A Look at the Ethics of Spirit Mediumship

by | Aug 28, 2017 | Benjamin Radford, Folklore, Ghosts, Investigation, Psychology, Skepticism | 0 comments

My new blog on the ethics of spirit mediumship…

Usually when people think of ghostly communication it’s in a positive or benign light. Ghost hunters, for example, often speak of helping lost souls “cross over” after getting information from the spirits, and mediums such as John Edward and the late convicted felon Sylvia Browne often offer ostensibly reassuring messages from dead loved ones. Whether the communication can be proven to have a ghostly origin is of course up for debate, but in many cases there can be real harm done, especially when the dead are not generic stereotypes (a Confederate soldier, for example) but once-living people.

I have discussed this issue in several of my articles and investigations, including in the haunted KiMo Theater in New Mexico and Rose Hall Plantation of Montego Bay, Jamaica. In those cases, specific once-living people’s family names have been tainted by their later inclusion into ghost stories.

 

You can read the rest HERE. 

 

You can find more on me and my work with a search for “Benjamin Radford” (not “Ben Radford”) on Vimeo, and please check out my podcast Squaring the Strange! 

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