosata in the 2nd century AD. In his satirical novel The Lover of Lies (circa 150 AD), he relates how Democritus "the learned man from Abdera in Thrace" lived in a tomb outside the city gates to prove that cemeteries were not haunted by the spirits of the departed. Lucian relates how he persisted in his disbelief despite practical jokes perpetrated by "some young men of Abdera" who dressed up in black robes with skull masks to frighten him.[53] This account by Lucian notes something about the popular classical expectation of how a ghost should look.

In the 5th century AD, the Christian priest Constantius of Lyon recorded an instance of the recurring theme of the improperly buried dead who come back to haunt the living, and who can only cease their haunting when their bones have been discovered and properly reburied.[54]

Middle Ages

Ghosts reported in medieval Europe tended to fall into two categories: the souls of the dead, or demons. The souls of the dead returned for a specific purpose. Demonic ghosts existed only to torment or tempt the living. The living could tell them apart by demanding their purpose in the name of Jesus Christ. The soul of a dead person would divulge its mission, while a demonic ghost would be banished at the sound of the Holy Name.[55]

Most ghosts were souls assigned to Purgatory, condemned for a specific period to atone for their transgressions in life. Their penance was generally related to their sin. For example, the ghost of a man who had been abusive to his servants was condemned to tear off and swallow bits of his own tongue; the ghost of another man, who had neglected to leave his cloak to the poor, was condemned to wear the cloak, now "heavy as a church tower". These ghosts appeared to the living to ask for prayers to end their suffering. Other dead souls returned to urge the living to confess their sins before their own deaths.[56]

Medieval European ghosts were more substantial than ghosts described in the Victorian age, and there are accounts of ghosts being wrestled with and physically restrained until a priest could arrive to hear its confession. Some were less solid, and could move through walls. Often they were described as paler and sadder versions of the person they had been while alive, and dressed in tattered gray rags. The vast majority of reported sightings were male.[57]

There were some reported cases of ghostly armies, fighting battles at night in the forest, or in the remains of an Iron Age hillfort, as at Wandlebury, near Cambridge, England. Living knights were sometimes challenged to single combat by phantom knights, which vanished when defeated.[58]

From the medieval period an apparition of a ghost is recorded from 1211, at the time of the Albigensian Crusade.[59] Gervase of Tilbury, Marshal of Arles, wrote that the image of Guilhem, a boy recently murdered in the forest, appeared in his cousin's home in Beaucaire, near Avignon. This series of "visits" lasted all of the summer. Through his cousin, who spoke for him, the boy allegedly held conversations with anyone who wished, until the local priest requested to speak to the boy directly, leading to an extended disquisition on theology. The boy narrated the trauma of death and the unhappiness of his fellow souls in Purgatory, and reported that God was most pleased with the ongoing Crusade against the Cathar heretics, launched three years earlier. The time of the Albigensian Crusade in southern France was marked by intense and prolonged warfare, this constant bloodshed and dislocation of populations being the context for these reported visits by the murdered boy.

Haunted houses are featured in the 9th-century Arabian Nights (such as the tale of Ali the Cairene and the Haunted House in Baghdad).[60]

European Renaissance to Romanticism

 
"Hamlet and his father's ghost" by Henry Fuseli (1796 drawing). The ghost is wearing stylized plate armor in 17th-century style, including a morion type helmet and tassets. Depicting ghosts as wearing armor, to suggest a sense of antiquity, was common in Elizabethan theater.

Renaissance magic took a revived interest in the occult, including necromancy. In the era of the Reformation and Counter Reformation, there was frequently a backlash against unwholesome interest in the dark arts, typified by writers such as Thomas Erastus.[61] The Swiss Reformed pastor Ludwig Lavater supplied one of the most frequently reprinted books of the period with his Of Ghosts and Spirits Walking By Night.[62]

The Child Ballad "Sweet William's Ghost" (1868) recounts the story of a ghost returning to his fiancée begging her to free him from his promise to marry her. He cannot marry her because he is dead but her refusal would mean his damnation. This reflects a popular British belief that the dead haunted their lovers if they took up with a new love without some formal release.[63] "The Unquiet Grave" expresses a belief even more widespread, found in various locations over Europe: ghosts can stem from the excessive grief of the living, whose mourning interferes with the dead's peaceful rest.[64] In many folktales from around the world, the hero arranges for the burial of a dead man. Soon after, he gains a companion who aids him and, in the end, the hero's companion reveals that he is in fact the dead man.[65] Instances of this include the Italian fairy tale "Fair Brow" and the Swedish "The Bird 'Grip'".

Modern period of western culture

Spiritualist movement

 
By 1853, when the popular song Spirit Rappings was published, Spiritualism was an object of intense curiosity.

Spiritualism is a monotheistic belief system or religion, postulating a belief in God, but with a distinguishing feature of belief that spirits of the dead residing in the spirit world can be contacted by "mediums", who can then provide information about the afterlife.[66]

Spiritualism developed in the United States and reached its peak growth in membership from the 1840s to the 1920s, especially in English-language countries.[67][68] By 1897, it was said to have more than eight million followers in the United States and Europe,[69] mostly drawn from the middle and upper classes, while the corresponding movement in continental Europe and Latin America is known as Spiritism.

The religion flourished for a half century without canonical texts or formal organization, attaining cohesion by periodicals, tours by trance lecturers, camp meetings, and the missionary activities of accomplished mediums.[70] Many prominent Spiritualists were women. Most followers supported causes such as the abolition of slavery and women's suffrage.[67] By the late 1880s, credibility of the informal movement weakened, due to accusations of fraud among mediums, and formal Spiritualist organizations began to appear.[67] Spiritualism is currently practiced primarily through various denominational Spiritualist churches in the United States and United Kingdom.

Spiritism

Spiritism, or French spiritualism, is based on the five books of the Spiritist Codification written by French educator Hypolite Léon Denizard Rivail under the pseudonym Allan Kardec reporting séances in which he observed a series of phenomena that he attributed to incorporeal intelligence (spirits). His assumption of spirit communication was validated by many contemporaries, among them many scientists and philosophers who attended séances and studied the phenomena. His work was later extended by writers like Leon Denis, Arthur Conan Doyle, Camille Flammarion, Ernesto Bozzano, Chico Xavier, Divaldo Pereira Franco, Waldo Vieira, Johannes Greber,[71] and others.

Spiritism has adherents in many countries throughout the world, including Spain, United States, Canada,[72] Japan, Germany, France, England, Argentina, Portugal, and especially Brazil, which has the largest proportion and greatest number of followers.[73]

Scientific view

The physician John Ferriar wrote "An Essay Towards a Theory of Apparitions" in 1813 in which he argued that sightings of ghosts were the result of optical illusions. Later the French physician Alexandre Jacques François Brière de Boismont published On Hallucinations: Or, the Rational History of Apparitions, Dreams, Ecstasy, Magnetism, and Somnambulism in 1845 in which he claimed sightings of ghosts were the result of hallucinations.[74][75]

 
A 1901 depiction of ball lightning

David Turner, a retired physical chemist, suggested that ball lightning could cause inanimate objects to move erratically.[76]

Joe Nickell of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry wrote that there was no credible scientific evidence that any location was inhabited by spirits of the dead.[77] Limitations of human perception and ordinary physical explanations can account for ghost sightings; for example, air pressure changes in a home causing doors to slam, humidity changes causing boards to creak, condensation in electrical connections causing intermittent behavior, or lights from a passing car reflected through a window at night. Pareidolia, an innate tendency to recognize patterns in random perceptions, is what some skeptics believe causes people to believe that they have 'seen ghosts'.[78] Reports of ghosts "seen out of the corner of the eye" may be accounted for by the sensitivity of human peripheral vision. According to Nickell, peripheral vision can easily mislead, especially late at night when the brain is tired and more likely to misinterpret sights and sounds.[79] Nickell further states, "science cannot substantiate the existence of a 'life energy' that could survive death without dissipating or function at all without a brain... why would... clothes survive?'" He asks, if ghosts glide, then why do people claim to hear them with "heavy footfalls"? Nickell says that ghosts act the same way as "dreams, memories, and imaginings, because they too are mental creations. They are evidence - not of another world, but of this real and natural one."[80]

Benjamin Radford from the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry and author of the 2017 book Investigating Ghosts: The Scientific Search for Spirits writes that "ghost hunting is the world's most popular paranormal pursuit" yet, to date, ghost hunters cannot agree on what a ghost is, or offer proof that they exist; "it's all speculation and guesswork". He writes that it would be "useful and important to distinguish between types of spirits and apparitions. Until then it's merely a parlor game distracting amateur ghost hunters from the task at hand."[81]

According to research in anomalistic psychology visions of ghosts may arise from hypnagogic hallucinations ("waking dreams" experienced in the transitional states to and from sleep).[82] In a study of two experiments into alleged hauntings (Wiseman et al.. 2003) came to the conclusion "that people consistently report unusual experiences in 'haunted' areas because of environmental factors, which may differ across locations." Some of these factors included "the variance of local magnetic fields, size of location and lighting level stimuli of which witnesses may not be consciously aware".[83]

Some researchers, such as Michael Persinger of Laurentian University, Canada, have speculated that changes in geomagnetic fields (created, e.g., by tectonic stresses in the Earth's crust or solar activity) could stimulate the brain's temporal lobes and produce many of the experiences associated with hauntings.[84] Sound is thought to be another cause of supposed sightings. Richard Lord and Richard Wiseman have concluded that infrasound can cause humans to experience bizarre feelings in a room, such as anxiety, extreme sorrow, a feeling of being watched, or even the chills.[85] Carbon monoxide poisoning, which can cause changes in perception of the visual and auditory systems,[86] was speculated upon as a possible explanation for haunted houses as early as 1921.

People who experience sleep paralysis often report seeing ghosts during their experiences. Neuroscientists Baland Jalal and V.S. Ramachandran have recently proposed neurological theories for why people hallucinate ghosts during sleep paralysis. Their theories emphasize the role of the parietal lobe and mirror neurons in triggering such ghostly hallucinations.[87]

By religion

Judaism

 
Witch of Endor by Nikolai Ge, depicting King Saul encountering the ghost of Samuel (1857)

The Hebrew Bible contains several references to owb (Hebrew: אוֹב), which are in a few places akin to shades of classical mythology but mostly describing mediums in connection with necromancy and spirit-consulting, which are grouped with witchcraft and other forms of divination under the category of forbidden occult activities.[88] The most notable reference to a shade is in the First Book of Samuel,[89] in which a disguised King Saul has the Witch of Endor conduct a seance to summon the dead prophet Samuel. A similar term appearing throughout the scriptures is repha'(im) (Hebrew: רְפָאִים), which while describing the race of "giants" formerly inhabiting Canaan in many verses, also refer to (the spirits of) dead ancestors of Sheol (like shades) in many others such as in the Book of Isaiah.[90]

Jewish mythology and folkloric traditions describe dybbuks, malicious possessing spirits believed to be the dislocated soul of a dead person. However, the term does not appear in the Kabbalah or Talmudic literature, where it is rather called an "evil spirit" or ru'aḥ tezazit (Hebrew: רוּחַ טוּמְאָה). It supposedly leaves the host body once it has accomplished its goal, sometimes after being helped.[91][92][93]

Christianity

In the New Testament, Jesus has to persuade the Disciples that he is not a ghost following the resurrection, Luke 24:37–39 (some versions of the Bible, such as the KJV and NKJV, use the term "spirit"). Similarly, Jesus' followers at first believe he is a ghost (spirit) when they see him walking on water.[94]

Some Christian denominations[which?] consider ghosts as beings who while tied to earth, no longer live on the material plane and linger in an intermediate state before continuing their journey to heaven.[95][96][97][98] On occasion, God would allow the souls in this state to return to earth to warn the living of the need for repentance.[99] Christians are taught that it is sinful to attempt to conjure or control spirits in accordance with Deuteronomy XVIII: 9–12.[100][101]

Some ghosts are actually said to be demons in disguise, who the Church teaches, in accordance with I Timothy 4:1, that they "come to deceive people and draw them away from God and into bondage."[102] As a result, attempts to contact the dead may lead to unwanted contact with a demon or an unclean spirit, as was said to occur in the case of Robbie Mannheim, a fourteen-year-old Maryland youth.[103] The Seventh-Day Adventist view is that a "soul" is not equivalent to "spirit" or "ghost" (depending on the Bible version), and that save for the Holy Spirit, all spirits or ghosts are demons in disguise. Furthermore, they teach that in accordance with (Genesis 2:7, Ecclesiastes 12:7), there are only two components to a "soul", neither of which survives death, with each returning to its respective source.

Christadelphians and Jehovah's Witnesses reject the view of a living, conscious soul after death.[104]

Islam

 
Muhammad ibn Muhammad Shakir Ruzmah-'i Nathani - A Soul Symbolized as an Angel

Rūḥ (Arabic: روح; plural arwah) is a person's immortal, essential self — pneuma, i.e. the "spirit" or "soul".[105] The term is also used for ghosts.[106] The souls of the deceased dwell in barzakh. Only a barrier in Quran, in Islamic tradition this refers to an entire intermediary world between the living and the afterlife. The world, especially cemeteries, are perforated with several gateways to the otherworld or barzakh.[107] In rare occasions, the dead can appear to the living.[108] Pure souls, such as the souls of saints, are commonly addressed as rūḥ, while impure souls seeking for revenge, are often addressed as afarit.[109] An inappropriate burial can also cause a soul to stay in this world, whereupon roaming the earth as a ghost. Since the just souls remain close to their tomb, some people try to communicate with them in order to gain hidden knowledge. Contact with the dead is not the same as contact with jinn, who alike could provide knowledge concealed from living humans.[110] Many encounters with ghosts are related to dreams supposed to occur in the realm of symbols.

Belief in spirits have not ceased to exist in Muslim belief. Smile of new-born babies is sometimes used as a proof for sighting spirits, like ghosts. However, the connection to the other world fades during life on earth but is resumed after death. Once again, smiling of dying people is considered as evidence for recognizing the spirit of their beloved ones. Yet, Muslims who affirm the existence of ghosts, are carefully when interacting with spirits, as the ghosts of humans can be as bad as the jinn. Worst of all, however, are the devils.

Muslim authors, like Ghazali, Ibn Qayyim and Suyuti wrote in more details about the life of ghosts. Ibn Qayyim and Suyuti assert, when a soul desires to turn back to earth long enough, it is gradually released from restrictions of Barzakh and able to move freely. Each spirit experiences afterlife in accordance with their deeds and condictions in the earthly life. Evil souls will find the afterlife as painful and punishment, imprisoned until God allows them to interact with other others. Good souls are not restricted. They are free to come visit other souls and even come down to lower regions. The higher planes (ʿilliyyīn) are considered to be broader than the lower ones, the lowest being the most narrow (sijjīn). The spiritual space is not thought as spatial, but reflects the capacity of the spirit. The more pure the spirit gets, the more it is able to interact with other souls and thus reaches a broader degree of freedom.[111]

The Ismailite Philosopher Nasir Khusraw conjectured that evil human souls turn into demons, when their bodies die, because of their intense attachment to the bodily world. They were worse than the jinn and fairies, who in turn could become devils, if they pursue evil.[112] A similar thought is recorded by Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi.[113]

The ghosts of saints are thought to transmit blessings from God through the heavenly realm to whose who visit their graves. Therefore, visiting the graves of saints and prophets became a major ritual in Muslim spirituality.[114]

Buddhism

In Buddhism, there are a number of planes of existence into which a person can be reborn, one of which is the realm of hungry ghosts.[115] Buddhist celebrate the Ghost Festival[116] as an expression of compassion, one of Buddhist virtues. If the hungry ghosts are fed by non-relatives, they would not bother the community.

By culture

African folklore

For the Igbo people, a man is simultaneously a physical and spiritual entity. However, it is his spirited dimension that is eternal.[117] In the Akan conception, we witness five parts of the human personality. We have the Nipadua (body), the Okra (soul), Sunsum (spirit), Ntoro (character from father), Mogya (character from mother).[117] The Humr people of southwestern Kordofan, Sudan consume the drink Umm Nyolokh, which is prepared from the liver and bone marrow of giraffes. Richard Rudgley[118] hypothesises that Umm Nyolokh may contain DMT and certain online websites further theorise that giraffe liver might owe its putative psychoactivity to substances derived from psychoactive plants, such as Acacia spp. consumed by the animal. The drink is said to cause hallucinations of giraffes, believed by the Humr to be the ghosts of giraffes.[119][120]

European folklore

 
Macbeth Seeing the Ghost of Banquo by Théodore Chassériau

Belief in ghosts in European folklore is characterized by the recurring fear of "returning" or revenant deceased who may harm the living. This includes the Scandinavian gjenganger, the Romanian strigoi, the Serbian vampir, the Greek vrykolakas, etc. In Scandinavian and Finnish tradition, ghosts appear in corporeal form, and their supernatural nature is given away by behavior rather than appearance. In fact, in many stories they are first mistaken for the living. They may be mute, appear and disappear suddenly, or leave no footprints or other traces.

English folklore is particularly notable for its numerous haunted locations.

Belief in the soul and an afterlife remained near universal until the emergence of atheism in the 18th century.[citation needed] In the 19th century, spiritism resurrected "belief in ghosts" as the object of systematic inquiry, and popular opinion in Western culture remains divided.[121]

South and Southeast Asia

Indian subcontinent

A bhoot or bhut (Hindi: भूत, Gujarati: ભૂત, Urdu: بهوت, Bengali: ভূত, Odia: ଭୂତ) is a supernatural creature, usually the ghost of a deceased person, in the popular culture, literature and some ancient texts of the Indian subcontinent.

North India

Interpretations of how bhoots come into existence vary by region and community, but they are usually considered to be perturbed and restless due to some factor that prevents them from moving on (to transmigration, non-being, nirvana, or heaven or hell, depending on tradition). This could be a violent death, unsettled matters in their lives, or simply the failure of their survivors to perform proper funerals.[122]

In Central and Northern India, ojha or spirit guides play a central role.[citation needed] It duly happens when in the night someone sleeps and decorates something on the wall, and they say that if one sees the spirit the next thing in the morning he will become a spirit too, and that to a headless spirit and the soul of the body will remain the dark with the dark lord from the spirits who reside in the body of every human in Central and Northern India. It is also believed that if someone calls one from behind, never turn back and see because the spirit may catch the human to make it a spirit. Other types of spirits in Hindu mythology include Baital, an evil spirit who haunts cemeteries and takes demonic possession of corpses, and Pishacha, a type of flesh-eating demon.

Bengal and East India

There are many kinds of ghosts and similar supernatural entities that frequently come up in Bengali culture, its folklores and form an important part in Bengali peoples' socio-cultural beliefs and superstitions. It is believed that the spirits of those who cannot find peace in the afterlife or die unnatural deaths remain on Earth. The word Pret (from Sanskrit) is also used in Bengali to mean ghost. In Bengal, ghosts are believed to be the spirit after death of an unsatisfied human being or a soul of a person who dies in unnatural or abnormal circumstances (like murder, suicide or accident). Even it is believed that other animals and creatures can also be turned into ghost after their death.

Thailand

 
Krasue, a Thai female ghost known as Ap in Khmer

Ghosts in Thailand are part of local folklore and have now become part of the popular culture of the country. Phraya Anuman Rajadhon was the first Thai scholar who seriously studied Thai folk beliefs and took notes on the nocturnal village spirits of Thailand. He established that, since such spirits were not represented in paintings or drawings, they were purely based on descriptions of popular orally transmitted traditional stories. Therefore, most of the contemporary iconography of ghosts such as Nang Tani, Nang Takian,[123] Krasue, Krahang,[124] Phi Hua Kat, Phi Pop, Phi Phong, Phi Phraya, and Mae Nak has its origins in Thai films that have now become classics.[125][126] The most feared spirit in Thailand is Phi Tai Hong, the ghost of a person who has died suddenly of a violent death.[127] The folklore of Thailand also includes the belief that sleep paralysis is caused by a ghost, Phi Am.

Tibet

There is widespread belief in ghosts in Tibetan culture. Ghosts are explicitly recognized in the Tibetan Buddhist religion as they were in Indian Buddhism,[128] occupying a distinct but overlapping world to the human one, and feature in many traditional legends. When a human dies, after a period of uncertainty they may enter the ghost world. A hungry ghost (Tibetan: yidag, yi-dvags; Sanskrit: प्रेत) has a tiny throat and huge stomach, and so can never be satisfied. Ghosts may be killed with a ritual dagger or caught in a spirit trap and burnt, thus releasing them to be reborn. Ghosts may also be exorcised, and an annual festival is held throughout Tibet for this purpose. Some say that Dorje Shugden, the ghost of a powerful 17th-century monk, is a deity, but the Dalai Lama asserts that he is an evil spirit, which has caused a split in the Tibetan exile community.

Austronesia

 
Spirit of the Dead Watching by Paul Gauguin (1892)

There are many Malay ghost myths, remnants of old animist beliefs that have been shaped by later Hindu, Buddhist, and Muslim influences in the modern states of Indonesia, Malaysia, and Brunei. Some ghost concepts such as the female vampires Pontianak and Penanggalan are shared throughout the region. Ghosts are a popular theme in modern Malaysian and Indonesian films. There are also many references to ghosts in Filipino culture, ranging from ancient legendary creatures such as the Manananggal and Tiyanak to more modern urban legends and horror films. The beliefs, legends and stories are as diverse as the people of the Philippines.

There was widespread belief in ghosts in Polynesian culture, some of which persists today. After death, a person's ghost normally traveled to the sky world or the underworld, but some could stay on earth. In many Polynesian legends, ghosts were often actively involved in the affairs of the living. Ghosts might also cause sickness or even invade the body of ordinary people, to be driven out through strong medicines.[129]

East and Central Asia

China

 
An image of Zhong Kui, the vanquisher of ghosts and evil beings, painted sometime before 1304 A.D. by Gong Kai

There are many references to ghosts in Chinese culture. Even Confucius said, "Respect ghosts and gods, but keep away from them."[130]

The ghosts take many forms, depending on how the person died, and are often harmful. Many Chinese ghost beliefs have been accepted by neighboring cultures, notably Japan and southeast Asia. Ghost beliefs are closely associated with traditional Chinese religion based on ancestor worship, many of which were incorporated in Taoism. Later beliefs were influenced by Buddhism, and in turn influenced and created uniquely Chinese Buddhist beliefs.

Many Chinese today believe it possible to contact the spirits of their ancestors through a medium, and that ancestors can help descendants if properly respected and rewarded. The annual ghost festival is celebrated by Chinese around the world. On this day, ghosts and spirits, including those of the deceased ancestors, come out from the lower realm. Ghosts are described in classical Chinese texts as well as modern literature and films.

An article in the China Post stated that nearly eighty-seven percent of Chinese office workers believe in ghosts, and some fifty-two percent of workers will wear hand art, necklaces, crosses, or even place a crystal ball on their desks to keep ghosts at bay, according to the poll.[citation needed]

Japan

 
Utagawa Kuniyoshi, The Ghosts, c. 1850

Yūrei (幽霊) are figures in Japanese folklore, analogous to Western legends of ghosts. The name consists of two kanji, 幽 (), meaning "faint" or "dim", and 霊 (rei), meaning "soul" or "spirit". Alternative names include 亡霊 (Bōrei) meaning ruined or departed spirit, 死霊 (Shiryō) meaning dead spirit, or the more encompassing 妖怪 (Yōkai) or お化け (Obake).

Like their Chinese and Western counterparts, they are thought to be spirits kept from a peaceful afterlife.

Americas

Mexico

 
Catrinas, one of the most popular figures of the Day of the Dead celebrations in Mexico

There is extensive and varied belief in ghosts in Mexican culture. The modern state of Mexico before the Spanish conquest was inhabited by diverse peoples such as the Maya and Aztec, and their beliefs have survived and evolved, combined with the beliefs of the Spanish colonists. The Day of the Dead incorporates pre-Columbian beliefs with Christian elements. Mexican literature and films include many stories of ghosts interacting with the living.

United States

According to the Gallup Poll News Service, belief in haunted houses, ghosts, communication with the dead, and witches had an especially steep increase over the 1990s.[131] A 2005 Gallup poll found that about 32 percent of Americans believe in ghosts.[132]

Depiction in the arts

 
The Phantom on the Terrace from Shakespeare's Hamlet (engraving by Eugène Delacroix, 1843)
 
John Dee and Edward Kelley invoking the spirit of a deceased person (engraving from the Astrology by Ebenezer Sibly, 1806)

Ghosts are prominent in story-telling of various nations. The ghost story is ubiquitous across all cultures from oral folktales to works of literature. While ghost stories are often explicitly meant to be scary, they have been written to serve all sorts of purposes, from comedy to morality tales. Ghosts often appear in the narrative as sentinels or prophets of things to come. Belief in ghosts is found in all cultures around the world, and thus ghost stories may be passed down orally or in written form.[133]

Spirits of the dead appear in literature as early as Homer's Odyssey, which features a journey to the underworld and the hero encountering the ghosts of the dead,[134] and the Old Testament, in which the Witch of Endor summons the spirit of the prophet Samuel.[134]

Renaissance to Romanticism (1500 to 1840)

One of the more recognizable ghosts in English literature is the shade of Hamlet's murdered father in Shakespeare's The Tragical History of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark. In Hamlet, it is the ghost who demands that Prince Hamlet investigate his "murder most foul" and seek revenge upon his usurping uncle, King Claudius.

In English Renaissance theater, ghosts were often depicted in the garb of the living and even in armor, as with the ghost of Hamlet's father. Armor, being out-of-date by the time of the Renaissance, gave the stage ghost a sense of antiquity.[135] But the sheeted ghost began to gain ground on stage in the 19th century because an armored ghost could not satisfactorily convey the requisite spookiness: it clanked and creaked, and had to be moved about by complicated pulley systems or elevators. These clanking ghosts being hoisted about the stage became objects of ridicule as they became clichéd stage elements. Ann Jones and Peter Stallybrass, in Renaissance Clothing and the Materials of Memory, point out, "In fact, it is as laughter increasingly threatens the Ghost that he starts to be staged not in armor but in some form of 'spirit drapery'."[136]

Victorian/Edwardian (1840 to 1920)

 
The ghost of a pirate, from Howard Pyle's Book of Pirates (1903)

The "classic" ghost story arose during the Victorian period, and included authors such as M. R. James, Sheridan Le Fanu, Violet Hunt, and Henry James. Classic ghost stories were influenced by the gothic fiction tradition, and contain elements of folklore and psychology. M. R. James summed up the essential elements of a ghost story as, "Malevolence and terror, the glare of evil faces, ‘the stony grin of unearthly malice', pursuing forms in darkness, and 'long-drawn, distant screams', are all in place, and so is a modicum of blood, shed with deliberation and carefully husbanded...".[137] One of the key early appearances by ghosts was The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole in 1764, considered to be the first gothic novel.[134][138][139]

Famous literary apparitions from this period are the ghosts of A Christmas Carol, in which Ebenezer Scrooge is helped to see the error of his ways by the ghost of his former colleague Jacob Marley, and the ghosts of Christmas Past, Christmas Present, and Christmas Yet to Come.

Modern era (1920 to 1970)

 
Brown Lady of Raynham Hall, a claimed ghost photograph by Captain Hubert C. Provand. First published in Country Life magazine, 1936

Professional parapsychologists and "ghosts hunters", such as Harry Price, active in the 1920s and 1930s, and Peter Underwood, active in the 1940s and 1950s, published accounts of their experiences with ostensibly true ghost stories such as Price's The Most Haunted House in England, and Underwood's Ghosts of Borley (both recounting experiences at Borley Rectory). The writer Frank Edwards delved into ghost stories in his books of his, like Stranger than Science.

Children's benevolent ghost stories became popular, such as Casper the Friendly Ghost, created in the 1930s and appearing in comics, animated cartoons, and eventually a 1995 feature film.

With the advent of motion pictures and television, screen depictions of ghosts became common, and spanned a variety of genres; the works of Shakespeare, Dickens and Wilde have all been made into cinematic versions. Novel-length tales have been difficult to adapt to cinema, although that of The Haunting of Hill House to The Haunting in 1963 is an exception.[139]

Sentimental depictions during this period were more popular in cinema than horror, and include the 1947 film The Ghost and Mrs. Muir, which was later adapted to television with a successful 1968–70 TV series.[139] Genuine psychological horror films from this period include 1944's The Uninvited, and 1945's Dead of Night.

Post-modern (1970–present)

The 1970s saw screen depictions of ghosts diverge into distinct genres of the romantic and horror. A common theme in the romantic genre from this period is the ghost as a benign guide or messenger, often with unfinished business, such as 1989's Field of Dreams, the 1990 film Ghost, and the 1993 comedy Heart and Souls.[140] In the horror genre, 1980's The Fog, and the A Nightmare on Elm Street series of films from the 1980s and 1990s are notable examples of the trend for the merging of ghost stories with scenes of physical violence.[139]

Popularised in such films as the 1984 comedy Ghostbusters, ghost hunting became a hobby for many who formed ghost hunting societies to explore reportedly haunted places. The ghost hunting theme has been featured in reality television series, such as Ghost Adventures, Ghost Hunters, Ghost Hunters International, Ghost Lab, Most Haunted, and A Haunting. It is also represented in children's television by such programs as The Ghost Hunter and Ghost Trackers. Ghost hunting also gave rise to multiple guidebooks to haunted locations, and ghost hunting "how-to" manuals.

The 1990s saw a return to classic "gothic" ghosts, whose dangers were more psychological than physical. Examples of films from this period include 1999's The Sixth Sense and The Others.

Asian cinema has also produced horror films about ghosts, such as the 1998 Japanese film Ringu (remade in the US as The Ring in 2002), and the Pang brothers' 2002 film The Eye.[141]Indian ghost movies are popular not just in India, but in the Middle East, Africa, South East Asia, and other parts of the world. Some Indian ghost movies such as the comedy / horror film Chandramukhi have been commercial successes, dubbed into several languages.[142]

In fictional television programming, ghosts have been explored in series such as Supernatural, Ghost Whisperer, and Medium.

In animated fictional television programming, ghosts have served as the central element in series such as Casper the Friendly Ghost, Danny Phantom, and Scooby-Doo. Various other television shows have depicted ghosts as well.

Metaphorical usages

Nietzsche argued that people generally wear prudent masks in company, but that an alternative strategy for social interaction is to present oneself as an absence, as a social ghost – "One reaches out for us but gets no hold of us"[143] – a sentiment later echoed (if in a less positive way) by Carl Jung.[144]

Nick Harkaway has considered that all people carry a host of ghosts in their heads in the form of impressions of past acquaintances – ghosts who represent mental maps of other people in the world and serve as philosophical reference points.[145]

Object relations theory sees human personalities as formed by splitting off aspects of the person that he or she deems incompatible, whereupon the person may be haunted in later life by such ghosts of his or her alternate selves.[146]

The sense of ghosts as invisible, mysterious entities is invoked in several terms that use the word metaphorically, such as ghostwriter (a writer who pens texts credited to another person without revealing the ghostwriter's role as an author); ghost singer (a vocalist who records songs whose vocals are credited to another person); and "ghosting" a date (when a person breaks off contact with a former romantic partner and disappears).

See also

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  96. ^ . The United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on April 21, 2009. Retrieved 2010-03-27. John Wesley believed in the intermediate state between death and the final judgment "where believers would share in the 'bosom of Abraham' or 'paradise,' even continuing to grow in holiness there," writes Ted Campbell, a professor at Perkins School of Theology, in his 1999 book Methodist Doctrine: The Essentials (Abingdon).
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  143. ^ Quoted in Gary Gutting ed., The Cambridge Companion to Foucault (2003) p. 235
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Bibliography

  • Finucane, R. C., Appearances of the Dead: A Cultural History of Ghosts, Prometheus Books, 1984, ISBN 0-87975-238-6.
  • Hervey, Sheila, Some Canadian Ghosts, in series, Original Canadian Pocket Book[s], Richmond Hill, Ont.: Pocket Books, 1973, SBN 671-78629-6
  • Hole, Christina, Haunted England, Batsford: London, 1950.
  • Kroonen, Guus (2013). Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-18340-7.
  • Orel, Vladimir (2003). A Handbook of Germanic Etymology. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-12875-0.
  • Oxford English Dictionary Online. Oxford University Press. 2021.

Further reading

  • Fairly, John & Welfare, Simon, Arthur C. Clarke's World of Strange Powers, Putnam: New York, 1985.
  • Felton, D., Haunted Greece and Rome: Ghost Stories From Classical Antiquity, University of Texas Press, 1999.
  • Johnston, Sarah Iles, Restless Dead: Encounters Between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece, University of California Press, 1999.
  • MacKenzie, Andrew, Apparitions and Ghosts, Arthur Barker, 1971.
  • Moreman, Christopher, Beyond the Threshold: Afterlife Beliefs and Experiences in World Religions, Rowman & Littlefield, 2008.

External links

  •   Media related to Ghosts at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Ghosts at Wikiquote
  •   The dictionary definition of ghost at Wiktionary

ghost, other, uses, disambiguation, haint, redirects, here, warsaw, yiddish, newspaper, haynt, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, folklore, ghost, soul, spirit, dead, person, human, animal, that, believed, able, appear, living, ghostlore, descriptio. For other uses see Ghost disambiguation Haint redirects here For the Warsaw Yiddish newspaper see Haynt Ghostly redirects here For other uses see Ghostly disambiguation In folklore a ghost is the soul or spirit of a dead person or non human animal that is believed to be able to appear to the living In ghostlore descriptions of ghosts vary widely from an invisible presence to translucent or barely visible wispy shapes to realistic lifelike forms The deliberate attempt to contact the spirit of a deceased person is known as necromancy or in spiritism as a seance Other terms associated with it are apparition haunt phantom poltergeist shade specter spirit spook wraith demon and ghoul An engraving of the Hammersmith Ghost appears in Roger Kirby s Wonderful and Scientific Museum a magazine published in 1804 The ghost turned out to be an old local cobbler who used a white sheet to get back at his apprentice for scaring his grandchildren 1 The belief in the existence of an afterlife as well as manifestations of the spirits of the dead is widespread dating back to animism or ancestor worship in pre literate cultures Certain religious practices funeral rites exorcisms and some practices of spiritualism and ritual magic are specifically designed to rest the spirits of the dead Ghosts are generally described as solitary human like essences though stories of ghostly armies and the ghosts of animals other than humans have also been recounted 2 3 They are believed to haunt particular locations objects or people they were associated with in life According to a 2009 study by the Pew Research Center 18 of Americans say they have seen a ghost 4 The overwhelming consensus of science is that there is no proof that ghosts exist 5 Their existence is impossible to falsify 5 and ghost hunting has been classified as pseudoscience 6 7 8 Despite centuries of investigation there is no scientific evidence that any location is inhabited by the spirits of the dead 6 9 Historically certain toxic and psychoactive plants such as datura and hyoscyamus niger whose use has long been associated with necromancy and the underworld have been shown to contain anticholinergic compounds that are pharmacologically linked to dementia specifically DLB as well as histological patterns of neurodegeneration 10 11 Recent research has indicated that ghost sightings may be related to degenerative brain diseases such as Alzheimer s disease 12 Common prescription medication and over the counter drugs such as sleep aids may also in rare instances cause ghost like hallucinations particularly zolpidem and diphenhydramine 13 Older reports linked carbon monoxide poisoning to ghost like hallucinations 14 In folklore studies ghosts fall within the motif index designation E200 E599 Ghosts and other revenants Contents 1 Terminology 2 Typology 2 1 Anthropological context 2 2 Ghosts and the afterlife 2 3 Fear of ghosts 2 4 Common attributes 2 5 Locale 3 History 3 1 Ancient Near East and Egypt 3 2 Classical Antiquity 3 2 1 Archaic and Classical Greece 3 2 2 Roman Empire and Late Antiquity 3 3 Middle Ages 3 4 European Renaissance to Romanticism 3 5 Modern period of western culture 3 5 1 Spiritualist movement 3 5 2 Spiritism 3 6 Scientific view 4 By religion 4 1 Judaism 4 2 Christianity 4 3 Islam 4 4 Buddhism 5 By culture 5 1 African folklore 5 2 European folklore 5 3 South and Southeast Asia 5 3 1 Indian subcontinent 5 3 2 North India 5 3 3 Bengal and East India 5 3 4 Thailand 5 3 5 Tibet 5 3 6 Austronesia 5 4 East and Central Asia 5 4 1 China 5 4 2 Japan 5 5 Americas 5 5 1 Mexico 5 5 2 United States 6 Depiction in the arts 6 1 Renaissance to Romanticism 1500 to 1840 6 2 Victorian Edwardian 1840 to 1920 6 3 Modern era 1920 to 1970 6 4 Post modern 1970 present 7 Metaphorical usages 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksTerminologyFurther information Soul Genius mythology and Geist The English word ghost continues Old English gast Stemming from Proto Germanic gaistaz it is cognate with Old Frisian gast Old Saxon gest Old Dutch gest and Old High German geist Although this form is not attested in North Germanic and East Germanic languages the equivalent word in Gothic is ahma Old Norse has andi m ond f it appears to be a dental suffix derivative of pre Germanic ghois d oz fury anger which is comparable to Sanskrit heḍas anger and Avestan zōizda terrible ugly The prior Proto Indo European form is reconstructed as ǵʰeys d os from the root ǵʰeys which is reflected in Old Norse geisa to rage and geiski fear cf geiskafullr full of fear in Gothic usgaisjan to terrify and usgaisnan to be terrified as well as in Avestan zōis cf zōisnu shivering trembling 15 16 17 The Germanic word is recorded as masculine only but likely continues a neuter s stem The original meaning of the Germanic word would thus have been an animating principle of the mind in particular capable of excitation and fury compare odr In Germanic paganism Germanic Mercury and the later Odin was at the same time the conductor of the dead and the lord of fury leading the Wild Hunt Besides denoting the human spirit or soul both of the living and the deceased the Old English word is used as a synonym of Latin spiritus also in the meaning of breath or blast from the earliest attestations 9th century It could also denote any good or evil spirit such as angels and demons the Anglo Saxon gospel refers to the demonic possession of Matthew 12 43 as se unclaena gast Also from the Old English period the word could denote the spirit of God viz the Holy Ghost The now prevailing sense of the soul of a deceased person spoken of as appearing in a visible form only emerges in Middle English 14th century The modern noun does however retain a wider field of application extending on one hand to soul spirit vital principle mind or psyche the seat of feeling thought and moral judgement on the other hand used figuratively of any shadowy outline or fuzzy or unsubstantial image in optics photography and cinematography especially a flare secondary image or spurious signal 18 The synonym spook is a Dutch loanword akin to Low German spok of uncertain etymology it entered the English language via American English in the 19th century 19 20 21 22 Alternative words in modern usage include spectre altn specter from Latin spectrum the Scottish wraith of obscure origin phantom via French ultimately from Greek phantasma compare fantasy and apparition The term shade in classical mythology translates Greek skia 23 or Latin umbra 24 in reference to the notion of spirits in the Greek underworld The term poltergeist is a German word literally a noisy ghost for a spirit said to manifest itself by invisibly moving and influencing objects 25 Wraith is a Scots word for ghost spectre or apparition It appeared in Scottish Romanticist literature and acquired the more general or figurative sense of portent or omen In 18th to 19th century Scottish literature it also applied to aquatic spirits The word has no commonly accepted etymology the OED notes of obscure origin only 26 An association with the verb writhe was the etymology favored by J R R Tolkien 27 Tolkien s use of the word in the naming of the creatures known as the Ringwraiths has influenced later usage in fantasy literature Bogey 28 or bogy bogie is a term for a ghost and appears in Scottish poet John Mayne s Hallowe en in 1780 29 30 A revenant is a deceased person returning from the dead to haunt the living either as a disembodied ghost or alternatively as an animated undead corpse Also related is the concept of a fetch the visible ghost or spirit of a person yet alive Typology nbsp Relief from a carved funerary lekythos at Athens showing Hermes as psychopomp conducting the soul of the deceased Myrrhine into Hades ca 430 420 B C Anthropological context Further information Animism Ancestor worship Origin of religion and Anthropology of religion A notion of the transcendent supernatural or numinous usually involving entities like ghosts demons or deities is a cultural universal 31 In pre literate folk religions these beliefs are often summarized under animism and ancestor worship Some people believe the ghost or spirit never leaves Earth until there is no one left to remember the one who died 32 In many cultures malignant restless ghosts are distinguished from the more benign spirits involved in ancestor worship 33 Ancestor worship typically involves rites intended to prevent revenants vengeful spirits of the dead imagined as starving and envious of the living Strategies for preventing revenants may either include sacrifice i e giving the dead food and drink to pacify them or magical banishment of the deceased to force them not to return Ritual feeding of the dead is performed in traditions like the Chinese Ghost Festival or the Western All Souls Day Magical banishment of the dead is present in many of the world s burial customs The bodies found in many tumuli kurgan had been ritually bound before burial 34 and the custom of binding the dead persists for example in rural Anatolia 35 Nineteenth century anthropologist James Frazer stated in his classic work The Golden Bough that souls were seen as the creature within that animated the body 36 Ghosts and the afterlife Further information Soul Psyche psychology Underworld Hungry ghost and Psychopomp Further information Ghost Festival All Souls Day Day of the Dead and Ghost Dance Although the human soul was sometimes symbolically or literally depicted in ancient cultures as a bird or other animal it appears to have been widely held that the soul was an exact reproduction of the body in every feature even down to clothing the person wore This is depicted in artwork from various ancient cultures including such works as the Egyptian Book of the Dead which shows deceased people in the afterlife appearing much as they did before death including the style of dress Fear of ghosts Main article Fear of ghosts nbsp Yurei Japanese ghost from the Hyakkai Zukan ca 1737While deceased ancestors are universally regarded as venerable and often believed to have a continued presence in some form of afterlife the spirit of a deceased person that persists in the material world a ghost is regarded as an unnatural or undesirable state of affairs and the idea of ghosts or revenants is associated with a reaction of fear This is universally the case in pre modern folk cultures but fear of ghosts also remains an integral aspect of the modern ghost story Gothic horror and other horror fiction dealing with the supernatural Common attributes Another widespread belief concerning ghosts is that they are composed of a misty airy or subtle material Anthropologists link this idea to early beliefs that ghosts were the person within the person the person s spirit most noticeable in ancient cultures as a person s breath which upon exhaling in colder climates appears visibly as a white mist 32 This belief may have also fostered the metaphorical meaning of breath in certain languages such as the Latin spiritus and the Greek pneuma which by analogy became extended to mean the soul In the Bible God is depicted as synthesising Adam as a living soul from the dust of the Earth and the breath of God In many traditional accounts ghosts were often thought to be deceased people looking for vengeance vengeful ghosts or imprisoned on earth for bad things they did during life The appearance of a ghost has often been regarded as an omen or portent of death Seeing one s own ghostly double or fetch is a related omen of death 37 nbsp Union Cemetery in Easton Connecticut is home to the legend of the White Lady White ladies were reported to appear in many rural areas and supposed to have died tragically or suffered trauma in life White Lady legends are found around the world Common to many of them is the theme of losing a child or husband and a sense of purity as opposed to the Lady in Red ghost that is mostly attributed to a jilted lover or prostitute The White Lady ghost is often associated with an individual family line or regarded as a harbinger of death similar to a banshee 38 39 needs context Legends of ghost ships have existed since the 18th century most notable of these is the Flying Dutchman This theme has been used in literature in The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Coleridge Ghosts are often depicted as being covered in a shroud and or dragging chains 40 Locale See also Haunted house A place where ghosts are reported is described as haunted and often seen as being inhabited by spirits of deceased who may have been former residents or were familiar with the property Supernatural activity inside homes is said to be mainly associated with violent or tragic events in the building s past such as murder accidental death or suicide sometimes in the recent or ancient past However not all hauntings are at a place of a violent death or even on violent grounds Many cultures and religions believe the essence of a being such as the soul continues to exist Some religious views argue that the spirits of those who have died have not passed over and are trapped inside the property where their memories and energy are strong History nbsp Ancient Sumerian cylinder seal impression showing the god Dumuzid being tortured in the Underworld by galla demonsAncient Near East and Egypt Main article Ghosts in Mesopotamian religions Main article Ghosts in ancient Egyptian culture There are many references to ghosts in Mesopotamian religions the religions of Sumer Babylon Assyria and other early states in Mesopotamia Traces of these beliefs survive in the later Abrahamic religions that came to dominate the region 41 Ghosts were thought to be created at time of death taking on the memory and personality of the dead person They traveled to the netherworld where they were assigned a position and led an existence similar in some ways to that of the living Relatives of the dead were expected to make offerings of food and drink to the dead to ease their conditions If they did not the ghosts could inflict misfortune and illness on the living Traditional healing practices ascribed a variety of illnesses to the action of ghosts while others were caused by gods or demons 42 nbsp Egyptian Akh glyph The soul and spirit re united after deathThere was widespread belief in ghosts in ancient Egyptian culture The Hebrew Bible contains few references to ghosts associating spiritism with forbidden occult activities cf Deuteronomy 18 11 The most notable reference is in the First Book of Samuel I Samuel 28 3 19 KJV in which a disguised King Saul has the Witch of Endor summon the spirit or ghost of Samuel The soul and spirit were believed to exist after death with the ability to assist or harm the living and the possibility of a second death Over a period of more than 2 500 years Egyptian beliefs about the nature of the afterlife evolved constantly Many of these beliefs were recorded in hieroglyph inscriptions papyrus scrolls and tomb paintings The Egyptian Book of the Dead compiles some of the beliefs from different periods of ancient Egyptian history 43 In modern times the fanciful concept of a mummy coming back to life and wreaking vengeance when disturbed has spawned a whole genre of horror stories and films 44 Classical Antiquity Further information Shade mythology and Magic in the Greco Roman world Archaic and Classical Greece nbsp Apulian red figure bell krater depicting the ghost of Clytemnestra waking the Erinyes date unknownGhosts appeared in Homer s Odyssey and Iliad in which they were described as vanishing as a vapor gibbering and whining into the earth Homer s ghosts had little interaction with the world of the living Periodically they were called upon to provide advice or prophecy but they do not appear to be particularly feared Ghosts in the classical world often appeared in the form of vapor or smoke but at other times they were described as being substantial appearing as they had been at the time of death complete with the wounds that killed them 45 By the 5th century BC classical Greek ghosts had become haunting frightening creatures who could work to either good or evil purposes The spirit of the dead was believed to hover near the resting place of the corpse and cemeteries were places the living avoided The dead were to be ritually mourned through public ceremony sacrifice and libations or else they might return to haunt their families The ancient Greeks held annual feasts to honor and placate the spirits of the dead to which the family ghosts were invited and after which they were firmly invited to leave until the same time next year 46 The 5th century BC play Oresteia includes an appearance of the ghost of Clytemnestra one of the first ghosts to appear in a work of fiction 47 Roman Empire and Late Antiquity nbsp Athenodorus and the Ghost by Henry Justice Ford c 1900The ancient Romans believed a ghost could be used to exact revenge on an enemy by scratching a curse on a piece of lead or pottery and placing it into a grave 48 Plutarch in the 1st century AD described the haunting of the baths at Chaeronea by the ghost of a murdered man The ghost s loud and frightful groans caused the people of the town to seal up the doors of the building 49 Another celebrated account of a haunted house from the ancient classical world is given by Pliny the Younger c 50 AD 50 Pliny describes the haunting of a house in Athens which was bought by the Stoic philosopher Athenodorus who lived about 100 years before Pliny Knowing that the house was supposedly haunted Athenodorus intentionally set up his writing desk in the room where the apparition was said to appear and sat there writing until late at night when he was disturbed by a ghost bound in chains He followed the ghost outside where it indicated a spot on the ground When Athenodorus later excavated the area a shackled skeleton was unearthed The haunting ceased when the skeleton was given a proper reburial 51 The writers Plautus and Lucian also wrote stories about haunted houses In the New Testament according to Luke 24 37 39 52 following his resurrection Jesus was forced to persuade the Disciples that he was not a ghost some versions of the Bible such as the KJV and NKJV use the term spirit Similarly Jesus followers at first believed he was a ghost spirit when they saw him walking on water One of the first persons to express disbelief in ghosts was Lucian of Samosata in the 2nd century AD In his satirical novel The Lover of Lies circa 150 AD he relates how Democritus the learned man from Abdera in Thrace lived in a tomb outside the city gates to prove that cemeteries were not haunted by the spirits of the departed Lucian relates how he persisted in his disbelief despite practical jokes perpetrated by some young men of Abdera who dressed up in black robes with skull masks to frighten him 53 This account by Lucian notes something about the popular classical expectation of how a ghost should look In the 5th century AD the Christian priest Constantius of Lyon recorded an instance of the recurring theme of the improperly buried dead who come back to haunt the living and who can only cease their haunting when their bones have been discovered and properly reburied 54 Middle Ages Ghosts reported in medieval Europe tended to fall into two categories the souls of the dead or demons The souls of the dead returned for a specific purpose Demonic ghosts existed only to torment or tempt the living The living could tell them apart by demanding their purpose in the name of Jesus Christ The soul of a dead person would divulge its mission while a demonic ghost would be banished at the sound of the Holy Name 55 Most ghosts were souls assigned to Purgatory condemned for a specific period to atone for their transgressions in life Their penance was generally related to their sin For example the ghost of a man who had been abusive to his servants was condemned to tear off and swallow bits of his own tongue the ghost of another man who had neglected to leave his cloak to the poor was condemned to wear the cloak now heavy as a church tower These ghosts appeared to the living to ask for prayers to end their suffering Other dead souls returned to urge the living to confess their sins before their own deaths 56 Medieval European ghosts were more substantial than ghosts described in the Victorian age and there are accounts of ghosts being wrestled with and physically restrained until a priest could arrive to hear its confession Some were less solid and could move through walls Often they were described as paler and sadder versions of the person they had been while alive and dressed in tattered gray rags The vast majority of reported sightings were male 57 There were some reported cases of ghostly armies fighting battles at night in the forest or in the remains of an Iron Age hillfort as at Wandlebury near Cambridge England Living knights were sometimes challenged to single combat by phantom knights which vanished when defeated 58 From the medieval period an apparition of a ghost is recorded from 1211 at the time of the Albigensian Crusade 59 Gervase of Tilbury Marshal of Arles wrote that the image of Guilhem a boy recently murdered in the forest appeared in his cousin s home in Beaucaire near Avignon This series of visits lasted all of the summer Through his cousin who spoke for him the boy allegedly held conversations with anyone who wished until the local priest requested to speak to the boy directly leading to an extended disquisition on theology The boy narrated the trauma of death and the unhappiness of his fellow souls in Purgatory and reported that God was most pleased with the ongoing Crusade against the Cathar heretics launched three years earlier The time of the Albigensian Crusade in southern France was marked by intense and prolonged warfare this constant bloodshed and dislocation of populations being the context for these reported visits by the murdered boy Haunted houses are featured in the 9th century Arabian Nights such as the tale of Ali the Cairene and the Haunted House in Baghdad 60 European Renaissance to Romanticism nbsp Hamlet and his father s ghost by Henry Fuseli 1796 drawing The ghost is wearing stylized plate armor in 17th century style including a morion type helmet and tassets Depicting ghosts as wearing armor to suggest a sense of antiquity was common in Elizabethan theater Renaissance magic took a revived interest in the occult including necromancy In the era of the Reformation and Counter Reformation there was frequently a backlash against unwholesome interest in the dark arts typified by writers such as Thomas Erastus 61 The Swiss Reformed pastor Ludwig Lavater supplied one of the most frequently reprinted books of the period with his Of Ghosts and Spirits Walking By Night 62 The Child Ballad Sweet William s Ghost 1868 recounts the story of a ghost returning to his fiancee begging her to free him from his promise to marry her He cannot marry her because he is dead but her refusal would mean his damnation This reflects a popular British belief that the dead haunted their lovers if they took up with a new love without some formal release 63 The Unquiet Grave expresses a belief even more widespread found in various locations over Europe ghosts can stem from the excessive grief of the living whose mourning interferes with the dead s peaceful rest 64 In many folktales from around the world the hero arranges for the burial of a dead man Soon after he gains a companion who aids him and in the end the hero s companion reveals that he is in fact the dead man 65 Instances of this include the Italian fairy tale Fair Brow and the Swedish The Bird Grip Modern period of western culture Spiritualist movement nbsp By 1853 when the popular song Spirit Rappings was published Spiritualism was an object of intense curiosity Main article Spiritualism Spiritualism is a monotheistic belief system or religion postulating a belief in God but with a distinguishing feature of belief that spirits of the dead residing in the spirit world can be contacted by mediums who can then provide information about the afterlife 66 Spiritualism developed in the United States and reached its peak growth in membership from the 1840s to the 1920s especially in English language countries 67 68 By 1897 it was said to have more than eight million followers in the United States and Europe 69 mostly drawn from the middle and upper classes while the corresponding movement in continental Europe and Latin America is known as Spiritism The religion flourished for a half century without canonical texts or formal organization attaining cohesion by periodicals tours by trance lecturers camp meetings and the missionary activities of accomplished mediums 70 Many prominent Spiritualists were women Most followers supported causes such as the abolition of slavery and women s suffrage 67 By the late 1880s credibility of the informal movement weakened due to accusations of fraud among mediums and formal Spiritualist organizations began to appear 67 Spiritualism is currently practiced primarily through various denominational Spiritualist churches in the United States and United Kingdom Spiritism Main article Spiritism Spiritism or French spiritualism is based on the five books of the Spiritist Codification written by French educator Hypolite Leon Denizard Rivail under the pseudonym Allan Kardec reporting seances in which he observed a series of phenomena that he attributed to incorporeal intelligence spirits His assumption of spirit communication was validated by many contemporaries among them many scientists and philosophers who attended seances and studied the phenomena His work was later extended by writers like Leon Denis Arthur Conan Doyle Camille Flammarion Ernesto Bozzano Chico Xavier Divaldo Pereira Franco Waldo Vieira Johannes Greber 71 and others Spiritism has adherents in many countries throughout the world including Spain United States Canada 72 Japan Germany France England Argentina Portugal and especially Brazil which has the largest proportion and greatest number of followers 73 Scientific view See also Paranormal The physician John Ferriar wrote An Essay Towards a Theory of Apparitions in 1813 in which he argued that sightings of ghosts were the result of optical illusions Later the French physician Alexandre Jacques Francois Briere de Boismont published On Hallucinations Or the Rational History of Apparitions Dreams Ecstasy Magnetism and Somnambulism in 1845 in which he claimed sightings of ghosts were the result of hallucinations 74 75 nbsp A 1901 depiction of ball lightningDavid Turner a retired physical chemist suggested that ball lightning could cause inanimate objects to move erratically 76 Joe Nickell of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry wrote that there was no credible scientific evidence that any location was inhabited by spirits of the dead 77 Limitations of human perception and ordinary physical explanations can account for ghost sightings for example air pressure changes in a home causing doors to slam humidity changes causing boards to creak condensation in electrical connections causing intermittent behavior or lights from a passing car reflected through a window at night Pareidolia an innate tendency to recognize patterns in random perceptions is what some skeptics believe causes people to believe that they have seen ghosts 78 Reports of ghosts seen out of the corner of the eye may be accounted for by the sensitivity of human peripheral vision According to Nickell peripheral vision can easily mislead especially late at night when the brain is tired and more likely to misinterpret sights and sounds 79 Nickell further states science cannot substantiate the existence of a life energy that could survive death without dissipating or function at all without a brain why would clothes survive He asks if ghosts glide then why do people claim to hear them with heavy footfalls Nickell says that ghosts act the same way as dreams memories and imaginings because they too are mental creations They are evidence not of another world but of this real and natural one 80 Benjamin Radford from the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry and author of the 2017 book Investigating Ghosts The Scientific Search for Spirits writes that ghost hunting is the world s most popular paranormal pursuit yet to date ghost hunters cannot agree on what a ghost is or offer proof that they exist it s all speculation and guesswork He writes that it would be useful and important to distinguish between types of spirits and apparitions Until then it s merely a parlor game distracting amateur ghost hunters from the task at hand 81 According to research in anomalistic psychology visions of ghosts may arise from hypnagogic hallucinations waking dreams experienced in the transitional states to and from sleep 82 In a study of two experiments into alleged hauntings Wiseman et al 2003 came to the conclusion that people consistently report unusual experiences in haunted areas because of environmental factors which may differ across locations Some of these factors included the variance of local magnetic fields size of location and lighting level stimuli of which witnesses may not be consciously aware 83 Some researchers such as Michael Persinger of Laurentian University Canada have speculated that changes in geomagnetic fields created e g by tectonic stresses in the Earth s crust or solar activity could stimulate the brain s temporal lobes and produce many of the experiences associated with hauntings 84 Sound is thought to be another cause of supposed sightings Richard Lord and Richard Wiseman have concluded that infrasound can cause humans to experience bizarre feelings in a room such as anxiety extreme sorrow a feeling of being watched or even the chills 85 Carbon monoxide poisoning which can cause changes in perception of the visual and auditory systems 86 was speculated upon as a possible explanation for haunted houses as early as 1921 People who experience sleep paralysis often report seeing ghosts during their experiences Neuroscientists Baland Jalal and V S Ramachandran have recently proposed neurological theories for why people hallucinate ghosts during sleep paralysis Their theories emphasize the role of the parietal lobe and mirror neurons in triggering such ghostly hallucinations 87 By religionJudaism See also Dybbuk nbsp Witch of Endor by Nikolai Ge depicting King Saul encountering the ghost of Samuel 1857 The Hebrew Bible contains several references to owb Hebrew או ב which are in a few places akin to shades of classical mythology but mostly describing mediums in connection with necromancy and spirit consulting which are grouped with witchcraft and other forms of divination under the category of forbidden occult activities 88 The most notable reference to a shade is in the First Book of Samuel 89 in which a disguised King Saul has the Witch of Endor conduct a seance to summon the dead prophet Samuel A similar term appearing throughout the scriptures is repha im Hebrew ר פ א ים which while describing the race of giants formerly inhabiting Canaan in many verses also refer to the spirits of dead ancestors of Sheol like shades in many others such as in the Book of Isaiah 90 Jewish mythology and folkloric traditions describe dybbuks malicious possessing spirits believed to be the dislocated soul of a dead person However the term does not appear in the Kabbalah or Talmudic literature where it is rather called an evil spirit or ru aḥ tezazit Hebrew רו ח טו מ א ה It supposedly leaves the host body once it has accomplished its goal sometimes after being helped 91 92 93 Christianity See also Allhallowtide In the New Testament Jesus has to persuade the Disciples that he is not a ghost following the resurrection Luke 24 37 39 some versions of the Bible such as the KJV and NKJV use the term spirit Similarly Jesus followers at first believe he is a ghost spirit when they see him walking on water 94 Some Christian denominations which consider ghosts as beings who while tied to earth no longer live on the material plane and linger in an intermediate state before continuing their journey to heaven 95 96 97 98 On occasion God would allow the souls in this state to return to earth to warn the living of the need for repentance 99 Christians are taught that it is sinful to attempt to conjure or control spirits in accordance with Deuteronomy XVIII 9 12 100 101 Some ghosts are actually said to be demons in disguise who the Church teaches in accordance with I Timothy 4 1 that they come to deceive people and draw them away from God and into bondage 102 As a result attempts to contact the dead may lead to unwanted contact with a demon or an unclean spirit as was said to occur in the case of Robbie Mannheim a fourteen year old Maryland youth 103 The Seventh Day Adventist view is that a soul is not equivalent to spirit or ghost depending on the Bible version and that save for the Holy Spirit all spirits or ghosts are demons in disguise Furthermore they teach that in accordance with Genesis 2 7 Ecclesiastes 12 7 there are only two components to a soul neither of which survives death with each returning to its respective source Christadelphians and Jehovah s Witnesses reject the view of a living conscious soul after death 104 Islam nbsp Muhammad ibn Muhammad Shakir Ruzmah i Nathani A Soul Symbolized as an AngelRuḥ Arabic روح plural arwah is a person s immortal essential self pneuma i e the spirit or soul 105 The term is also used for ghosts 106 The souls of the deceased dwell in barzakh Only a barrier in Quran in Islamic tradition this refers to an entire intermediary world between the living and the afterlife The world especially cemeteries are perforated with several gateways to the otherworld or barzakh 107 In rare occasions the dead can appear to the living 108 Pure souls such as the souls of saints are commonly addressed as ruḥ while impure souls seeking for revenge are often addressed as afarit 109 An inappropriate burial can also cause a soul to stay in this world whereupon roaming the earth as a ghost Since the just souls remain close to their tomb some people try to communicate with them in order to gain hidden knowledge Contact with the dead is not the same as contact with jinn who alike could provide knowledge concealed from living humans 110 Many encounters with ghosts are related to dreams supposed to occur in the realm of symbols Belief in spirits have not ceased to exist in Muslim belief Smile of new born babies is sometimes used as a proof for sighting spirits like ghosts However the connection to the other world fades during life on earth but is resumed after death Once again smiling of dying people is considered as evidence for recognizing the spirit of their beloved ones Yet Muslims who affirm the existence of ghosts are carefully when interacting with spirits as the ghosts of humans can be as bad as the jinn Worst of all however are the devils Muslim authors like Ghazali Ibn Qayyim and Suyuti wrote in more details about the life of ghosts Ibn Qayyim and Suyuti assert when a soul desires to turn back to earth long enough it is gradually released from restrictions of Barzakh and able to move freely Each spirit experiences afterlife in accordance with their deeds and condictions in the earthly life Evil souls will find the afterlife as painful and punishment imprisoned until God allows them to interact with other others Good souls are not restricted They are free to come visit other souls and even come down to lower regions The higher planes ʿilliyyin are considered to be broader than the lower ones the lowest being the most narrow sijjin The spiritual space is not thought as spatial but reflects the capacity of the spirit The more pure the spirit gets the more it is able to interact with other souls and thus reaches a broader degree of freedom 111 The Ismailite Philosopher Nasir Khusraw conjectured that evil human souls turn into demons when their bodies die because of their intense attachment to the bodily world They were worse than the jinn and fairies who in turn could become devils if they pursue evil 112 A similar thought is recorded by Muhammad ibn Zakariya al Razi 113 The ghosts of saints are thought to transmit blessings from God through the heavenly realm to whose who visit their graves Therefore visiting the graves of saints and prophets became a major ritual in Muslim spirituality 114 Buddhism In Buddhism there are a number of planes of existence into which a person can be reborn one of which is the realm of hungry ghosts 115 Buddhist celebrate the Ghost Festival 116 as an expression of compassion one of Buddhist virtues If the hungry ghosts are fed by non relatives they would not bother the community By cultureAfrican folklore For the Igbo people a man is simultaneously a physical and spiritual entity However it is his spirited dimension that is eternal 117 In the Akan conception we witness five parts of the human personality We have the Nipadua body the Okra soul Sunsum spirit Ntoro character from father Mogya character from mother 117 The Humr people of southwestern Kordofan Sudan consume the drink Umm Nyolokh which is prepared from the liver and bone marrow of giraffes Richard Rudgley 118 hypothesises that Umm Nyolokh may contain DMT and certain online websites further theorise that giraffe liver might owe its putative psychoactivity to substances derived from psychoactive plants such as Acacia spp consumed by the animal The drink is said to cause hallucinations of giraffes believed by the Humr to be the ghosts of giraffes 119 120 European folklore Further information Revenant Necromancy and Samhain nbsp Macbeth Seeing the Ghost of Banquo by Theodore ChasseriauBelief in ghosts in European folklore is characterized by the recurring fear of returning or revenant deceased who may harm the living This includes the Scandinavian gjenganger the Romanian strigoi the Serbian vampir the Greek vrykolakas etc In Scandinavian and Finnish tradition ghosts appear in corporeal form and their supernatural nature is given away by behavior rather than appearance In fact in many stories they are first mistaken for the living They may be mute appear and disappear suddenly or leave no footprints or other traces English folklore is particularly notable for its numerous haunted locations Belief in the soul and an afterlife remained near universal until the emergence of atheism in the 18th century citation needed In the 19th century spiritism resurrected belief in ghosts as the object of systematic inquiry and popular opinion in Western culture remains divided 121 South and Southeast Asia Indian subcontinent Main articles Bhoot ghost and Ghosts in Bengali culture A bhoot or bhut Hindi भ त Gujarati ભ ત Urdu بهوت Bengali ভ ত Odia ଭ ତ is a supernatural creature usually the ghost of a deceased person in the popular culture literature and some ancient texts of the Indian subcontinent North India Interpretations of how bhoots come into existence vary by region and community but they are usually considered to be perturbed and restless due to some factor that prevents them from moving on to transmigration non being nirvana or heaven or hell depending on tradition This could be a violent death unsettled matters in their lives or simply the failure of their survivors to perform proper funerals 122 In Central and Northern India ojha or spirit guides play a central role citation needed It duly happens when in the night someone sleeps and decorates something on the wall and they say that if one sees the spirit the next thing in the morning he will become a spirit too and that to a headless spirit and the soul of the body will remain the dark with the dark lord from the spirits who reside in the body of every human in Central and Northern India It is also believed that if someone calls one from behind never turn back and see because the spirit may catch the human to make it a spirit Other types of spirits in Hindu mythology include Baital an evil spirit who haunts cemeteries and takes demonic possession of corpses and Pishacha a type of flesh eating demon Bengal and East India There are many kinds of ghosts and similar supernatural entities that frequently come up in Bengali culture its folklores and form an important part in Bengali peoples socio cultural beliefs and superstitions It is believed that the spirits of those who cannot find peace in the afterlife or die unnatural deaths remain on Earth The word Pret from Sanskrit is also used in Bengali to mean ghost In Bengal ghosts are believed to be the spirit after death of an unsatisfied human being or a soul of a person who dies in unnatural or abnormal circumstances like murder suicide or accident Even it is believed that other animals and creatures can also be turned into ghost after their death Thailand Main article Ghosts in Thai culture nbsp Krasue a Thai female ghost known as Ap in KhmerGhosts in Thailand are part of local folklore and have now become part of the popular culture of the country Phraya Anuman Rajadhon was the first Thai scholar who seriously studied Thai folk beliefs and took notes on the nocturnal village spirits of Thailand He established that since such spirits were not represented in paintings or drawings they were purely based on descriptions of popular orally transmitted traditional stories Therefore most of the contemporary iconography of ghosts such as Nang Tani Nang Takian 123 Krasue Krahang 124 Phi Hua Kat Phi Pop Phi Phong Phi Phraya and Mae Nak has its origins in Thai films that have now become classics 125 126 The most feared spirit in Thailand is Phi Tai Hong the ghost of a person who has died suddenly of a violent death 127 The folklore of Thailand also includes the belief that sleep paralysis is caused by a ghost Phi Am Tibet Main article Ghosts in Tibetan culture There is widespread belief in ghosts in Tibetan culture Ghosts are explicitly recognized in the Tibetan Buddhist religion as they were in Indian Buddhism 128 occupying a distinct but overlapping world to the human one and feature in many traditional legends When a human dies after a period of uncertainty they may enter the ghost world A hungry ghost Tibetan yidag yi dvags Sanskrit प र त has a tiny throat and huge stomach and so can never be satisfied Ghosts may be killed with a ritual dagger or caught in a spirit trap and burnt thus releasing them to be reborn Ghosts may also be exorcised and an annual festival is held throughout Tibet for this purpose Some say that Dorje Shugden the ghost of a powerful 17th century monk is a deity but the Dalai Lama asserts that he is an evil spirit which has caused a split in the Tibetan exile community Austronesia Main articles Malay ghost myths Ghosts in Filipino culture and Ghosts in Polynesian culture nbsp Spirit of the Dead Watching by Paul Gauguin 1892 There are many Malay ghost myths remnants of old animist beliefs that have been shaped by later Hindu Buddhist and Muslim influences in the modern states of Indonesia Malaysia and Brunei Some ghost concepts such as the female vampires Pontianak and Penanggalan are shared throughout the region Ghosts are a popular theme in modern Malaysian and Indonesian films There are also many references to ghosts in Filipino culture ranging from ancient legendary creatures such as the Manananggal and Tiyanak to more modern urban legends and horror films The beliefs legends and stories are as diverse as the people of the Philippines There was widespread belief in ghosts in Polynesian culture some of which persists today After death a person s ghost normally traveled to the sky world or the underworld but some could stay on earth In many Polynesian legends ghosts were often actively involved in the affairs of the living Ghosts might also cause sickness or even invade the body of ordinary people to be driven out through strong medicines 129 East and Central Asia Further information Preta China Main article Ghosts in Chinese culture nbsp An image of Zhong Kui the vanquisher of ghosts and evil beings painted sometime before 1304 A D by Gong KaiThere are many references to ghosts in Chinese culture Even Confucius said Respect ghosts and gods but keep away from them 130 The ghosts take many forms depending on how the person died and are often harmful Many Chinese ghost beliefs have been accepted by neighboring cultures notably Japan and southeast Asia Ghost beliefs are closely associated with traditional Chinese religion based on ancestor worship many of which were incorporated in Taoism Later beliefs were influenced by Buddhism and in turn influenced and created uniquely Chinese Buddhist beliefs Many Chinese today believe it possible to contact the spirits of their ancestors through a medium and that ancestors can help descendants if properly respected and rewarded The annual ghost festival is celebrated by Chinese around the world On this day ghosts and spirits including those of the deceased ancestors come out from the lower realm Ghosts are described in classical Chinese texts as well as modern literature and films An article in the China Post stated that nearly eighty seven percent of Chinese office workers believe in ghosts and some fifty two percent of workers will wear hand art necklaces crosses or even place a crystal ball on their desks to keep ghosts at bay according to the poll citation needed Japan nbsp Utagawa Kuniyoshi The Ghosts c 1850Main articles Yurei Onryō and Japanese ghost story Yurei 幽霊 are figures in Japanese folklore analogous to Western legends of ghosts The name consists of two kanji 幽 yu meaning faint or dim and 霊 rei meaning soul or spirit Alternative names include 亡霊 Bōrei meaning ruined or departed spirit 死霊 Shiryō meaning dead spirit or the more encompassing 妖怪 Yōkai or お化け Obake Like their Chinese and Western counterparts they are thought to be spirits kept from a peaceful afterlife Americas Mexico nbsp Catrinas one of the most popular figures of the Day of the Dead celebrations in MexicoMain article Ghosts in Mexican culture There is extensive and varied belief in ghosts in Mexican culture The modern state of Mexico before the Spanish conquest was inhabited by diverse peoples such as the Maya and Aztec and their beliefs have survived and evolved combined with the beliefs of the Spanish colonists The Day of the Dead incorporates pre Columbian beliefs with Christian elements Mexican literature and films include many stories of ghosts interacting with the living United States Further information Ghosts of the American Civil War Shadow people and Ghost hunting According to the Gallup Poll News Service belief in haunted houses ghosts communication with the dead and witches had an especially steep increase over the 1990s 131 A 2005 Gallup poll found that about 32 percent of Americans believe in ghosts 132 Depiction in the artsMain articles Ghost story and List of ghost films nbsp The Phantom on the Terrace from Shakespeare s Hamlet engraving by Eugene Delacroix 1843 nbsp John Dee and Edward Kelley invoking the spirit of a deceased person engraving from the Astrology by Ebenezer Sibly 1806 Ghosts are prominent in story telling of various nations The ghost story is ubiquitous across all cultures from oral folktales to works of literature While ghost stories are often explicitly meant to be scary they have been written to serve all sorts of purposes from comedy to morality tales Ghosts often appear in the narrative as sentinels or prophets of things to come Belief in ghosts is found in all cultures around the world and thus ghost stories may be passed down orally or in written form 133 Spirits of the dead appear in literature as early as Homer s Odyssey which features a journey to the underworld and the hero encountering the ghosts of the dead 134 and the Old Testament in which the Witch of Endor summons the spirit of the prophet Samuel 134 Renaissance to Romanticism 1500 to 1840 One of the more recognizable ghosts in English literature is the shade of Hamlet s murdered father in Shakespeare s The Tragical History of Hamlet Prince of Denmark In Hamlet it is the ghost who demands that Prince Hamlet investigate his murder most foul and seek revenge upon his usurping uncle King Claudius In English Renaissance theater ghosts were often depicted in the garb of the living and even in armor as with the ghost of Hamlet s father Armor being out of date by the time of the Renaissance gave the stage ghost a sense of antiquity 135 But the sheeted ghost began to gain ground on stage in the 19th century because an armored ghost could not satisfactorily convey the requisite spookiness it clanked and creaked and had to be moved about by complicated pulley systems or elevators These clanking ghosts being hoisted about the stage became objects of ridicule as they became cliched stage elements Ann Jones and Peter Stallybrass in Renaissance Clothing and the Materials of Memory point out In fact it is as laughter increasingly threatens the Ghost that he starts to be staged not in armor but in some form of spirit drapery 136 Victorian Edwardian 1840 to 1920 nbsp Ghost of Christmas Present from Charles Dickens novella A Christmas Carol 1843 nbsp The ghost of a pirate from Howard Pyle s Book of Pirates 1903 The classic ghost story arose during the Victorian period and included authors such as M R James Sheridan Le Fanu Violet Hunt and Henry James Classic ghost stories were influenced by the gothic fiction tradition and contain elements of folklore and psychology M R James summed up the essential elements of a ghost story as Malevolence and terror the glare of evil faces the stony grin of unearthly malice pursuing forms in darkness and long drawn distant screams are all in place and so is a modicum of blood shed with deliberation and carefully husbanded 137 One of the key early appearances by ghosts was The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole in 1764 considered to be the first gothic novel 134 138 139 Famous literary apparitions from this period are the ghosts of A Christmas Carol in which Ebenezer Scrooge is helped to see the error of his ways by the ghost of his former colleague Jacob Marley and the ghosts of Christmas Past Christmas Present and Christmas Yet to Come Modern era 1920 to 1970 nbsp Brown Lady of Raynham Hall a claimed ghost photograph by Captain Hubert C Provand First published in Country Life magazine 1936Professional parapsychologists and ghosts hunters such as Harry Price active in the 1920s and 1930s and Peter Underwood active in the 1940s and 1950s published accounts of their experiences with ostensibly true ghost stories such as Price s The Most Haunted House in England and Underwood s Ghosts of Borley both recounting experiences at Borley Rectory The writer Frank Edwards delved into ghost stories in his books of his like Stranger than Science Children s benevolent ghost stories became popular such as Casper the Friendly Ghost created in the 1930s and appearing in comics animated cartoons and eventually a 1995 feature film With the advent of motion pictures and television screen depictions of ghosts became common and spanned a variety of genres the works of Shakespeare Dickens and Wilde have all been made into cinematic versions Novel length tales have been difficult to adapt to cinema although that of The Haunting of Hill House to The Haunting in 1963 is an exception 139 Sentimental depictions during this period were more popular in cinema than horror and include the 1947 film The Ghost and Mrs Muir which was later adapted to television with a successful 1968 70 TV series 139 Genuine psychological horror films from this period include 1944 s The Uninvited and 1945 s Dead of Night Post modern 1970 present See also List of ghost filmsFurther information List of ghosts Popular culture and Category Fictional ghosts The 1970s saw screen depictions of ghosts diverge into distinct genres of the romantic and horror A common theme in the romantic genre from this period is the ghost as a benign guide or messenger often with unfinished business such as 1989 s Field of Dreams the 1990 film Ghost and the 1993 comedy Heart and Souls 140 In the horror genre 1980 s The Fog and the A Nightmare on Elm Street series of films from the 1980s and 1990s are notable examples of the trend for the merging of ghost stories with scenes of physical violence 139 Popularised in such films as the 1984 comedy Ghostbusters ghost hunting became a hobby for many who formed ghost hunting societies to explore reportedly haunted places The ghost hunting theme has been featured in reality television series such as Ghost Adventures Ghost Hunters Ghost Hunters International Ghost Lab Most Haunted and A Haunting It is also represented in children s television by such programs as The Ghost Hunter and Ghost Trackers Ghost hunting also gave rise to multiple guidebooks to haunted locations and ghost hunting how to manuals The 1990s saw a return to classic gothic ghosts whose dangers were more psychological than physical Examples of films from this period include 1999 s The Sixth Sense and The Others Asian cinema has also produced horror films about ghosts such as the 1998 Japanese film Ringu remade in the US as The Ring in 2002 and the Pang brothers 2002 film The Eye 141 Indian ghost movies are popular not just in India but in the Middle East Africa South East Asia and other parts of the world Some Indian ghost movies such as the comedy horror film Chandramukhi have been commercial successes dubbed into several languages 142 In fictional television programming ghosts have been explored in series such as Supernatural Ghost Whisperer and Medium In animated fictional television programming ghosts have served as the central element in series such as Casper the Friendly Ghost Danny Phantom and Scooby Doo Various other television shows have depicted ghosts as well Metaphorical usagesNietzsche argued that people generally wear prudent masks in company but that an alternative strategy for social interaction is to present oneself as an absence as a social ghost One reaches out for us but gets no hold of us 143 a sentiment later echoed if in a less positive way by Carl Jung 144 Nick Harkaway has considered that all people carry a host of ghosts in their heads in the form of impressions of past acquaintances ghosts who represent mental maps of other people in the world and serve as philosophical reference points 145 Object relations theory sees human personalities as formed by splitting off aspects of the person that he or she deems incompatible whereupon the person may be haunted in later life by such ghosts of his or her alternate selves 146 The sense of ghosts as invisible mysterious entities is invoked in several terms that use the word metaphorically such as ghostwriter a writer who pens texts credited to another person without revealing the ghostwriter s role as an author ghost singer a vocalist who records songs whose vocals are credited to another person and ghosting a date when a person breaks off contact with a former romantic partner and disappears See also nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ghosts Gadulta Hauntology List of ghosts Paranormal activity Spiritism Spirit photography Susulu mythology La LloronaReferences Kirby R S 1804 The Hammersmith Ghosts Kirby s Wonderful and Scientific Museum pp 65 79 Hole pp 150 163 Cohen Daniel 1984 The encyclopedia of ghosts Dodd Mead p 8 ISBN 978 0 396 08308 5 Michael Lipka October 30 2015 18 of Americans say they ve seen a ghost Pew Retrieved 7 February 2019 a b Bunge Mario Philosophy of Science From Problem to Theory Transaction Publishers 1998 ISBN 978 1 4128 2423 1 p 178 a b Regal Brian 15 October 2009 Pseudoscience A Critical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 75 77 ISBN 978 0 313 35508 0 Raford Benjamin November 2010 Ghost Hunting Mistakes Science and Pseudoscience in Ghost Investigations Committee for Skeptical Inquiry Archived from the original on 28 March 2019 Retrieved 8 July 2017 Levy Rob Levy Stephanie Hearing ghost voices relies on pseudoscience and fallibility of human perception The Conversation Retrieved 8 July 2017 Radford Benjamin Are Ghosts Real Evidence Has Not Materialized Live Science Retrieved 8 July 2017 Raetsch Ch 2005 The encyclopedia of psychoactive plants ethnopharmacology and its applications US Park Street Press pp 277 282 Study suggests link between long term use of anticholinergics and dementia risk Alzheimer s Society 2015 01 26 Archived from the original on 2015 11 12 Retrieved 2015 02 17 A case of progressive posterior cortical atrophy PCA with vivid hallucination are some ghost tales vivid hallucinations in normal people Furuya et al Mian Razs January 2019 Visual Hallucinations from Zolpidem Use for the Treatment of Hospital Insomnia in a Septuagenarian Cureus 11 1 e3848 doi 10 7759 cureus 3848 PMC 6411327 PMID 30891388 Odd The Body 30 October 2009 See ghosts There may be a medical reason NBC News Orel 2003 p 262 Kroonen 2013 p 163 Oxford English Dictionary 2021 s v ghost n ghost Oxford English Dictionary Retrieved 27 August 2013 spook Oxford English Dictionary Retrieved 27 August 2013 Mencken H L 1936 repr 1980 The American Language An Inquiry into the Development of English in the United States 4th edition New York Knopf p 108 Webster s Third New International Dictionary Merriam Webster spook Webster s New World College Dictionary 4th edition Wiley spook oὗtos Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon umbra Charlton T Lewis Charles Short A Latin Dictionary Cohen Daniel 1984 The encyclopedia of ghosts Dodd Mead pp 137 156 ISBN 978 0 396 08308 5 wraith Oxford English Dictionary Retrieved 27 August 2013 Milner Liz Tom Shippey J R R Tolkien Author of the Century Houghton Mifflin Company 2001 greenmanreview com Archived from the original on 2013 01 25 Retrieved 2009 01 04 bogey Merriam Webster 2012 08 31 Retrieved on 2013 03 21 Robert Chambers The life and works of Robert Burns Volume 1 Lippincott Grambo amp co 1854 Ulster Scots Words and Phrases Bogie Archived 2015 11 06 at the Wayback Machine BBC Retrieved December 18 2010 Donald Brown 1991 Human Universals Philadelphia Temple University Press online summary a b Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology edited by J Gordon Melton Gale Group ISBN 0 8103 5487 X Richard Cavendish 1994 The World of Ghosts and the Supernatural Waymark Publications Basingstoke 5 e g in graves of the Irish Bronze Age IOL ie Archived 2008 12 25 at the Wayback Machine In the immediate aftermath of a death the deceased is removed from the bed he died in and placed on the prepared floor called a comfort bed His jaw is bound up and his feet tied together usually at the big toes Kultur gov tr archive version If a man lives and moves it can only be because he has a little man or animal inside who moves him The animal inside the animal the man inside the man is the soul And as the activity of an animal or man is explained by the presence of the soul so the repose of sleep or death is explained by its absence sleep or trance being the temporary death being the permanent absence of the soul The Golden Bough Project Gutenberg Retrieved January 16 2007 Hole pp 13 27 Fantastically wrong wailing banshee Wired Ireland s Most Famous Ghost The White Lady Irish Central permanent dead link Shure Natalie 2015 10 31 Who Invented The Bedsheet Ghost The Daily Beast Retrieved 2020 08 13 Jacobsen Thorkild 1978 The treasures of darkness a history of Mesopotamian religion Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 02291 9 Black Jeremy A Green Anthony Rickards Tessa 1992 Gods demons and symbols of ancient Mesopotamia an illustrated dictionary University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 70794 8 Goelet Ogden 1998 A Commentary on the Corpus of Literature and Tradition which constitutes the Book of Going Forth By Day San Francisco Chronicle Books pp 139 170 Vieira Mark A 2003 Hollywood horror from gothic to cosmic Harry N Abrams pp 55 58 ISBN 978 0 8109 4535 7 Finucane pp 4 16 Finucane pp 8 11 Trousdell Richard 2008 Tragedy and Transformation The Oresteia of Aeschylus Jung Journal 2 3 5 38 doi 10 1525 jung 2008 2 3 5 JSTOR 10 1525 jung 2008 2 3 5 S2CID 170372385 Finucane pg 12 Finucane pg 13 Jaehnig K C 1999 03 11 Classical ghost stories Southern Illinois University Archived from the original on September 8 2007 Retrieved 2007 09 19 Pliny the Younger LXXXIII To Sura bartleby com Retrieved 2007 09 19 Luke 24 37 39 They were startled and frightened Bible Gateway 26 September 2018 Archived from the original on 26 September 2018 The Doubter by Lucian in Roger Lancelyn Green 1970 Thirteen Uncanny Tales London Dent 14 21 and Finucane pg 26 F R Hoare The Western Fathers Sheed amp Ward New York 1954 pp 294 5 Finucane Ch 3 Fincucane pp 70 77 Finucane pp 83 84 Finucane pg 79 Mark Gregory Pegg 2008 A Most Holy War Oxford University Press New York 3 5 116 117 ISBN 978 0 19 517131 0 Yuriko Yamanaka Tetsuo Nishio 2006 The Arabian Nights and Orientalism Perspectives from East amp West I B Tauris p 83 ISBN 978 1 85043 768 0 Walker D P 1958 Spiritual and Demonic Magic from Ficino to Campanella London Warburg Institute passim Original German edition Von Gespansten kurtzer und einfaltiger bericht Zurich 1569 VD16 L 834 Child Francis James The English and Scottish Popular Ballads v 2 p 227 Dover Publications New York 1965 Child Francis James The English and Scottish Popular Ballads v 2 p 234 Dover Publications New York 1965 Grateful dead Encyclopaedia Britannica Online 2007 Retrieved 2007 12 14 Carroll Bret E 1997 Spiritualism in Antebellum America Religion in North America Bloomington Indiana University Press p 248 ISBN 978 0 253 33315 5 a b c Braude Ann 2001 Radical Spirits Spiritualism and Women s Rights in Nineteenth Century America Second Edition Indiana University Press p 296 ISBN 978 0 253 21502 4 Britten Emma Hardinge 1884 Nineteenth Century Miracles Spirits and their Work in Every Country of the Earth New York William Britten ISBN 978 0 7661 6290 7 THREE FORMS OF THOUGHT M M Mangassarian Addresses the Society for Ethical Culture at Carnegie Music Hall UNREST OF THE HUMAN MIND Theosophy Spiritualism and Christian Science Discussed The Theory of Reaction a Fallacy Ineffectiveness of the Spiritualistic Idea The New York Times 29 November 1897 Natale Simone 2016 Supernatural Entertainments Victorian Spiritualism and the Rise of Modern Media Culture University Park PA Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 978 0 271 07104 6 Johannes Greber Archived 2009 03 16 at the Wayback Machine Seanet com Retrieved on 2013 03 21 In Canada Spiritism is an officially recognized religious denomination unique in the world as The National Spiritist Church of Alberta Archived 2010 05 04 at the Wayback Machine Church A145 registered by Department of Vital Statistics Government of Alberta under The Marriage Act of Alberta with government licensed clergy and legal authority to perform marriages Hess David 1991 Spirits and Scientists Ideology Spiritism and Brazilian Culture Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 978 0 271 00724 3 McCorristine Shane Spectres of the Self Thinking About Ghosts and Ghost Seeing in England 1750 1920 2010 ISBN 1 139 78882 5 pp 44 56 Gelder Ken The horror reader 2000 ISBN 0 415 21356 8 pp 43 44 Muir Hazel 2001 12 20 Ball lightning scientists remain in the dark New Scientist Retrieved 2011 01 15 Nickell Joe Sep Oct 2000 Haunted Inns Tales of Spectral Guests Committee for Skeptical Inquiry Retrieved 2009 12 19 Carroll Robert Todd June 2001 pareidolia skepdic com Retrieved 2007 09 19 Weinstein Larry June 2001 The Paranormal Visit Committee for Skeptical Inquiry Archived from the original on 2010 03 16 Retrieved 2010 02 12 Once the idea of a ghost appears in a household no longer is an object merely mislaid There gets to be a dynamic in a place where the idea that it s haunted takes on a life of its own One of a kind quirks that could never be repeated all become further evidence of the haunting Nickell Joe 2018 Hawking Ghosts in Old Louisville Skeptical Inquirer 42 2 26 29 Radford Ben 2018 The Curious Question of Ghost Taxonomy Skeptical Inquirer 42 3 47 49 Klemperer Frances 1992 Ghosts Visions and Voices Sometimes Simply Perceptual Mistakes British Medical Journal 305 6868 1518 1519 doi 10 1136 bmj 305 6868 1518 JSTOR 29717993 PMC 1884722 PMID 1286367 Wiseman R Watt C Stevens P et al 2003 An investigation into alleged hauntings PDF The British Journal of Psychology 94 2 195 211 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 537 2406 doi 10 1348 000712603321661886 PMID 12803815 Archived PDF from the original on 2008 08 29 Richard Wiseman Archived 2007 08 30 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved September 25 2007 Sounds like terror in the air Reuters Sydney Morning Herald 2003 09 09 Retrieved 2007 09 19 Choi IS 2001 Carbon monoxide poisoning systemic manifestations and complications J Korean Med Sci 16 3 253 61 doi 10 3346 jkms 2001 16 3 253 PMC 3054741 PMID 11410684 Jalal Baland Romanelli Andrea Hinton Devon E 2015 12 01 Cultural Explanations of Sleep Paralysis in Italy The Pandafeche Attack and Associated Supernatural Beliefs Culture Medicine and Psychiatry 39 4 651 664 doi 10 1007 s11013 015 9442 y ISSN 0165 005X PMID 25802016 S2CID 46090345 Deuteronomy 18 11 1 Samuel 28 3 19 Isaiah 14 9 26 14 19 Falk Avner 26 May 1996 A Psychoanalytic History of the Jews Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press ISBN 978 0 8386 3660 2 via Google Books Dybbuk Encyclopaedia Britannica Online retrieved 2009 06 10 Dibbuk Encyclopedia Judaica by Gershom Scholem Ehrman Bart D 2006 Peter Paul and Mary Magdalene the followers of Jesus in history and legend Oxford University Press p 17 ISBN 978 0 19 530013 0 Retrieved 14 November 2015 Jesus then walks out to them on the water When they see him in the middle of the lake the disciples are terrified thinking it is a ghost Jesus assures them it is he and then Peter in a characteristically unreserved moment calls out Lord if it is you command me to come to you on the water Matt 14 28 Emissary 2007 09 30 A Faraway Ancient Country ISBN 978 0 615 15801 3 Retrieved 2010 03 27 if we have ghosts then where do we put them in the Christian universe While they are tied to the earth they are no longer living on the material plain Heaven and hell are exclusive places so it s extremely unlikely that people come and go from these destinations as they please There must be a third state in the afterlife where souls linger before continuing their journey Heavenly minded It s time to get our eschatology right say scholars authors The United Methodist Church Archived from the original on April 21 2009 Retrieved 2010 03 27 John Wesley believed in the intermediate state between death and the final judgment where believers would share in the bosom of Abraham or paradise even continuing to grow in holiness there writes Ted Campbell a professor at Perkins School of Theology in his 1999 book Methodist Doctrine The Essentials Abingdon Prosser Eleanor 1967 Hamlet and revenge Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0316 1 Retrieved 2010 03 27 Primarily the Purgatory ghost appeared only to ask for masses alms fasts pilgrimages and above all prayers Fathers Paulist 1945 Catholic world Volume 162 Paulist Fathers Retrieved 2010 03 27 That the Ghost comes from Purgatory is evident from his description of his abode in the other world as primarily a state of purification consisting of Ghosts Fairies and Omens University of Wisconsin Madison Archived from the original on 2004 04 23 Retrieved 2010 03 27 The Roman Catholic Church taught that at death the souls of those too good for hell and too bad for heaven were sent to Purgatory Here they were purged of their sins by punishment but might on occasion be allowed to return to earth to warn the living of the need for repentance Do You Believe in Ghosts Catholic Exchange 2006 10 07 Retrieved 2010 03 27 Ghosts can come to us for good but we must not attempt to conjure or control spirits Klein Michele 2003 06 30 Not to worry Jewish wisdom and folklore Jewish Publication Society ISBN 978 0 8276 0753 8 Retrieved 2010 03 27 Jews have sometimes engaged in conjuring spirits when worried even though the Bible prohibits this behavior A Christian Perspective on Ghosts and Hauntings Spotlight Ministries Archived from the original on 2010 01 09 Retrieved 2010 03 27 The Bible warns of the very real danger of seductive spirits that will come to deceive people and draw them away from God and into bondage But the Spirit the Holy Spirit explicitly says that in later times some will fall away from the faith paying attention to deceitful spirits and doctrines of demons 1 Tim 4 1 Lim Sue 2002 06 18 Good Spirits Bad Spirits How to Distinguish Between Them Writers Club Press ISBN 978 0 595 22771 6 Retrieved 2010 04 02 Robbie s playing of the Ouija board gave occult spirits the jurisdiction or right to control him which they did until they were commanded to leave cast out Doctrines to be Rejected 8 April 2003 Archived from the original on 8 April 2003 Bedir Murteza 2006 Interplay of Sufism Law Theology and Philosophy A non Sufi Mystic of 4th 5th 10 11th Centuries In Carmona Alfonso ed El Sufismo y las normas del Islam Trabajos del IV Congreso Internacional de Estudios Juridicos Islamicos Derecho y Sufismo pp 262 3 ISBN 84 7564 323 X OCLC 70767145 Retrieved 2017 07 15 via Google Books Sengers Gerda 2003 Women and Demons Cultic Healing in Islamic Egypt BRILL p 50 ISBN 978 90 04 12771 5 OCLC 50713550 Christian Lange Paradise and Hell in Islamic Traditions Cambridge University Press 2015 ISBN 978 0 521 50637 3 p 122 Werner Diem Marco Scholler The Living and the Dead in Islam Epitaphs as texts Otto Harrassowitz Verlag 2004 ISBN 978 3 447 05083 8 p 144 Jane I Smith Yvonne Yazbeck Haddad The Islamic Understanding of Death and Resurrection Oxford University Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 19 515649 2 page 153 Werner Diem Marco Scholler The Living and the Dead in Islam Epitaphs as texts Otto Harrassowitz Verlag 2004 ISBN 978 3 447 05083 8 p 116 Jane Idleman SMith Yvonne Yazbeck Haddad The Islamic Understanding of Death and Resurrection State University of New York Press Albany 1981 ISBN 0 87395 506 4 p 117 125 Valery Rees From Gabriel to Lucifer A Cultural History of Angels Bloomsbury Publishing 04 12 2012 ISBN 978 0 85772 162 4 p 82 Gertsman Elina Rosenwein Barbara H 2018 The Middle Ages in 50 Objects Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press p 103 ISBN 978 1 107 15038 6 OCLC 1030592502 Retrieved 25 February 2020 JOSEF W MERI ASPECTS OF BARAKA BLESSINGS AND RITUAL DEVOTION AMONG MEDIEVAL MUSLIMS AND JEWS1 in Medieval encounters 1999 NV Brill Leiden p 47 69 Firth Shirley End of Life A Hindu View The Lancet 2005 366 682 86 Jose Vidamor B Yu Inculturation of Filipino Chinese Culture Mentality Gregorian Biblical BookShop 2000 ISBN 978 88 7652 848 4 p 110 a b G O Ozumba African Traditional Metaphysics Quodlibet Journal www quodlibet net Archived from the original on 2010 11 16 Retrieved 2016 11 22 Rudgley Richard The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Substances pub Abacus 1998 ISBN 0 349 11127 8 pps 20 21 Ian Cunnison 1958 Giraffe hunting among the Humr tribe Sudan Notes and Records 39 6 Animals That Can Get You High Archived from the original on 15 December 2017 Retrieved 18 December 2017 Paul Chambers 2006 The Cock Lane Ghost London Sutton 61 2 Ramchandani Indu 2000 Hoiberg Dale ed Students Britannica India Volumes 1 5 Popular Prakashan 2000 ISBN 978 0 85229 760 5 Bhut also spelt bhoot in Hindu mythology a restless ghost Bhoots are believed to be malignant if they have died a violent of premature death or have been denied funerary rites Ghosts of Thai folklore Archived 2013 11 01 at the Wayback Machine Board postjung com Retrieved on 2013 03 21 Phi Krahang permanent dead link Thaighosts net Retrieved on 2013 03 21 Movie poster showing Thai ghosts Krahang and Krasue with Count Dracula photobucket com Ghosts and Spirits of Lan Na Northern Thailand in Forbes Andrew and Henley David Ancient Chiang Mai Volume 4 Chiang Mai Cognoscenti Books 2012 ASIN B006J541LE Spirits Thaiworldview com Retrieved on 2013 03 21 Conze Edward 1993 A Short History of Buddhism 2 ed Oxford Oneworld Westervelt William Drake 1985 Hawaiian Legends of Ghosts and Ghost Gods Forgotten Books ISBN 978 1 60506 964 7 Chinese Ghost Culture Ministry of Culture P R China Archived from the original on 2010 07 11 Retrieved 2010 07 07 Newport F Strausberg M 2001 Americans belief in psychic and paranormal phenomena is up over last decade Gallup Poll News Service 8 June Science and Technology Public Attitudes and Understanding Public Knowledge About S amp T Belief in Pseudoscience Archived April 12 2010 at the Wayback Machine Chapter 7 of Science and Engineering Indicators 2004 National Science Board National Science Foundation Science and Engineering Indicators 2006 National Science Board National Science Foundation Lyons Linda July 12 2005 One Third of Americans Believe Dearly May Not Have Departed Gallup Polls Retrieved 2010 11 28 Darrell Schweitzer 2005 The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy Themes Works and Wonders Westport CT Greenwood pp 338 340 a b c Darrell Schweitzer 2005 p 338 340 Ann Jones amp Peter Stallybrass Renaissance Clothing and the Materials of Memory Cambridge University Press 2000 Holland Peter 2005 Shakespeare Survey Volume 58 Writing about Shakespeare Cambridge University Press p 40 James M R Some Remarks on Ghost Stories The Bookman December 1929 The Castle of Otranto The creepy tale that launched gothic fiction BBC Retrieved October 7 2017 a b c d Newman Kim ed BFI Companion to Horror Cassell London 1996 ISBN 0 304 33216 X p 135 Chanko Kenneth M August 8 1993 FILM When It Comes to the Hereafter Romance and Sentiment Rule The New York Times Retrieved 2009 01 29 Rafferty Terence June 8 2003 Why Asian Ghost Stories Are the Best The New York Times Retrieved 2009 01 29 Mohamed Shoaib September 24 2007 The Bus Conductor Turned Superstar Who Took the Right Bus to Demi Behindwoods Retrieved 2010 03 17 Quoted in Gary Gutting ed The Cambridge Companion to Foucault 2003 p 235 C G Jung Two Essays on Analytical Psychology London 1953 p 197 Nick Harkaway The Gone Away World 2008 p 380 Michael Parsons The Dove that Returns the Dove that Vanishes 2000 p 83 4 Bibliography Finucane R C Appearances of the Dead A Cultural History of Ghosts Prometheus Books 1984 ISBN 0 87975 238 6 Hervey Sheila Some Canadian Ghosts in series Original Canadian Pocket Book s Richmond Hill Ont Pocket Books 1973 SBN 671 78629 6 Hole Christina Haunted England Batsford London 1950 Kroonen Guus 2013 Etymological Dictionary of Proto Germanic Brill ISBN 978 90 04 18340 7 Orel Vladimir 2003 A Handbook of Germanic Etymology Brill ISBN 978 90 04 12875 0 Oxford English Dictionary Online Oxford University Press 2021 Further readingFairly John amp Welfare Simon Arthur C Clarke s World of Strange Powers Putnam New York 1985 Felton D Haunted Greece and Rome Ghost Stories From Classical Antiquity University of Texas Press 1999 Johnston Sarah Iles Restless Dead Encounters Between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece University of California Press 1999 MacKenzie Andrew Apparitions and Ghosts Arthur Barker 1971 Moreman Christopher Beyond the Threshold Afterlife Beliefs and Experiences in World Religions Rowman amp Littlefield 2008 External links nbsp Media related to Ghosts at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Quotations related to Ghosts at Wikiquote nbsp The dictionary definition of ghost at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ghost amp oldid 1180841673 European folklore, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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