Amos Norton Craft

Amos Norton Craft (July 7, 1844 - August 30, 1912)[1] was an American Methodist and early skeptic writer.

Craft was born in Mecca, Ohio on July 7, 1844.[1][2] He married Alice Alvira Judson on March 10, 1863.[2] They had four children. Craft graduated from Mount Union College in 1865. He was a minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church.[2] In 1878 he settled in Oil City, Pennsylvania.[2]

Craft obtained a PhD in philosophy from Mount Union College.[3] He is most well known for his Epidemic Delusions (1881). According to skeptic Daniel Loxton the book is a "critical gaze over spirit mediums, end of the world panics, bogus religious relics, witch-hunting manias, haunted houses, clairvoyance, and mesmerism. Again and again he hammered home the point that paranormal claims rest upon arguments from ignorance."[4]

Craft died on August 30, 1912 in Meadville, Pennsylvania.[5]

Publications

gollark: Or TJ08.
gollark: The leetle trees stole it.
gollark: Oracle Wyrms?
gollark: Keeps the spriter constantly employed!
gollark: A dragon where every day it gets a new head?

See also

References

  1. Brill, H. E. (1938). Story of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Oklahoma. The University Press. p. 130
  2. Crafts, James Monroe. (1893). The Crafts Family: A Genealogical and Biographical History of the Descendants of Griffin and Alice Craft, of Roxbury, Mass. 1630-1890. Gazette Printing Company. p. 775
  3. The Rev. Amos N. Craft. The Christian Advocate (December 12, 1912).
  4. Loxton, Daniel. (2013). Why Is There a Skeptical Movement?. The Skeptics Society. Retrieved 2015-11-06.
  5. Alumni Catalog 1915. Mount Union college.
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