2016
DOI: 10.1080/13642537.2016.1170062
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Are you afraid of the dark? Notes on the psychology of belief in histories of science and the occult

Abstract: The popular view of the inherent conflict between science and the occult has been rendered obsolete by recent advances in the history of science. Yet, these historiographical revisions have gone unnoticed in the public understanding of science and public education at large. Particularly, reconstructions of the formation of modern psychology and its links to psychical research can show that the standard view of the latter as motivated by metaphysical bias fails to stand up to scrutiny. After highlighting certai… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The representation that the group of "heroes of the era of Reason" was composed of zealots of mechanistic and secular thought would be a reinterpretation initiated by influential science popularizers of the 19th century, an image that has been constantly nurtured to the present day. A similar analysis has also been recently proposed by the historian of science Andreas Sommer (2016).…”
supporting
confidence: 60%
“…The representation that the group of "heroes of the era of Reason" was composed of zealots of mechanistic and secular thought would be a reinterpretation initiated by influential science popularizers of the 19th century, an image that has been constantly nurtured to the present day. A similar analysis has also been recently proposed by the historian of science Andreas Sommer (2016).…”
supporting
confidence: 60%