Everything about Table-turning totally explained
Table Turning or "Table Tipping" (see
Ouija board) is a type of
séance in which participants sit around a table, place their hands on it, and wait for rotations. The table was purportedly made to serve as a means of communicating with the spirits; the alphabet would be slowly called over and the table would tilt at the appropriate letter, thus spelling out words and sentences.
History
When the movement of
Modern Spiritualism first reached Europe from America in the winter of
1852–
1853, the most popular method of consulting the
spirits was for several persons to sit round a table, with their hands resting on it, and wait for the table to move. If the experiment was successful the table would rotate with considerable rapidity, and would occasionally rise in the air, or perform other movements. Whilst by many the movements were ascribed to the agency of spirits, two investigators—
Count de Gasparin and
Professor Thury of
Geneva—conducted a careful series of experiments by which they claimed to have demonstrated that the movements of the table were due to a physical force emanating from the bodies of the sitters, for which they proposed the name
ectenic force. Their conclusion rested on the supposed elimination of all known physical causes for the movements; but it's doubtful from the description of the experiments whether the precautions taken were sufficient to exclude unconscious muscular action or even deliberate fraud.
In England table-turning became a fashionable diversion and was practised all over the country in the year 1853.
Dr. John Elliotson and his followers attributed the phenomena to
mesmerism. The general public were content to find the explanation of the movements in spirits,
animal magnetism,
odic force,
galvanism,
electricity, or even the rotation of the earth.
James Braid,
W. B. Carpenter and others pointed out, however, that the phenomena could depend upon the expectation of the sitters, and could be stopped altogether by appropriate suggestion.
Faraday devised some simple apparatus which conclusively demonstrated that the movements he investigated were due to unconscious muscular action. The apparatus consisted of two small boards, with glass rollers between them, the whole fastened together by
india-rubber bands in such a manner that the upper board could slide under lateral pressure to a limited extent over the lower one. The occurrence of such lateral movement was at once indicated by means of an upright
haystalk fastened to the apparatus. When by this means it was made clear to the experimenters that it was the fingers which moved the table, not the table the fingers, the phenomena generally ceased.
In France,
Allan Kardec studied the phenomenon and concluded that some messages were caused by an outside intelligence as the message contained information that wasn't known (see the
Book on Mediums).
Further Information
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