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Thomson Jay Hudson

 
 
(1834-1903)

American author and lecturer who attained prominence by an ingenious anti-Spiritualist theory expounded in his books. He was born on February 22, 1834, in Windham, Ohio. He attended public schools in Windham and later studied law. He was admitted to the bar at Cleveland, Ohio, in 1857 and practiced for a time in Michigan before entering a journalistic career, culminating in the editorship of the Detroit Evening News. In 1880 he left journalism to enter the U.S. Patent Office, becoming principal examiner. In 1893 he resigned and devoted his time to the study of experimental psychology. Hudson was awarded an honorary LL.D. by St. John's College, Annapolis, in 1896.

The essence of his special theory of psychic phenomena, developed from studies in hypnotism, was that man has within him two distinct minds: the objective, with which he carries on his practical daily life; and the subjective, which is dormant but is infallible as a record, registering every single impression of life. The objective mind is capable of both inductive and deductive reasoning, the subjective mind of deductive only, according to Hudson's theory.

The change of death is survival in another state of consciousness, with which, however, communication is impossible. Any attempt is simply playing the fool with the subjective mind, which presents reflections of the experimenter's complete life record and lures him on to believe that he is communicating with his departed friends, Hudson said.

The Law of Psychic Phenomena (1893), in which this theory is expounded, became very popular and made a deep impression. It was followed by Scientific Demonstration of the Future Life (1896), Divine Pedigree of Man (1900), Law of Mental Medicine (1903), and Evolution of the Soul and Other Essays (1904).

Hudson's theories attained an even greater popularity after they were picked up by Thomas Troward and became the basis of his famous Edinburgh Lectures on Mental Science (1909). Troward fed the notion of two minds into New Thought, where it was eventually picked up by Ernest Holmes and became the basic insight upon which Religious Science was based.

Hudson died in Detroit on May 26, 1903. Admiral Usborne Moore writes in Glimpses of the Next State (1911) that through Mrs. Georgie, a young dramatist of Rochester who wrote automatically in mirror writing, he received manifestations of Hudson's spirit. Details of his life, unknown to both of them, were given, and he communicated through different mediums in Detroit and Chicago, carrying as a test messages of the admiral from one medium to another and describing his activities to them.

Sources:

Hudson, Thomson Jay. Divine Pedigree of Man. Chicago: A. C. McClure, 1900.

——. Evolution of the Soul and Other Essays. Chicago: A. C. McClure, 1904.

——. The Law of Psychic Phenomena. London: G. P. Putnam; Chicago: A. C. McClurg, 1893. Reprint, New York: Samuel Weiser, 1969.

——. Scientific Demonstration of the Future Life. Chicago: A. C. McClure, 1896.

Melton, J. Gordon. New Thought: A Reader. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Institute for the Study of American Religion, 1990.

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Wikipedia: Thomson Jay Hudson
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Thomson Jay Hudson

Thomson Jay Hudson born Windham, Ohio, USA, February 22, 1834, Chief Examiner of the US Patent Office and Psychical researcher, known for his three laws of psychic phenomena, which were first published in 1893.

Refusing his father's wish to become a minister of religion, Hudson funded his own study of law at college. He began a law practice in Port Huron, Michigan, but, in 1860, he began a journalistic career instead; and, in 1866, unsuccessfully ran for the US Senate. From 1877 till 1880 he was Washington Correspondent for the Scripps Syndicate. In 1880 he accepted a position in the US Patent Office, and was promoted to Principal Examiner of a Scientific Division, a post he held until the publication of his remarkable book The Law of Psychic Phenomena in 1893.

He wrote and lectured on this subject until his death from heart failure in 1903.

Hudson's theory

Thomson Jay Hudson began observing hypnotism shows and noticed similarities between hypnosis subjects and the trances of Spiritualist mediums. His idea was that any contact with "spirits" was in fact contact with the medium's or the subject's own subconscious. Anything else could be explained by telepathy, which he defined as contact between two or more subconsciouses.

Hudson postulated that his theory could explain all forms of spiritualism, and had a period of popularity until the carnage of the First World War caused a fresh interest in spiritualism again as psychic mediums emerged to meet the demands of grieving relatives.

Hudson's work, although unrefuted, and thought by some to be a "bust" of spiritualism, remained almost forgotten until recently when his theory was found to explain some of the theories of Rupert Sheldrake. In 1998, the electronic voice phenomena, that Hudson could have known nothing about, which had hitherto defied explanation, was found to follow Hudson's laws. Paranormal investigators are beginning to look again at his works.

Hudson's three laws

1. Man has two minds: the objective mind (conscious) and the subjective mind (subconscious).

2. The subjective mind is constantly amenable to control by suggestion.

3. The subjective mind is incapable of inductive reasoning.

Works

The Law of Psychic Phenomena (1893)

Scientific Demonstration of Future Life (1895)

Divine Pedigree of Man (1899)

The Law of Mental Medicine (1903)

Evolution of the Soul and Other Essays (1906) (Published posthumously)


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Occultism & Parapsychology Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Copyright © 2001 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Thomson Jay Hudson" Read more