21 November 2015

Notes - get cracking

           It is a cold and rainy mid-afternoon. You are waiting for Carol at Kroger’s on Tylersville after a lunch at Smashburgers and a kid’s cup sized dessert at Graeter’s. You had another errand – taking some sweaters to Good Will. – Amorella

         1608 hours. I have begun cleaning my chest-of-drawers. The bottom three drawers are cleaned and I’m working up. I also have lots of ‘junk’ in the top two as well as socks as well as who knows what. Time to check my email for the first time today.

         1808 hours. I spent an hour and a half taking everything out of the top two drawers. I have a trash bag more than half full and I have begun putting everything back in the top drawer. I have four containers to go through and throw out stuff among outdated electronic gear.

         There is some exaggeration in the above paragraph, but not much. Later, dude. -  Amorella

         Almost time for bed. Carol made scrambled eggs with ham as well as a side of mixed veggies. You watched several shows. Carol is upstairs reading, and was when you watched last night’s “Grimm”. You have been thinking about how the universe may be as a hologram but when you look up information much of it is from people who use the concept in a pseudoscientific way. This bothers you because you do not want to use the concept that way. – Amorella

         2245 hours. Reality may be as a hologram I don’t have a problem with that. I remember back in the mid to late 1960’s when I read the Edgar Cayce books. In 1972 Carol and I even visited the Institute in Virginia Beach. We were taken back by people, who ‘believed’ and acted as though Cayce was a real prophet, – too much so for our liking, and our interest began to wane.

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Edgar Cayce March 18, 1877 – January 3, 1945) was an American mystic who answered questions on subjects as varied as healing, reincarnation, wars, Atlantis, and future events while in a trance. A biographer gave him the nickname, "The Sleeping Prophet." A nonprofit organization, the Association for Research and Enlightenment,] was founded to facilitate the study of Cayce's work. A hospital and a university were also established.

Cayce is a well-documented psychic of the 20th century. Hundreds of books have been written about him. Cayce's practice of reading through the entire Bible each year was thought to give him the insight to reconcile his Christian beliefs with the metaphysical information provided while in trance, and some consider him the true founder and a principal source of the most characteristic beliefs of the New Age Movement.

Cayce became a celebrity toward the end of his life, and he believed the publicity given to his prophecies overshadowed the more important parts of his work, such as healing the sick and studying religion. Skeptics challenge Cayce's alleged psychic abilities, and traditional Christians also question his unorthodox answers on religious matters such as reincarnation, and the Akashic records.

Psychic abilities

Cayce has variously been referred to as a “prophet” (cf. Jess Stearn’s book, The Sleeping Prophet), a "mystic" and a "seer". While giving a reading for a seeker, he at times referred to consulting the Akashic Record (the etheric imprint) of that soul's experience. The only biography written during Cayce's lifetime was There is a River, by Thomas Joseph Sugrue.

Cayce's methods involved lying down and entering into a sleep state, usually at the request of a subject who was seeking help with health or other personal problems. Subjects would not normally be present, and their questions would be given to Cayce, who would then proceed with a reading. Initial readings dealt primarily with the physical health of the individual; later readings might be given on past lives, business advice, dream interpretation, and mental or spiritual health.

Until September 1923, his readings were not systematically recorded or preserved. However, an article published in the Birmingham Post-Herald on October 10, 1922, quotes Cayce as saying that he had given 8,056 readings as of that date and it is known that he gave approximately 13,000–14,000 readings after that date. Today, a total of 14,306 are available at A.R.E. Cayce headquarters in Va. Beach and an online member-only section along with background information, correspondence, and follow-up documentation.

When out of the trance, Cayce would not remember what he had said during the reading. The unconscious mind, according to Cayce, has access to information that the conscious mind does not—a common assumption about hypnosis in Cayce's time. After Gladys Davis became Cayce's secretary on September 10, 1923, all readings were preserved and his wife, Gertrude Evans Cayce, generally guided the readings.

Cayce said that his trance statements should be taken into account only to the extent that they led to a better life for the recipient. Moreover, he invited his subjects to test his suggestions rather than accept them on faith.

Other abilities that have been attributed to Cayce include astral projection, prophesying, mediumship, viewing the Akashic Records or "Book of Life", and seeing auras. Cayce said he became interested in learning more about these subjects after he was informed about the content of his readings, which he reported that he never actually heard himself.

Supporters

Cayce's clients included a number of famous people such as Woodrow Wilson, Thomas Edison, Irving Berlin and George Gershwin.

Gina Cerminara published books such as Many Mansions and The World Within. Brian Weiss published a bestseller regarding clinical recollection of past lives, Many Lives, Many Masters. These books provide broad support for spiritualism and reincarnation. Many Mansions elaborates on Cayce's work and supports his stated abilities with real life examples.

This is an example from Gina Cerminara.
Cayce once gave a reading on a blind man, a musician by profession, who regained part of his vision in one eye through following the physical suggestions given by Cayce. This man happened to have a passion for railroads and a tremendous interest in the Civil War. In the life reading Cayce gave, he said that the man had been a soldier in the South, in the army of Lee, and that he had been a railroad man by profession in that incarnation. Then he proceeded to tell him that his name in that life was Barnett Seay, and that the records of Seay could still be found in the state of Virginia. The man took the trouble to hunt for the records and found them in the state capitol at Richmond: that is to say he found the record of one Barnett Seay, standard-bearer in Lee's army who had entered and been discharged from the service in such and such a year.

The Dictionary of American Religious Biography writes about Cayce.
As a humble individual full of self-doubts, Cayce never profited from his mystic gift. He read the Bible every day, taught Sunday School, and helped others only when asked. Many did ask, and over the years he produced readings that diagnosed health problems, prescribed dietary regimens, dealt with psychic disorders, and predicted future events such as wars, earthquakes, and changes in governments. He spoke, moreover, of reincarnations, the early history of Israel, and the lost civilization of Atlantis. Enough of his diagnoses and predictions proved true to silence many skeptics and to develop a wide following.

Criticism

Skeptics say that the evidence for Cayce's powers comes from contemporaneous newspaper articles, affidavits, anecdotes, testimonials, and books. Martin Gardner, for example, wrote that while Cayce's trances did happen, most of the information from his trances was derived from books that Cayce had been reading by authors such as Carl Jung, P. D. Ouspensky, and Helena Blavatsky. Gardner's hypothesis was that the trance readings of Cayce contain, "little bits of information gleaned from here and there in the occult literature, spiced with occasional novelties from Cayce's unconscious.”

Skeptics are also critical of Cayce's support for various forms of alternative medicine, which they regard as quackery. Michael Shermer writes in Why People Believe Weird Things, "Uneducated beyond the ninth grade, Cayce acquired his broad knowledge through voracious reading and from this he wove elaborate tales.” Shermer wrote that, "Cayce was fantasy-prone from his youth, often talking with angels and receiving visions of his dead grandfather." Shermer further cites James Randi as saying, "Cayce was fond of expressions like 'I feel that' and 'perhaps'—qualifying words used to avoid positive declarations." Examination of the readings do not show qualifying terms.

Skeptical investigator Joe Nickell has noted:

Although Cayce was never subjected to proper testing, ESP pioneer Dr. Joseph B. Rhine of Duke University — who should have been sympathetic to Cayce's claims — was unimpressed. A reading that Cayce gave for Rhine's daughter was notably inaccurate. Frequently, Cayce was even wider off the mark, as when he provided diagnoses of subjects who had died since the letters requesting the readings were sent.

Science writer Karen Stollznow has written:

The reality is that his cures were hearsay and his treatments were folk remedies that were useless at best and dangerous at worse... Cayce wasn't able to cure his own cousin, or his own son who died as a baby. Many of Cayce's readings took place after the patient had already died.

Biblical Christians are critical of Cayce's views on issues such as reincarnation, oneness, and the Akashic records.

Selected and edited from Wikipedia

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         2316 hours. I may have put this in the blog a few years ago. I don’t remember. Reading and studying such material has made me quite skeptical, but at least one percent of my mind is open for truths that may come from any tongue and quarter of the world. I do not know.

         Post. Carol is calling you up to bed, boy. Get cracking. – Amorella.

         2319 hours. You are so funny Amorella. You really are. 

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