Engels’ Dialectics of Nature
http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1883/don/ch10.htm
Natural Science and the Spirit World[1] 
THE dialectics that has found its way into popular consciousness finds
expression in the old saying that extremes meet. In accordance with this
we should hardly err in looking for the most extreme degree of fantasy,
credulity, and superstition, not in that trend of natural science which,
like the German philosophy of nature, tries to force the objective world
into the framework of its subjective thought, but rather in the opposite
trend, which, relying on mere experience, treats thought with sovereign
disdain and really has gone to the furthest extreme in emptiness of
thought. This school prevails in England. Its father, the much lauded
Francis Bacon, already advanced the demand that his new
empirical-inductive method should be pursued to attain by its means,
above all, longer life, rejuvenation - to a certain extent, alteration
of stature and features, transformation of one body into another, the
production of new species, power over the air and the production of
storms. He complains that such investigations have been abandoned, and
in his natural history he actually gives recipes for making gold and
performing various miracles. Similarly Isaac Newton in his old age
greatly busied himself with expounding the revelation of St. John. So it
is not to be wondered at if in recent years English empiricism in the
person of some of its representatives - and not the worst of them -
should seem to have fallen a hopeless victim to the spirit-rapping and
spirit-seeing imported from America.

The first natural scientist belonging here is the very eminent
zoologist and botanist, Alfred Russell Wallace, the man who
simultaneously with Darwin put forward the theory of the evolution of
species by natural selection. In his little work, On Miracles and Modern
Spiritualism, London, Burns, 1875, he relates that his first experiences
in this branch of natural knowledge date from 1844, when he attended the
lectures of Mr. Spencer Hall on mesmerism and as a result carried out
similar experiments on his pupils. “I was extremely interested in the
subject and pursued it with ardour.” He not only produced magnetic
sleep together with the phenomena of articular rigidity, and local loss
of sensation, he also confirmed the correctness of Gall’s map of the
skull, because on touching any one of Gall’s organs the corresponding
activity was aroused in the magnetised patient and exhibited by
appropriate and lively gestures. Further, he established that his
patient, merely by being touched, partook of all the sensations of the
operator; he made him drunk with a glass of water as soon as he told him
that it was brandy. He could make one of the young men so stupid, even
in the waking condition, that he no longer knew his own name, a feat,
however, that other schoolmasters are capable of accomplishing without
any mesmerism. And so on.

Now it happens that I also saw this Mr. Spencer Hall in the winter of
1843-4 in Manchester. He was a very mediocre charlatan, who travelled
the country under the patronage of some parsons and undertook
magnetico-phrenological performances with a young girl in order to prove
thereby the existence of God, the immortality of the soul, and the
incorrectness of the materialism that was being preached at that time by
the Owenites in all big towns. The lady was sent into a magnetico-sleep
and then, as soon as the operator touched any part of the skull
corresponding to one of Gall’s organs, she gave a bountiful display of
theatrical, demonstrative gestures and poses representing the activity
of the organ concerned; for instance, for the organ of
philoprogenitiveness she fondled and kissed an imaginary baby, etc.
Moreover, the good Mr. Hall had enriched Gall’s geography of the skull
with a new island of Barataria: right at the top of the skull he had
discovered an organ of veneration, on touching which his hypnotic miss
sank on to her knees, folded her hands in prayer, and depicted to the
astonished, philistine audience an angel wrapt in veneration. That was
the climax and conclusion of the exhibition. The existence of God had
been proved.

The effect on me and one of my acquaintances was exactly the same as on
Mr. Wallace; the phenomena interested us and we tried to find out how
far we could reproduce them. A wideawake young boy of 12 years old
offered himself as subject. Gently gazing into his eyes, or stroking,
sent him without difficulty into the hypnotic condition. But since we
were rather less credulous than Mr. Wallace and set to work with rather
less fervour, we arrived at quite different results. Apart from muscular
rigidity and loss of sensation, which were easy to produce, we found
also a state of complete passivity of the will bound up with a peculiar
hypersensitivity of sensation. The patient, when aroused from his
lethargy by any external stimulus, exhibited very much greater
liveliness than in the waking condition. There was no trace of any
mysterious relation to the operator; anyone else could just as easily
set the sleeper into activity. To set Gall’s cranial organs into
action was the least that we achieved; we went much further, we could
not only exchange them for one another, or make their seat anywhere in
the whole body, but we also fabricated any amount of other organs,
organs of singing, whistling, piping, dancing, boxing, sewing, cobbling,
tobacco-smoking, etc., and we could make their seat wherever we wanted.
Wallace made his patients drunk on water, but we discovered in the great
toe an organ of drunkenness which only had to be touched in order to
cause the finest drunken comedy to be enacted. But it must be well
understood, no organ showed a trace of action until the patient was
given to understand what was expected of him; the boy soon perfected
himself by practice to such an extent that the merest indication
sufficed. The organs produced in this way then retained their validity
for later occasions of putting to sleep, as long as they were not
altered in the same way. The patient had even a double memory, one for
the waking state and a second quite separate one for the hypnotic
condition., As regards the passivity of the will and its absolute
subjection to the will of a third person, this loses all its miraculous
appearance when we bear in mind that the whole condition began with the
subjection of the will of the patient to that of the operator, and
cannot be restored without it. The most powerful magician of a
magnetiser in the world will come to the end of his resources as soon as
his patient laughs him in the face.

While we with our frivolous scepticism thus found that the basis of
magnetico- phrenological charlatanry lay in a series of phenomena which
for the most part differ only in degree from those of the waking state
and require no mystical interpretation, Mr. Wallace’s “ardour” led
him into a series of self-deceptions, in virtue of which he confirmed
Gall’s map of the skull in all its details and noted a mysterious
relation between operator and patient.[2] Everywhere in Mr. Wallace’s
account, the sincerity of which reaches the degree of naivété, it
becomes apparent that he was much less concerned in investigating the
factual background of charlatanry than in reproducing all the phenomena
at all costs. Only this frame of mind is needed for the man who was
originally a scientist to be quickly converted into an “adept” by
means of simple and facile self-deception. Mr. Wallace ended up with
faith in magnetico-phrenological miracles and so already stood with one
foot in the world of spirits.

He drew the other foot after him in 1865. On returning from his twelve
years of travel in the tropical zone, experiments in table-turning
introduced him to the society of various “mediums.” How rapid his
progress was, and how complete his mastery of the subject, is testified
to by the above-mentioned booklet. He expects us to take for good coin
not only all the alleged miracles of Home, the brothers Davenport, and
other “mediums” who all more or less exhibit themselves for money
and who have for the most part been frequently exposed as impostors, but
also a whole series of allegedly authentic spirit histories from early
times. The Pythonesses of the Greek oracle, the witches of the Middle
Ages, were all “mediums,” and Iamblichus[3] in his De divinatione
already described quite accurately “the most astonishing phenomena of
modern spiritualism."

Just one example to show how lightly Mr. Wallace deals with the
scientific corroboration and authentication of these miracles. It is
certainly a strong assumption that we should believe that the aforesaid
spirits should allow themselves to be photographed, and we have surely
the right to demand that such spirit photographs should be authenticated
in the most indubitable manner before we accept them as genuine. Now Mr.
Wallace recounts on p.187 that in March, 1872, a leading medium, Mrs.
Guppy, née Nicholls, had herself photographed together with her husband
and small boy at Mr. Hudson’s in Notting Hill, and on two different
photographs a tall female figure, finely draped in white gauze robes,
with somewhat Eastern features, was to be seen behind her in a pose as
if giving a benediction. “Here, then, one of two things are absolutely
certain.[4] Either there was a living intelligent, but invisible being
present, or Mr. and Mrs. Guppy, the photographer, and some fourth person
planned a wicked imposture and have maintained it ever since. Knowing
Mr. and Mrs. Guppy so well as I do, I feel an absolute conviction that
they are as incapable of an imposture of this kind as any earnest
inquirer after truth in the department of natural science."[5]

Consequently, either deception or spirit photography. Quite so. And, if
deception, either the spirit was already on the photographic plates, or
four persons must have been concerned, or three if we leave out as
weak-minded or duped old Mr. Guppy who died in January, 1875, at the age
of 84 (it only needed that he should be sent behind the Spanish screen
of the background). That a photographer could obtain a “model” for
the spirit without difficulty does not need to be argued. But the
photographer Hudson, shortly afterwards, was publicly prosecuted for
habitual falsification of spirit photographs, so Mr. Wallace remarks in
mitigation: “One thing is clear, if an imposture has occurred, it was
at once detected by spiritualists themselves.” Hence there is not much
reliance to be placed on the photographer. Remains Mrs. Guppy, and for
her there is only the “absolute conviction” of our friend Wallace
and nothing more. Nothing more? Not at all. The absolute trustworthiness
of Mrs. Guppy is evidenced by her assertion that one evening, early in
June, 1871, she was carried through the air in a state of
unconsciousness from her house in Highbury Hill Park to 69, Lamb’s
Conduit Street - three English miles as the crow flies - and deposited
in the said house of No. 69 on the table in the midst of a
spiritualistic séance. The doors of the room were closed, and although
Mrs. Guppy was one of the stoutest women in London, which is certainly
saying a good deal, nevertheless her sudden incursion did not leave
behind the slightest hole either in the doors or in the ceiling.
(Reported in the London .Echo, June 8, 1871.) And if anyone still does
not believe in the genuineness of spirit photography, there’s no
helping him.

The second eminent adept among English natural scientists is Mr.
William Crookes, the discoverer of the chemical element thallium and of
the radiometer (in Germany also called “Lichtmühle” [light-mill] ).
Mr. Crookes began to investigate spiritualistic manifestations about
1871, and employed for this purpose a number of physical and mechanical
appliances, spring balances, electric batteries, etc. Whether he brought
to his task the main apparatus required, a sceptically critical mind, or
whether he remained to the end in a fit state for working, we shall see.
At any rate, within a not very long period, Mr. Crookes was just as
completely captivated as Mr. Wallace. “For some years,” he relates,
“a young lady, Miss Florence Cook, has exhibited remarkable
mediumship, which latterly culminated in the production of an entire
female form purporting to be of spiritual origin, and which appeared
barefooted and in white flowing robes while she lay entranced in dark
clothing and securely bound in a cabinet or adjoining room.” This
spirit, which called itself Katie, and which looked remarkably like Miss
Cook, was one evening suddenly seized round the waist by Mr. Volckmann -
the present husband of Mrs. Guppy - and held fast in order to see
whether it was not indeed Miss Cook in another edition. The spirit
proved to be a quite sturdy damsel, it defended itself vigorously, the
onlookers intervened, the gas was turned out, and when, after some
scuffling, peace was reestablished and the room re-lit, the spirit had
vanished and Miss Cook lay bound and unconscious in her corner.
Nevertheless, Mr. Volckmann is said to maintain up to the present day
that he had seized hold of Miss Cook and nobody else. In order to
establish this scientifically, Mr. Varley, a well-known electrician, on
the occasion of a new experiment, arranged for the current from a
battery to flow through the medium, Miss Cook, in such a way that she
could not play the part of the spirit without interrupting the current.
Nevertheless, the spirit made its appearance. It was, therefore, indeed
a being different from Miss Cook. To establish this further was the task
of Mr. Crookes. His first step was to win the confidence of the
spiritualistic lady. This confidence, so he says himself in the
Spiritualist, June 5, 1874, “increased gradually to such an extent
that she refused to give a séance unless I made the arrangements. She
said that she always wanted me to be near her and in the neighbourhood
of the cabinet; I found that - when this confidence had been established
and she was sure that I would not break any promise made to her - the
phenomena increased considerably in strength and there was freely
forthcoming evidence that would have been unobtainable in any other way.
She frequently consulted me in regard to the persons present at the
séances and the places to be given them, for she had recently become
very nervous as a result of certain ill-advised suggestions that,
besides other more scientific methods of investigation, force also
should be applied.”

The spirit lady rewarded this confidence, which was as kind as it was
scientific, in the highest measure. She even made her appearance - which
can no longer surprise us - in Mr. Crookes’ house, played with his
children and told them “anecdotes from her adventures in India,”
treated Mr. Crookes to an account of “some of the bitter experiences
of her past life,” allowed him to take her by the arm so that he could
convince himself of her evident materiality, allowed him to take her
pulse and count the number of her respirations per minute, and finally
allowed herself to be photographed next to Mr. Crookes. “This
figure,” says Mr. Wallace, “after she had been seen, touched,
photographed, and conversed with, vanished absolutely out of a small
room from which there was no other exit than an adjoining room filled
with spectators” - which was not such a great feat, provided that the
spectators were polite enough to show as much faith in Mr. Crookes, in
whose house this happened, as Mr. Crookes did in the spirit.

Unfortunately these “fully authenticated phenomena” are not
immediately credible even for spiritualists. We saw above how the very
spiritualistic Mr. Volckmann permitted himself to make a very material
grab. And now a clergyman, a member of the committee of the “British
National Association of Spiritualists,” has also been present at a
séance with Miss Cook, and he established the fact without difficulty
that the room through the door of which the spirit came and disappeared
communicated with the outer world by a second door. The behaviour of Mr.
Crookes, who was also present, gave “the final death blow to my belief
that there might be something in the manifestations.” (Mystic London,
by the Rev. C. Maurice Davies, London, Tinsley Brothers).[6] And, over
and above that, it came to light in America how “Katies” were
“materialised.” A married couple named Holmes held séances in
Philadelphia in which likewise a “Katie” appeared and received
bountiful presents from the believers. However, one sceptic refused to
rest until he got on the track of the said Katie, who, anyway, had
already gone on strike once because of lack of pay; he discovered her in
a boarding-house as a young lady of unquestionable flesh and bone, and
in possession of all the presents that had been given to the spirit.

Meanwhile the Continent also had its scientific spiritseers. A
scientific association at St. Petersburg - I do not know exactly whether
the University or even the Academy itself - charged the Councillor of
State, Aksakov, and the chemist, Butlerov, to examine the basis of the
spiritualistic phenomena, but it dbes not seem that very much came of
this. On the other hand - if the noisy announcements of the
spiritualists are to be believed - Germany has now also put forward its
man in the person of Professor Zöllner in Leipzig.

For years, as is well known, Herr Zöllner has been hard at work on the
“fourth dimension” of space, and has discovered that many things
that are impossible in a space of three dimensions, are a simple matter
of course in a space of four dimensions. Thus, in the latter kind of
space, a closed metal sphere can be turned inside out like a glove,
without making a hole in it; similarly a knot can be tied in an endless
string or one which has both ends fastened, and two separate closed
rings can be interlinked without opening either of them, and many more
such feats. According to the recent triumphant reports from the spirit
world, it is said now that Professor Zöllner has addressed himself to
one or more mediums in order with their aid to determine more details of
the locality of the fourth dimension. The success is said to have been
surprising. After the session the arm of the chair, on which he rested
his arm while his hand never left the table, was found to have become
interlocked with his arm, a string that had both ends sealed to the
table was found tied into four knots, and so on. In short, all the
miracles of the fourth dimension are said to have been performed by the
spirits with the utmost ease. It must be borne in mind: relata refero, I
do not vouch for the correctness of the spirit bulletin, and if it
should contain any inaccuracy, Herr Zöllner ought to be thankful that I
am giving him the opportunity to make a correction. If, however, it
reproduces the experiences of Herr Zöllner without falsification, then
it obviously signifies a new era both in the science of spiritualism and
that of mathematics. The spirits prove the existence of the fourth
dimension, just as the fourth dimension vouches for the existence of
spirits. And this once established, an entirely new, immeasurable field
is opened to science. All previous mathematics and natural science will
be only a preparatory school for the mathematics of the fourth and still
higher dimensions, and for the mechanics, physics, chemistry, and
physiology of the spirits dwelling in these higher dimensions. Has not
Mr. Crookes scientifically determined how much weight is lost by tables
and other articles of furniture on their passage into the fourth
dimension - as we may now well be permitted to call it - and does not
Mr. Wallace declare it proven that fire there does no harm to the human
body? And now we have even the physiology of the spirit bodies! They
breathe, they have a pulse, therefore lungs, heart, and a circulatory
apparatus, and in consequence are at least as admirably equipped as our
own in regard to the other bodily organs. For breathing requires
carbohydrates which undergo combustion in the lungs, and these
carbohydrates can only be supplied from without; hence, stomach,
intestines, and their accessories - and if we have once established so
much, the rest follows without difficulty. The existence of such organs,
however, implies the possibility of their falling a prey to disease,
hence it may still come to pass that Herr Virchow will have to compile a
cellular pathology of the spirit world. And since most of these spirits
are very handsome young ladies, who are not to be distinguished in any
respect whatsoever from terrestrial damsels, other than by their
supra-mundane beauty, it could not be very long before they come into
contact with “men who feel the passion of love"; and since, as
established by Mr. Crookes from the beat of the pulse, “the female
heart is not absent,” natural selection also has opened before it the
prospect of a fourth dimension, one in which it has no longer any need
to fear of being confused with wicked social-democracy.

 

Enough. Here it becomes palpably evident which is the most certain path
from natural science to mysticism. It is not the extravagant theorising
of the philosophy of nature, but the shallowest empiricism that spurns
all theory and distrusts all thought. It is not a priori necessity that
proves the existence .of spirits, but the empirical observations of
Messrs. Wallace, Crookes, and Co. If we trust the spectrum-analysis
observations of Crookes, which led to the discovery of the metal
thallium, or the rich zoological discoveries of Wallace in the Malay
Archipelago, we are asked to place the same trust in the spiritualistic
experiences and discoveries of these two scientists. And if we express
the opinion that, after all, there is a little difference between the
two, namely, that we can verify the one but not the other, then the
spirit-seers retort that this is not the case, and that they are ready
to give us the opportunity of verifying also the spirit phenomena.

Indeed, dialectics cannot be despised with impunity. However great
one’s contempt for all theoretical thought, nevertheless one cannot
bring two natural facts into relation with one another, or understand
the connection existing between them, without theoretical thought. The
only question is whether one’s thinking is correct or not, and
contempt of theory is evidently the most certain way to think
naturalistically, and therefore incorrectly. But, according to an old
and well-known dialectic law, incorrect thinking, carried to its logical
conclusion, inevitably arrives at the opposite of its point of
departure. Hence, the empirical contempt of dialectics on the part of
some of the most sober empiricists is punished by their being led into
the most barren of all superstitions, into modern spiritualism.

It is the same with mathematics. The ordinary metaphysical
mathematicians boast with enormous pride of the absolute irrefutability
of the results of their science. But these results include also
imaginary magnitudes, which thereby acquire a certain reality. When one
has once become accustomed to ascribe some kind of reality outside of
our minds to √-1, or to the fourth dimension, then it is not a matter of
much importance if one goes a step further and also accepts the spirit
world of the mediums. It is as Ketteler said about Döllinger[7]: “The
man has defended so much nonsense in his life, he really could have
accepted infallibility into the bargain!” 

In fact, mere empiricism is incapable of refuting the spiritualists. In
the first place, the “higher” phenomena always show themselves only
when the “investigator” concerned is already so far in the toils
that he now only sees what he is meant to see or wants to see - as
Crookes himself describes with such inimitable naivété. In the second
place, however, the spiritualist cares nothing that hundreds of alleged
facts are exposed as imposture and dozens of alleged mediums as ordinary
tricksters. As long as every single alleged miracle has not been
explained away, they have still room enough to carry on, as indeed
Wallace says clearly enough in connection with the falsified spirit
photographs. The existence of falsifications proves the genuineness of
the genuine ones.

And so empiricism finds itself compelled to refute the importunate
spirit-seers not by means of empirical experiments, but by theoretical
considerations, and to say, with Huxley[8]: “The only good that I can
see in the demonstration of the truth of ‘spiritualism’ is to
furnish an additional argument against suicide. Better live a
crossing-sweeper than die and be made to talk twaddle by a ‘medium’
hired at a guinea a séance!"

Notes
1. From a manuscript of Engels probably written in 1878, and first
published in the “Illustrierter Neue Welt-Kalender für das Jahr
1898.” 

2. As already said, the patients perfect themselves by practice. It is
therefore quite possible that, when the subjection of the will has
become habitual, the relation of the participants becomes more intimate,
individual phenomena are intensified and are reflected weakly even in
the waking state. [Note by F. Engels.]

3. See Appendix II, p. 368.

4. The spirit world is superior to grammar. A joker once caused the
spirit of the grammarian Lindley Murray to testify. To the question
whether he was there, he answered: “I are.” (American for I am.) The
medium was from America. [Note by F. Engels.]

5. See Appendix II, p. 369.

6. See Appendix II, p. 370.

7. A catholic scholar who did not accept the dogma of papal
infallibility.

8. See Appendix II, p. 370.

Transcribed in 2001 for MEIA by jj...@hwcn.org 
 


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