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Whately Carington

Walter Whately Carington (1892 – March 2, 1947) was a British parapsychologist. His name, originally Walter Whately Smith, was changed in 1933.[1]

Whately Carington
Born1892
DiedMarch 2, 1947
Occupation(s)Parapsychologist, writer

Biography edit

Carington born in London was educated at the University of Cambridge where he studied science. He was admitted to Middle Temple on 8 November 1912, but withdrew in 1916 without being Called to the Bar. He joined the Royal Flying Corps during World War I and became an experienced pilot, but was badly injured after a forced landing. On behalf of the Air Ministry and War Office he returned to Cambridge to undertake research into acoustics, with special reference to psychological problems. At this time he devised some innovative methods for the mathematical assessment of feelings, which proved useful in his later work.

He investigated the mediums Kathleen Goligher and Gladys Osborne Leonard and he set about studying psychical research in more detail.[1] Between 1934 and 1936 Carington tested the trance mediumship of Eileen Garrett, Gladys Osborne Leonard and Rudi Schneider with psychogalvanic reflex and word association tests.[2] Carington concluded from the results their trance controls were secondary personalities, not spirits.[3][4][5][6]

Criticism of Carington's tests on mediums came from C. D. Broad and R. H. Thouless who wrote he had made statistical errors and misinterpreted numerical data.[7] The psychologist Donald West had praised the tests that Carington performed with Leonard.[8]

Carington gave up all other work for his interest in psychical research. He lived on a small private income for a time in a remote village in the Netherlands. In 1938 he travelled to Germany, to rescue a woman from harassment by the Gestapo. They later married and set up home in Cornwall, where his wife collaborated in his experiments and nursed him as his health gradually failed. His early death at the age of fifty-four was due in part to his injury during World War I, and to overwork.

The psychical researcher Renée Haynes described Carington as a "shy, dedicated retiring man, whose services to psychical research have never been fully recognized."[9]

Hypotheses edit

Carington theorised that individual minds are less isolated from one another than is assumed. Carington's hypothesis of telepathy was to draw upon the association of ideas: in a mind, one idea yields to another through associative links. Carington hypothesized that telepathy depends upon an analogous type of linkage at a subconscious level. He suggested that such links could perhaps be reinforced by what he called 'K’ ideas or objects. Carington speculated on the concept of a "group mind" and "psychons". He believed that minds which hold a great deal of their images in common may be favourable for telepathic communication.[10][11][12]

Carington wrote about his hypothesis in his book Telepathy (1945). The book received a positive review in the British Medical Journal which described it as an "extremely interesting and, though often highly speculative, a thought-provoking book."[10] However Frank Finger gave the book a negative review in The Quarterly Review of Biology claiming Carington failed to present any scientific data that could be intelligently evaluated and concluded "it seems doubtful that this book will alter the scientific status of telepathic communication appreciably, and certainly it will cause no great upheaval in the field of biological science."[13]

Carington's ideas about telepathy inspired the novelist Iris Murdoch who wrote "His theory, though wrong I've no doubt, is interesting."[14]

The philosopher Antony Flew wrote the verdict seemed to go against Carington's hypothesis because it "commits him to saying that the various sub-laws of association (those of Recency, Repetition, etc.) will apply to telepathic association also."[15]

Carington in his book Matter, Mind, and Meaning (1949) advocated a form of neutral monism. He held that mind and matter both consist of the same kind of components known as "cognita" or sense data.[16][17][18]

Publications edit

Books

  • The Foundations of Spiritualism (1920)
  • A Theory of the Mechanism of Survival (1920)
  • The Measurement of Emotion (1922)
  • The Death of Materialism (1932)
  • Three Essays on Consciousness (1934)
  • Telepathy: An Outline of its Fact, Theory and Implications (1945)
  • Matter, Mind and Meaning (1949). Completed by H. H. Price.

Papers

  • – (1934). The Quantitative Study of Trance Personalities. Part 1. Preliminary Studies. Mrs. Garrett, Rudi Schneider, Mrs. Leonard. Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 42: 173–240.
  • – (1935). The Quantitative Study of Trance Personalities. Part 2. Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 43: 319–361.
  • – (1936). The Quantitative Study of Trance Personalities. Part 3. Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 44: 189–222.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Walter Whately Carington". Gale Encyclopedia of Occultism & Parapsychology.
  2. ^ Mauskopf, Seymour; McVaugh, Michael. (1980). The Elusive Science: Origins of experimental Psychical Research. Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 222. ISBN 978-0801823312 "Between 1934 and 1936 he published three papers on "The Quantitative Study of Trance Personalities" — studying Mrs. Garrett (and "Uvani"); Rudi Schneider (and his control, "Olga"); and Mrs. Osborne Leonard (together with her control, "Feda," and two other communicators purporting to be the late Reverend John Wesley Thomas and his daughter Etta). As Hereward Carrington had done, he used reaction times and variations in the psychogalvanic reflex during word-association tests."
  3. ^ Spiritist Mediums May Be Split Personalities. (1935). The Science News-Letter. Vol. 28, No. 753. pp. 165–166. "Mr. Carington subjected a considerable number of mediums, both in their normal condition and in the trance state, to what psychologists call the word-association test. This consists in the examiner saying one word, and the subject answering with the first word that comes into his mind. The answer gives a picture of the mental state of the subject... In their normal state, they gave one set of reactions to test words. In their trance, their "controls" gave the opposite set of reactions. This led Mr. Carington to suspect that a medium's "control" is no messenger from the spirit world, but simply an ordinarily suppressed "other self" who gets leave to speak up during the trance condition."
  4. ^ Edmunds, Simeon. (1965) Miracles of the Mind: An Introduction to Parapsychology. Thomas. p. 77. ISBN 978-0020527541 "Drayton Thomas made the notes of his sittings with Mrs. Leonard available to W. Whately Carington when the latter carried out his noted quantitative study of mediumship, and collaborated closely with him in this work, although he disagreed strongly with Carington's conclusion that "Feda" was not a spirit entity, but merely a secondary personality of the medium. Carington's view, however, received formidable support from the results of his application of the psychological technique known as the word association test, which he made on Mrs. Leonard and a number of other trance mediums."
  5. ^ Douglas, Alfred. (1982). Extra-Sensory Powers: A Century of Psychical Research. Overlook Press. p. 159. ISBN 978-0879511609 "Carington was interested in the psychology of the trance state, and to investigate this further applied Word Association Tests to various mediums, including Mrs Leonard. The results were not conclusive, but in the case of Mrs Leonard Carington believed that they demonstrated a "counter-similarity" between the personalities of Mrs Leonard and Feda; an inverse relationship that tended to confirm Lady Troubridge's studies. Carington concluded that in his view Feda was a secondary personality of Mrs Leonard, probably formed round a nucleus of repressed material."
  6. ^ Franklyn, Julian. (2003). Dictionary of the Occult. Kessinger Reprint Edition. p. 230. ISBN 978-1162578330 "It was further shown by Mr. Whately Carington, using the psycho-galvanic-reflex, that the medium's spirit control "Olga", who claims to be the ghost of a Spanish dancing-girl, Lola Montez, is in reality indistinguishable in psychological make-up from Rudi himself."
  7. ^ Broad, C. D. (2011). Lectures on Psychical Research. Routledge Reprint Edition. p. 200. ISBN 978-0415610728
  8. ^ West, Donald. (1954). Psychical Research Today. Duckworth. p. 60. "Carington discovered that the results given by Feda and Mrs Leonard were neither what one would expect from testing two different persons nor what one would normally get from testing the same person twice. Superficially their patterns were grossly dissimilar, but they were related to each other – that is, negatively correlated. Where the normal Mrs Leonard tended to give a long reaction time, the entranced Mrs Leonard gave a short one, and vice versa. In other words Feda and Mrs Leonard were not independent individuals; they were complementary characters. The result is in keeping with the theory that Feda is a dramatization of the medium's own subconscious trends. It is very difficult to reconcile these findings with a Spiritualistic interpretation."
  9. ^ Haynes, Renée. (1982). The Society for Psychical Research, 1882–1982: A History. Macdonald. p. 92. ISBN 978-0356078755
  10. ^ a b Telepathy and the Group Mind. (1945). The British Medical Journal. Vol. 2, No. 4433. p. 886
  11. ^ Samuel, Lawrence. (2011). Supernatural America: A Cultural History: A Cultural History. Praeger. p. 61. ISBN 978-0313398995 "British author Whately Carington (no relation to the American writer Hereward Carrington) posited that “mind-stuff” (composed of “psychons,” or ideas) was analogous to but completely distinct from matter in the physical world. Although their cognitive equivalent had yet to be discovered, dimensions of the physical world—time and space—did not apply to the mind, Carington argued, meaning people's mental processes could overlap. While our conscious minds were isolated units, our subconscious minds were not, he theorized, making an "association of ideas" possible between people who were acquainted with each other and, better yet, had common interests."
  12. ^ "Walter Whately Carington". Biographical Dictionary of Parapsychology. "Carington's best known and most controversial contribution to parapsychology is his "association theory" of telepathy, the basis of which is the concept that minds are systems of ideas and sensa (termed "psychons" by Carington). Such "psychon systems," he held, are not wholly insulated from one another, and in telepathy interaction between psychons in different minds takes place according to the same laws of association as govern the interaction of psychons in a single mind."
  13. ^ Finger, Frank. (1947). Thought Transference: An Outline of Facts, Theory and Implications of Telepathy by Whately Carington. The Quarterly Review of Biology. Vol. 22, No. 1. pp. 97–98.
  14. ^ "Iris Murdoch's early works and her struggle to 'write something good' revealed". The Telegraph.
  15. ^ Flew, Antony. (1953). A New Approach To Psychical Research. Watts & Co. p. 132
  16. ^ Broad, C. D. (1950). Matter, Mind, and Meaning by W. Whately Carington. Philosophy. Vol. 25, No. 94. pp. 275–277.
  17. ^ Grenell, R. G. (1953). Matter, Mind and Meaning by Whately Carington. The Quarterly Review of Biology. Vol. 28, No. 4. pp. 404–405.
  18. ^ Oakeshott, Michael; O'Sullivan, Luke. (2007). The Concept of a Philosophical Jurisprudence: Essays and Reviews 1926–51. Imprint Academic. p. 286. ISBN 978-1845401801 "The doctrine that Mr Carington comes to favour is a form of Neutral Monism: the common constituents of mind and matter are sense-data or cognita. In themselves these cognita are neither mental nor material."

Further reading edit

  • Heywood, Rosalind. (1978). The Sixth Sense: An Inquiry Into Extra-Sensory Perception. Penguin Books.
  • Thouless, R, H. (1937). Review of Mr. Whately Carington's Work on Trance Personalities. Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 44: 223–275.
  • Thouless, R, H. (1963). Experimental Psychical Research. Penguin Books.
  • Smith, Susy. (1964). The Mediumship of Mrs. Leonard. New Hyde Park NY: University Books. See Chapter 8 for Carington's word association experiments with Mrs. Leonard.

whately, carington, walter, 1892, march, 1947, british, parapsychologist, name, originally, walter, whately, smith, changed, 1933, born1892diedmarch, 1947occupation, parapsychologist, writer, contents, biography, hypotheses, publications, also, references, fur. Walter Whately Carington 1892 March 2 1947 was a British parapsychologist His name originally Walter Whately Smith was changed in 1933 1 Whately CaringtonBorn1892DiedMarch 2 1947Occupation s Parapsychologist writer Contents 1 Biography 2 Hypotheses 3 Publications 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingBiography editCarington born in London was educated at the University of Cambridge where he studied science He was admitted to Middle Temple on 8 November 1912 but withdrew in 1916 without being Called to the Bar He joined the Royal Flying Corps during World War I and became an experienced pilot but was badly injured after a forced landing On behalf of the Air Ministry and War Office he returned to Cambridge to undertake research into acoustics with special reference to psychological problems At this time he devised some innovative methods for the mathematical assessment of feelings which proved useful in his later work He investigated the mediums Kathleen Goligher and Gladys Osborne Leonard and he set about studying psychical research in more detail 1 Between 1934 and 1936 Carington tested the trance mediumship of Eileen Garrett Gladys Osborne Leonard and Rudi Schneider with psychogalvanic reflex and word association tests 2 Carington concluded from the results their trance controls were secondary personalities not spirits 3 4 5 6 Criticism of Carington s tests on mediums came from C D Broad and R H Thouless who wrote he had made statistical errors and misinterpreted numerical data 7 The psychologist Donald West had praised the tests that Carington performed with Leonard 8 Carington gave up all other work for his interest in psychical research He lived on a small private income for a time in a remote village in the Netherlands In 1938 he travelled to Germany to rescue a woman from harassment by the Gestapo They later married and set up home in Cornwall where his wife collaborated in his experiments and nursed him as his health gradually failed His early death at the age of fifty four was due in part to his injury during World War I and to overwork The psychical researcher Renee Haynes described Carington as a shy dedicated retiring man whose services to psychical research have never been fully recognized 9 Hypotheses editCarington theorised that individual minds are less isolated from one another than is assumed Carington s hypothesis of telepathy was to draw upon the association of ideas in a mind one idea yields to another through associative links Carington hypothesized that telepathy depends upon an analogous type of linkage at a subconscious level He suggested that such links could perhaps be reinforced by what he called K ideas or objects Carington speculated on the concept of a group mind and psychons He believed that minds which hold a great deal of their images in common may be favourable for telepathic communication 10 11 12 Carington wrote about his hypothesis in his book Telepathy 1945 The book received a positive review in the British Medical Journal which described it as an extremely interesting and though often highly speculative a thought provoking book 10 However Frank Finger gave the book a negative review in The Quarterly Review of Biology claiming Carington failed to present any scientific data that could be intelligently evaluated and concluded it seems doubtful that this book will alter the scientific status of telepathic communication appreciably and certainly it will cause no great upheaval in the field of biological science 13 Carington s ideas about telepathy inspired the novelist Iris Murdoch who wrote His theory though wrong I ve no doubt is interesting 14 The philosopher Antony Flew wrote the verdict seemed to go against Carington s hypothesis because it commits him to saying that the various sub laws of association those of Recency Repetition etc will apply to telepathic association also 15 Carington in his book Matter Mind and Meaning 1949 advocated a form of neutral monism He held that mind and matter both consist of the same kind of components known as cognita or sense data 16 17 18 Publications editBooks The Foundations of Spiritualism 1920 A Theory of the Mechanism of Survival 1920 The Measurement of Emotion 1922 The Death of Materialism 1932 Three Essays on Consciousness 1934 Telepathy An Outline of its Fact Theory and Implications 1945 Matter Mind and Meaning 1949 Completed by H H Price Papers 1934 The Quantitative Study of Trance Personalities Part 1 Preliminary Studies Mrs Garrett Rudi Schneider Mrs Leonard Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 42 173 240 1935 The Quantitative Study of Trance Personalities Part 2 Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 43 319 361 1936 The Quantitative Study of Trance Personalities Part 3 Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 44 189 222 See also editGardner MurphyReferences edit a b Walter Whately Carington Gale Encyclopedia of Occultism amp Parapsychology Mauskopf Seymour McVaugh Michael 1980 The Elusive Science Origins of experimental Psychical Research Johns Hopkins University Press p 222 ISBN 978 0801823312 Between 1934 and 1936 he published three papers on The Quantitative Study of Trance Personalities studying Mrs Garrett and Uvani Rudi Schneider and his control Olga and Mrs Osborne Leonard together with her control Feda and two other communicators purporting to be the late Reverend John Wesley Thomas and his daughter Etta As Hereward Carrington had done he used reaction times and variations in the psychogalvanic reflex during word association tests Spiritist Mediums May Be Split Personalities 1935 The Science News Letter Vol 28 No 753 pp 165 166 Mr Carington subjected a considerable number of mediums both in their normal condition and in the trance state to what psychologists call the word association test This consists in the examiner saying one word and the subject answering with the first word that comes into his mind The answer gives a picture of the mental state of the subject In their normal state they gave one set of reactions to test words In their trance their controls gave the opposite set of reactions This led Mr Carington to suspect that a medium s control is no messenger from the spirit world but simply an ordinarily suppressed other self who gets leave to speak up during the trance condition Edmunds Simeon 1965 Miracles of the Mind An Introduction to Parapsychology Thomas p 77 ISBN 978 0020527541 Drayton Thomas made the notes of his sittings with Mrs Leonard available to W Whately Carington when the latter carried out his noted quantitative study of mediumship and collaborated closely with him in this work although he disagreed strongly with Carington s conclusion that Feda was not a spirit entity but merely a secondary personality of the medium Carington s view however received formidable support from the results of his application of the psychological technique known as the word association test which he made on Mrs Leonard and a number of other trance mediums Douglas Alfred 1982 Extra Sensory Powers A Century of Psychical Research Overlook Press p 159 ISBN 978 0879511609 Carington was interested in the psychology of the trance state and to investigate this further applied Word Association Tests to various mediums including Mrs Leonard The results were not conclusive but in the case of Mrs Leonard Carington believed that they demonstrated a counter similarity between the personalities of Mrs Leonard and Feda an inverse relationship that tended to confirm Lady Troubridge s studies Carington concluded that in his view Feda was a secondary personality of Mrs Leonard probably formed round a nucleus of repressed material Franklyn Julian 2003 Dictionary of the Occult Kessinger Reprint Edition p 230 ISBN 978 1162578330 It was further shown by Mr Whately Carington using the psycho galvanic reflex that the medium s spirit control Olga who claims to be the ghost of a Spanish dancing girl Lola Montez is in reality indistinguishable in psychological make up from Rudi himself Broad C D 2011 Lectures on Psychical Research Routledge Reprint Edition p 200 ISBN 978 0415610728 West Donald 1954 Psychical Research Today Duckworth p 60 Carington discovered that the results given by Feda and Mrs Leonard were neither what one would expect from testing two different persons nor what one would normally get from testing the same person twice Superficially their patterns were grossly dissimilar but they were related to each other that is negatively correlated Where the normal Mrs Leonard tended to give a long reaction time the entranced Mrs Leonard gave a short one and vice versa In other words Feda and Mrs Leonard were not independent individuals they were complementary characters The result is in keeping with the theory that Feda is a dramatization of the medium s own subconscious trends It is very difficult to reconcile these findings with a Spiritualistic interpretation Haynes Renee 1982 The Society for Psychical Research 1882 1982 A History Macdonald p 92 ISBN 978 0356078755 a b Telepathy and the Group Mind 1945 The British Medical Journal Vol 2 No 4433 p 886 Samuel Lawrence 2011 Supernatural America A Cultural History A Cultural History Praeger p 61 ISBN 978 0313398995 British author Whately Carington no relation to the American writer Hereward Carrington posited that mind stuff composed of psychons or ideas was analogous to but completely distinct from matter in the physical world Although their cognitive equivalent had yet to be discovered dimensions of the physical world time and space did not apply to the mind Carington argued meaning people s mental processes could overlap While our conscious minds were isolated units our subconscious minds were not he theorized making an association of ideas possible between people who were acquainted with each other and better yet had common interests Walter Whately Carington Biographical Dictionary of Parapsychology Carington s best known and most controversial contribution to parapsychology is his association theory of telepathy the basis of which is the concept that minds are systems of ideas and sensa termed psychons by Carington Such psychon systems he held are not wholly insulated from one another and in telepathy interaction between psychons in different minds takes place according to the same laws of association as govern the interaction of psychons in a single mind Finger Frank 1947 Thought Transference An Outline of Facts Theory and Implications of Telepathy by Whately Carington The Quarterly Review of Biology Vol 22 No 1 pp 97 98 Iris Murdoch s early works and her struggle to write something good revealed The Telegraph Flew Antony 1953 A New Approach To Psychical Research Watts amp Co p 132 Broad C D 1950 Matter Mind and Meaning by W Whately Carington Philosophy Vol 25 No 94 pp 275 277 Grenell R G 1953 Matter Mind and Meaning by Whately Carington The Quarterly Review of Biology Vol 28 No 4 pp 404 405 Oakeshott Michael O Sullivan Luke 2007 The Concept of a Philosophical Jurisprudence Essays and Reviews 1926 51 Imprint Academic p 286 ISBN 978 1845401801 The doctrine that Mr Carington comes to favour is a form of Neutral Monism the common constituents of mind and matter are sense data or cognita In themselves these cognita are neither mental nor material Further reading editHeywood Rosalind 1978 The Sixth Sense An Inquiry Into Extra Sensory Perception Penguin Books Thouless R H 1937 Review of Mr Whately Carington s Work on Trance Personalities Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 44 223 275 Thouless R H 1963 Experimental Psychical Research Penguin Books Smith Susy 1964 The Mediumship of Mrs Leonard New Hyde Park NY University Books See Chapter 8 for Carington s word association experiments with Mrs Leonard Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Whately Carington amp oldid 1157900199, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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