Historical perspectives of the influence of mediumship on the construction of psychological and psychiatric ideas

Authors

  • Carlos S. Alvarado University of Virginia; Division of Perceptual Studies
  • Fátima Regina Machado Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo; Faculdade de Comunicação e Filosofia
  • Wellington Zangari Universidade de São Paulo; Instituo de Psicologia; Laboratório de Estudos em Psicologia Social da Religião
  • Nancy L. Zingrone University of Virginia; Division of Perceptual Studies

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S0101-60832007000700007

Keywords:

Mediumship, psychiatry, psychology, spiritism, psychical research, psychopathology

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Psychology and psychiatry have long been influenced by the phenomena their practitioners study. A variety of ideas about the mind and its pathology were developed in the context of studies of hysteria, double and multiple personality and hypnotic phenomena. OBJECTIVES: In this study we argue that mediumship influenced both psychology and psychiatry in different ways. The study of mediumistic phenomena such as trances and written or verbal messages claimed to come from deceased spirits contributed to the development of several important concepts during the nineteenth century and later on. METHODS: We have reviewed the historical psychiatric and psychological literature relating to mediumship to identify discussions about mediumship. RESULTS: Mediumship was used to defend a variety of ideas about the subconscious mind by figures such as William B. Carpenter, Frederic W.H. Myers, and Joseph Grasset. Both Pierre Janet and Théodore Flournoy used mediumship to illustrate forms of dissociation. Similarly, psychopathology was related in different ways to the practice of mediumship, as discussed by Jean-Martin Charcot, Pierre Janet and Gilbert Ballet. CONCLUSIONS: While mediumship was just only one factor affecting concepts of the subconscious, dissociation and psychopathology, its influence needs to be more recognized than it is currently done in the historiography of psychology and psychiatry.

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Published

2007-01-01

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

Historical perspectives of the influence of mediumship on the construction of psychological and psychiatric ideas . (2007). Archives of Clinical Psychiatry, 34(supl.1), 42-53. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0101-60832007000700007