Tuesday, February 6, 2024

Thomas Edison's Spirit Phone

Here's a fun article from Atlas Obscura. It seems that Thomas Edison invented a "spirit phone" that was intended to communicate with spirits of the dead. In the 1920's spiritualism was still going full-force, and researchers were very interested in the implications of apparently physical manifestations that occurred during seances.


In 1920, the inventor shocked the public when he told American Magazine: “I have been at work for some time, building an apparatus to see if it is possible for personalities which have left this earth to communicate with us.” Edison, who was known for having hundreds of patents of inventions and creating an efficient version of the light bulb, added that this new invention would not function by “any occult, mystifying, mysterious, or weird means, employed by so–called “mediums”, but by scientific methods. I am engaged in the construction of one such apparatus now, and I hope to be able to finish it before very many months pass.”


Edison’s idea became known as a “spirit phone”, and caused a media storm. For years many historians believed the invention to be a joke or a hoax; no blueprints or prototypes of a spirit phone could be found. But while he may not have actually contacted the dead, there is evidence he experimented with the idea. In 2015 the French journalist Philippe Baudouin found a rare version of Edison’s diary in a thrift store in France. This version includes a chapter that was not printed in the widely known 1948 English edition, called the Diary and Sundry Observations of Thomas Alva Edison. This missing chapter was dedicated to his theory of the spirit world, and how it might be possible to contact it. Baudouin re-published the French edition as Le Royaume de l’au-delà.


Edison was such an extreme self-promoter that it's hard to imagine him not taking credit for contacting the spirit world if his device ever worked. That fact alone suggests that it never did. The article goes into more detail about Edison's model of how he thought the spirit world worked, and from that account I think I can see what the problem was. Detector sensitivity would have beem an issue with the electronics of the time, but beyond that I doubt something based on Edison's model would work even with the latest technology.


Speaking to loved ones beyond the grave may have appealed to the public, but for Edison this was a matter of strict science. Edison believed that life was indestructible, and that the “quantity could never be increased or decreased.” He theorized that like our bodies, our personalities have a physical form, made of tiny “entities” similar to our current view of atoms. He thought these entities might exist after humans passed away—a personality-based residue of loose memories and thoughts, containing part of who a person was during life. If these particles existed, he reasoned, they could collect together in the ether around us. Possibly they could be amplified by his device like a human voice could be amplified and recorded by a phonograph.


Parapsychology research in both the United States and the former Soviet Union established pretty comprehensively that paranormal phenomema do not involve any sort of particle that can be measured by standard means. Those findings don't necessarily preclude some sort of exotic particle that evades most measurements, but even so, Edison's apparatus would have been unable to detect those as well. Much more advanced detectors available from the 1950's through the 1970's remained unable to detect any particles associated with spirits and/or psychic phenomena.


My own experiments suggest that conjured spirits can affect a modern EMF detector, though it has to be used on the most sensitive setting and it's not clear Edison would have had anything that precise. Last year the Minneapolis Institute of Art hosted an exhibit called "Supernatural America: The Paranormal in American Art" . One of the items on display was device that used EMF to detect spirits. I tried to see if I could trip it using some covert spellwork, but to no avail. I later looked up the specifications on it and found that it was less precise than even the low sensitivity setting on my EMF detector, which I already knew spirits were unable to affect.


The point in bringing that up is that this particular device at the MIA exhibit was built more recently than the Edison spirit phone would have been, and it used better and more precise techology. Still it was not anywhere near as sensitive as my cheap EMF detector that found on Amazon a few years back. The EMF approach appears to be closer to the right track based on my own work, but it also is clear that if you go too far back you are not going to have access to the components that you would need to build a working prototype.


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5 comments:

Rémi Sussan said...

Many years later,, Nick Herbert created a "quantum machine" in order to contact "spirits" : (from http://quantumtantra.blogspot.com/2015/12/harry-houdini-metaphase-breakout.html)
". In the early '70s, while working at a Smith-Corona research facility in Palo Alto CA, I invented and constructed the Metaphase Typewriter, which transforms quantum uncertain processes into pseudo-English text. I was hoping that spirits (whether living, dead or inconceivably other) might possess this machine and turn its quantum-random text into intelligible communication.

My friends and I operated the Metaphase Typewriter in many "high-energy" psychic environments, producing a few remarkable synchronicities, but no sustained clear-text message "from the other side"

Scott Stenwick said...

That is awesome. I love that this sort of research is going on.

We know from all the attempts since the beginning of the last century that spirit communication is difficult without involving a human operator. It never has been clear why that is. Early radionics had the same issue, where without an operator to "stick the rate" the machines just refused to work, no matter how they were set.

So far nobody seems to have figured out the right way to do it. But we'll never get there without doing the experimental work.

Arthur Shattuck O’Keefe said...

Thank you for an interesting post! There is a point I’d like to weigh in on, if I may.

The Atlas Obscura article gets a key point incorrect. To quote:

“In 2015 the French journalist Philippe Baudouin found a rare version of Edison’s diary in a thrift store in France. This version includes a chapter that was not printed in the widely known 1948 English edition, called the Diary and Sundry Observations of Thomas Alva Edison. This missing chapter was dedicated to his theory of the spirit world, and how it might be possible to contact it.”

It is not true that this chapter wasn’t printed in the original (English) 1948 edition of “The Diary and Sundry Observations of Thomas Alva Edison.” It’s there, the final chapter: Chapter XIII, titled “The Realms Beyond.” I know because I possess a copy.

Copies of the 1948 edition are still circulating, and as of this writing I saw one for sale on Amazon.

https://www.amazon.com/Diary-Sundry-Observations-Thomas-Edison/dp/B0006ARKI4

(By the way, the term “spirit phone” was a media invention, in that Edison never gave a name for his proposed invention.)

As noted in the Atlas Obscura article and your post here, the final chapter features Edison’s thoughts on life after death and his claim that he was working on a device to possibly communicate with the dead. While this chapter was in fact included in the first (English) edition, it does not appear in any English editions published afterwards.

In other words, the chapter on Edison’s musings on life after death and the “spirit phone” was never really “missing.” It was redacted. The question is, why?

In research for an article related to this topic, I contacted The Philosophical Library (the publisher of the 1948 edition) to ask why the chapter was redacted. I was told they didn’t know why, because there were no records in their possession regarding editorial decisions going back to 1948, and that the editor of the 1948 edition, Dagobert D. Runes, had passed away many years before.

My best guess as to why this redaction happened:

(I should add the caveat that the possible motive here is pure speculation on my part.) Spiritualism and similar schools of thought were (to some extent) still considered a valid aspect of scientific inquiry in 1920, when Edison made his spirit phone claim. But by the late 1940s, such mainstream “respectability” was gone (and not to return until the New Age movement of the 1970s), so Edison’s estate (I speculate) asked that the final chapter be redacted from all subsequent printings of the book. It was perhaps considered an embarrassment. To be sure, even though the spirit phone concept created a bit of a media storm back in 1920, it is generally absent from writings on Edison’s legacy.

If it might be of interest, my article mentioned above is about the alleged race between Thomas Edison and Nikole Tesla to invent a device to contact the dead, and that Edison supposedly stole the spirit phone concept from Tesla. (A notion with no evidence to support it; all evidence suggests the spirit phone concept was Edison’s alone.)

https://medium.com/@arthurokeefe_33302/the-myth-of-the-edison-tesla-spirit-phone-rivalry-8d441ae76f75

I have also depicted the Edison spirit phone concept in a novel, titled The Spirit Phone (BHC Press, 2022). It features an alternate version of the year 1899, in which Edison successfully devises a spirit phone and begins marketing it as a consumer product. The protagonists are Nikola Tesla and the English occultist Aleister Crowley.

https://www.bhcpress.com/Books_OKeefe_The_Spirit_Phone.html

Thank you again for your thoughts on an interesting topic!

Scott Stenwick said...

Thanks for the updated info! I appreciate it very much.

Arthur Shattuck O’Keefe said...

You're welcome! I somehow misspelled "Nikola" as "Nikole" in my post.....