The Society was especially active in the thirty years after it was founded, gaining fame for its debunking of Madame Blavatsky and the Theosophical Society in 1884. Most initial members were spiritualists but there was a core of 'professional' investigators - the Sidgwick Group, headed by Henry Sidgwick, a formation pre-dating the SPR by eight years. The Society was wracked by internal strife, a large part of the membership (the [Spiritualism|Spiritists]) leaving as early as 1887 in opposition to the approach taken by the so-called intellectuals.
The Society still exists and states its principal areas of study as "exchanges between minds, or between minds and the environment, which are not dealt with by current orthodox science." Of its initial aims, the most successful has been the gathering of data relating to the history of the paranormal - the SPR has built up an extensive library and archive.
DMOZ category: Top/Society/Religion and Spirituality/Esoteric and Occult/Personalities/Blavatsky, Helena Petrovna/The Society for Psychical Research Scandal (http://dmoz.org/Society/Religion_and_Spirituality/Esoteric_and_Occult/Personalities/Blavatsky,_Helena_Petrovna/The_Society_for_Psychical_Research_Scandal/)
Search Encyclopedia
|