Psychography. 
148 
[March, 
kindred phenomena, that if we 
intelligences they may know our P^At, and may thus 
our words, perhaps even our thoughts,, ^ ^ 
easily assume the part : of so intelligences may 
sssar« 
Slfsie o 4 f t°he 5 “ JoTmal°Sf a Scfence,” and which under all 
° l Iderme l^seem A” C me e prer^aAre P tAproi^^ these and 
simdfaAmanifestations a refutation^ of^Matenallsm^^^ 1 ® 
probably still moie prema uie what is ordinarily 
SliefdSh." 1 oXse C p e oints Psychography does not appear 
beings, be they spiritual or rnatena Nat ure, we 
may mean-can interfere with the cause 0 
have no longer any assurance that like causes 
10 To gi^ean 6 "e : every man who knows Urat fuel has 
been ifid in a stove, and who some hour. ahe.wajds ,d have 
biazing, will conchude—perhaPome human being had set it 
bsa: ^ ::: 
‘ 52-t“ s"S 
Sre what confidence can 4 we have in the results which 
^ “ — 
Ca T re e ad U1 in a recent article in the “Journal of Science” 
“tanng in mind those- ^rations, SpWtuaU^t 
well speak in a irn ^ 0 f rse an unpleasant truth 
fATe h liur‘Aa P p°, S tp’ "of‘ Spirit u alism " lias not merely 
