Ectoplasm

Ectoplasm is a physical substance supposedly created paranormally on the bodies of psychic mediums for spirits to take form in. Since World War II, reports of ectoplasm have declined and science has shown that the substance turned out to be a hoax, made of natural substances such as cheesecloth or fabric.

It's fun to pretend
Paranormal
Fails from the crypt
v - t - e

Definition

The term derives from ecto- (from Greek for outside) and plasm (from Greek for a molded thing), or more in other words something molded outside, i.e. something physical being "molded" externally to the body by use of psychic power. Sometimes the synonymous term exteriorization is used instead. Charles Richet (1850-1935) who had coined the term ectoplasm, did not actually believe the substance had anything to do with spirits. Similar to other psychical researchers who studied mediumship in the 19th century such as Camille Flammarion wrote that it was a mysterious force that could emanate from the body of the medium during seances.

The view that ectoplasm was an actual force or fluid was later dropped due to investigations into ectoplasm by scientific sampling. Evidence had shown from samples that ectoplasm was the result of fraud and trickery of the medium made from chewed paper, cloth, egg white or butter muslin. The photographs of ectoplasm show it to closely resemble cheesecloth and natural substances. Ectoplasm as spirits has been refuted by science and thankfully most modern paranormal researchers today accept this, the only modern-day supporters of ectoplasm being genuine are some spiritualists.

This paranormal-related article is a stub.
You can help RationalWiki by expanding it.
gollark: This is *peak* design.
gollark: It contains !!ROUNDED CORNERS!!, arbitrarily changes the button layouts, has excessive whitespace, *gradients*, and also a hamburger menu despite having tons of free room for links.
gollark: It does not have to look like that, bee.
gollark: The obvious solution would be to carcinize the entire XAML... runtime?
gollark: Well, the obvious cloudscale™ way would be to make something to bridge it to a remote™ webcloud™ API, then give the remote™ cloudwebscale™ hyperAPI™ another API™, which is then used by a React.js application hosted on your server to control it.
This article is issued from Rationalwiki. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.