James H. Hyslop: Difference between revisions

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At the meetings on [[September 8]] and [[October 16]], 1875, a '''[[J. Hyslop]]''' was present at the meetings when the [[Theosophical Society]] was [[Founding of the Theosophical Society|founded]] in New York. No more precise identification of this person was made by early Theosophists, especially since Hyslop the [[Founders|Founder]] quickly lost interest in the Society. James Hervey Hyslop would have been 21 years old, attending college in Ohio, but it is not impossible that he is the same individual. Theosophical historians [[Boris de Zirkoff]] and [[Walter A. Carrithers, Jr.]] believed the two characters to be one and the same.
At the meetings on [[September 8]] and [[October 16]], 1875, a '''[[J. Hyslop]]''' was present at the meetings when the [[Theosophical Society]] was [[Founding of the Theosophical Society|founded]] in New York. No more precise identification of this person was made by early Theosophists, especially since Hyslop the [[Founders|Founder]] quickly lost interest in the Society. James Hervey Hyslop would have been 21 years old, attending college in Ohio, but it is not impossible that he is the same individual. Theosophical historians [[Boris de Zirkoff]] and [[Walter A. Carrithers, Jr.]] believed the two characters to be one and the same.


In 1907, while Hyslop was touring the West coast of the United States, he was persuaded to speak at the inaugural meeting of the '''Berkeley Society for Psychical Research'''. Theosophist [[Irving S. Cooper]] had started the group to encourage the general public's already great interest in psychic experiences.
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Backed by the strong aid and sustained thought of a class of twelve who had studied [[Theosophy]] with me for a year and a half, a hall was rented last August in the Masonic Temple, and the first meeting advertised. Dr. Hyslop, who was lecturing of the Pacific Coast, consented to speak for us. This served as a cue to the newspapers and the Society became well known in a night.
 
We now have a membership of 80 with an average attendance of 40 at our weekly meetings. Active research is confined to groups which meet at various hours during the week. People may belong to these groups who are not members of the Society. In this way the influence of the Movement is greatly extended. Each group studies some definite phase of psychic phenomena, and their reports form the basis for the deliberations of the general meetings of the Society. All experimenting with phenomena is rigidly excluded from the latter, thus disappointing the merely curious...
 
Psychic phenomena are valueless unless they lead to a keener recognition of the underlying laws and of the significance of life. I am bending all efforts toward making this attitude rational to the members of the Society.<ref>Irving S. Cooper, "The Berkeley Society for Psychical Research" ''The Theosophic Messenger'' 9.5 (February, 1908), 102.</ref>
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While James H. Hyslop seems to have had no other known connection to the [[Theosophical Movement]], he and his books were mentioned at times in Theosophical periodicals as having useful ideas. A review of his book ''Science and a Future Life'' says:
While James H. Hyslop seems to have had no other known connection to the [[Theosophical Movement]], he and his books were mentioned at times in Theosophical periodicals as having useful ideas. A review of his book ''Science and a Future Life'' says:
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Revision as of 22:05, 4 June 2020

James H. Hyslop

James. H. Hyslop (August 18, 1854 – June 17, 1920) was an American psychologist and psychic researcher. He was probably the J. Hyslop who was one of the Founders of the Theosophical Society.

Personal life

James Hervey Hyslop was born on August 18, 1854 in Xenia, Ohio as the son of Robert Hyslop and his wife Martha (or Margarette).

James was graduated with a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Wooster, Ohio in 1877. After studies at the University of Leipzig from 1882–84, he achieved his doctorate at Johns Hopkins University in 1877.[1]

On October 1, 1891, he married Mary Fry Hall (1859-1900) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania at the First Presbyterian Church.[2] He had met her in Germany. She died on October 5, 1900, leaving three young children – a son George Hall, and two daughters, Mary Winifred and Beatrice Fry.[3][4]

Academic career

Hyslop's first academic position was as an instructor in Philosophy in Lake Forest University in Illinois during 1880–82 and 1884–85. He became the head of Department of Philosophy in Smith College during 1885–86, and then served as a faculty member in Bucknell University in Lewisburgh, Pennsylvania during 1888–89. From 1889–91 he worked as a tutor in philosophy, ethics and psychology. He completed his career at Columbia University, teaching ethics and logic from 1891–1902.

In 1903 he received an honorary degree (LL.D) from the University of Wooster where he had been awarded his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1877.[5]

Spiritualism and psychic research

UNDER CONSTRUCTION
UNDER CONSTRUCTION

Dr. Hyslop was an active member of the Society for Psychical Research and of the American Society for Psychical Research, working with Richard Hodgson and with William James. He founded the American Institute for Scientific Research in 1904 to support psychical research and the study of abnormal psychology. The Institute was subsumed by the ASPR, of which Hyslop became the chief investigator of Leonora Piper's skills as a medium.[6] Hyslop was the secretary-treasurer and director of the ASPR from 1907–1920.[7]

With the assistance of other psychical researchers, he recorded many sessions with Mrs. Piper. Some of these experiences were personal in nature:

In 1898-99 a series of sittings [with Boston medium Mrs. Leonora Piper] were held at which Mr. Hyslop, father of Professor J. H. Hyslop, was the professed communicator... Professor Hyslop himself is satisfied that he has actually been in communication with his father.[8]

Professor Hyslop had an international reputation. In 1913 he attended the first Occult Congress held in Berlin. Other attendees were Camille Flammarion; Professor Richet, the French authority on psychological research; Dr. Albert Von Schrenk-Notzing, the German psychiatrist and psychic researcher; and scientists from twenty other countries.[9]

Hyslop is widely recognized as having made a major contribution to the literature of psychical research:

Professor Hyslop, had, with wonderful persistence, patience and precision, placed on record a vast amount of experimental material, fully accredited and exactly sustained in accordance with the standards of evidence. His data, together with his detailed commentaries and observations, are a matter of public record. What he thus accomplished is his greatest monument; and no marble shaft could be more imperishable.[10]

Connections to the Theosophical Society

At the meetings on September 8 and October 16, 1875, a J. Hyslop was present at the meetings when the Theosophical Society was founded in New York. No more precise identification of this person was made by early Theosophists, especially since Hyslop the Founder quickly lost interest in the Society. James Hervey Hyslop would have been 21 years old, attending college in Ohio, but it is not impossible that he is the same individual. Theosophical historians Boris de Zirkoff and Walter A. Carrithers, Jr. believed the two characters to be one and the same.

dx While James H. Hyslop seems to have had no other known connection to the Theosophical Movement, he and his books were mentioned at times in Theosophical periodicals as having useful ideas. A review of his book Science and a Future Life says:

This book, while unrelated to the teachings of Theosophy, is of some importance as evidence of the trend of the scientific spirit to-day. Prof. Hyslop, as is well known, became convinced of the continuity of Life through psychical research, but in this, his last work, he indicates more interest in the "inferences" to be drawn from accumulated facts than in the data themselves. This is its claim to our consideration: When we find in his concluding chapter the assertion, "The relative value of consciousness" is the important question and that "there are two things that interest us, external reality and our inner life, matter and consciousness," and through the dictum that "matter itself only interests us for its effect on consciousness," we realized that it will not be long before "states of consciousness" will be recognized as more important than matter.[11]

Writings

Professor Hyslop was a prolific writer. William James, Richard Hodgson and Oliver Lodge and others criticized some of his books not for their content but for their convoluted style and high degree of detail.

Periodicals and proceedings

Hyslop published many reviews and articles in academic journals, and in the Proceedings on the Society for Psychical Research. The Union Index of Theosophical Periodicals lists 26 articles by or about him.

Textbooks and academic works

  • Elements of Logic. 1892.
  • Hume's Treatise of Morals: And Selections from the Treatise of the Passions. 1893.
  • Anomalies in Logic. 1894.
  • Freedom, Responsibility and Punishment. 1894.
  • Elements of Ethics. 1895.
  • Logic and Argument. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1899. Available at Internet Archive.
  • The Ethics of the Greek Philosophers: Socrates, Plato and Aristotle. 1903.
  • Problems of Philosophy. 1905.

Psychical research

  • The Wants of Psychical Research. 1900.
  • A Further Record of Observations of Certain Trance Phenomena. 1901.
  • The Mental State of The Dead: A Limitation to Psychical Research. World Today, 1905.
  • Science and A Future Life. Boston: Herbert B. Turner & Co., 1905. Available at Internet Archive.
  • Borderland of Psychical Research. Boston: Herbert B. Turner & Co., 1906. Available at Internet Archive.
  • Enigmas of Psychical Research. 1906.
  • Psychical Research and the Resurrection. Boston: Small, Maynard & Co., 1908. Available at Internet Archive.
  • Psychical Research and Survival. 1913.
  • The Doris Case of Multiple Personality (1915–1917). With Walter Franklin Prince.
  • Life After Death. Problems of the Future Life and Its Nature. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co. 1918. Available at Internet Archive.
  • Contact with the Other World; the Latest Evidence as to Communication with the Dead. New York: The Century Company, 1919.

Available at Internet Archive.

Poetry

  • Poems, Original and Translations. 1915.

Additional resources

  • Tubby, Gertrude Ogden. James H. Hyslop - X His Book: A Cross Reference Record. York, Pa.: The York printing company, 1929. Available at Internet Archive. Gertrude Ogden Tubby was Hyslop's secretary and lived with the family, according to the 1915 New York Census.

Notes

  1. Boris de Zirkoff, "Hyslop, James Henry" H. P. Blavatsky Collected Writings Volume I (Wheaton, Illinois: Theosophical Press, 1966), 470.
  2. U.S., Presbyterian Church Records, 1701-1970 for James Harvey Hyslop.
  3. United States Federal Census for 1900, 1910, 1920.
  4. 1915 New York Census.
  5. U.S., School Catalogs, 1765-1935. University of Wooster, Ohio, 1916.
  6. J. Gordon Melton, ed. , "Hyslop, James Hervey". Encyclopedia of Occultism & Parapsychology Vol 1: A–L (Fifth ed.), 2001.
  7. Helene Pleasants, Biographical Dictionary of Parapsychology. Garrett Publications, 1964.
  8. Frank Podmore "The Case of Mrs. Piper" in The Naturalization of the Supernatural (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1908), 321. Available at Internet Archive.
  9. The Messenger 1.7 (December, 1913) 139.
  10. Weston D. Payley, "Preface" to James H. Hyslop - X His Book: A Cross Reference Record by Gertrude Ogden Tubby. York, Pa.: The York printing company, 1929. Available at Internet Archive.
  11. J.R.R., "Science and a Future Life," Theosophical Quarterly 3.12 (April,1906), 493.