Jump to content

Rudi Schneider

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rudi Schneider
BornJuly 27, 1908
DiedApril 28, 1957
Occupation(s)Mechanic
Physical medium

Rudi Schneider (July 27, 1908 – April 28, 1957), son of Josef Schneider and brother of Willi Schneider, was an Austrian Spiritualist and physical medium.[1][2] His career was covered extensively by the Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research,[3] and he took part in a number of notable experiments conducted by paranormal researchers/debunkers, including Harry Price, Albert von Schrenck-Notzing and Eric Dingwall.[4][5] Some of these researchers declared him to be a fraud while others were unable to find evidence of trickery.[3][4][6]

Early career

[edit]

Schneider began participating in séances with his elder brother Willi Schneider at age 11. Both Rudi and Willi claimed to channel a spirit entity called "Olga" who in the séance room claimed to be "Lola Montez" the nickname of Eliza Eosanna Gilbert (1821-1861) the mistress of Ludwig I of Bavaria. Schneider held his first solo séance in 1919 and is said to have been able to summon the ghostly image of a human hand, as well as a number of other manifestations that are traditionally associated with séances.[3][4] Schneider's other brother, Karl, also claimed to be a medium.[5]

Investigations

[edit]

Schneider began giving demonstrations to the Vienna Institut für Radiumforschung der Akademie der Wissenschaften in 1923. In an investigation into the mediumship of Schneider in 1924 the physicists Stefan Meyer and Karl Przibram caught Schneider evading the controls in a series of séances. After Meyer and Przibram's accusations, the institute concluded that the abilities that Schneider had demonstrated up to that point were all, based on the balance of probability, the result of trickery and that he was no-longer of interest to them.[3][7][8][9]

In 1926, American journalist Warren Vinton attended séances with Schneider and came to the conclusion that the movement of objects were fraudulently produced by other members of the Schneider family concealed in the room.[4][10] In April 1927, Vinton published an article in Psyche which accused Schneider of being a fraud and using a hidden accomplice. Another researcher, J. Malcolm Bird who attended a séance with Schneider also supported Vinton's accusations.[11][12][13][14]

The parapsychologist Walter Franklin Prince attended a series of sittings with Schneider and no paranormal phenomena was observed. In his notes in the Bulletin VII of the Boston SPR published under Experiments with Physical Mediums in Europe (1928) he wrote "despite my studied and unremitting complaisance, no phenomena have occurred when I had any part in the control, save curtain movement which were capable of the simplest explanation."[15] Whilst Prince did not detect any concrete evidence of fraud he found the red light too dim to observe the medium and suspected that Schneider's spirit guide "Olga" insisted the sitters talk loudly to act as a distraction and possible cover for an accomplice in the room.[16]

According to Peter Underwood it was discovered that Schneider had a "sexual climax" during some of his séances.[17] Schneider had an orgasm during some of his mediumship practices.[18] Psychologist D. H. Rawcliffe wrote that Schneider "had been repeatedly and comprehensively exposed" as a fraudulent trickster.[19]

Harry Price

[edit]
Rudi Schneider (left) with Harry Price (right).

In 1929, Schneider took part in a number of experiments conducted by notable investigator/debunker Harry Price at the National Laboratory of Psychical Research. Price conducted a series of experiments in which Schneider was connected to a series of pressure switches that would alert observers if he moved his hands, feet or limbs in any significant way. Schneider was also physically restrained during some of the experiments.[4] Price recorded that during his experiments various phenomena were observed; including the movement of objects placed around the room and the apparent manifestation of mysterious hands and shapes.[4]

Schneider claimed he could levitate objects but according to Price a photograph taken on April 28, 1932, showed that Schneider had managed to free his arm to move a handkerchief from the table. After this, many scientists considered Schneider to be exposed as a fraud; however, there was a controversy over the photograph from the parapsychology community.[20][21] Price wrote that the findings of the other experiments should be revised due to the evidence showing how Schneider could free himself from the controls.[22]

After Price had exposed Schneider, various scientists such as Karl Przibram and the magician Henry Evans wrote to Price telling him that they agreed that Schneider evaded control during his séances and congratulated Price on the success of unmasking the fraud.[23] In opposition, SPR members who were highly critical of Price, supported Schneider's mediumship and promoted a conspiracy theory that the Price photograph was a hoax.[24] SPR member Anita Gregory claimed Price had deliberately faked the photograph to discredit SPR research and ruin Schneider's reputation.[25] The psychologist Alan Gauld wrote that Gregory's analysis of the photograph was misconceived and there was no direct evidence the photograph taken by Price had been tampered with.[26] In opposition to Gregory the photographic expert Vernon Harrison testified that the photograph was genuine.[27] Harrison suggested that instead of fraud the shock of the flash caused Schneider to jerk involuntarily breaking free from the control, and when the second flash went off, recorded him in that position.[28] SPR member John L. Randall who reviewed the Price and Schneider case also came to the conclusion the photograph was genuine. However, Randall disagreed with Harrison that Schneider's movement was accidental and wrote the photograph was evidence for Price's claim that Schneider had freed his hand with fraudulent intent.[29]

V. J. Woolley criticized the electronic controls of Price's experiments. He noted they were liable to go wrong such as a broken wire and that they were not fraud proof like Price had claimed. According to Woolley one sitter alone could "free his feet by connecting his metal floor plates by a piece of wire... I do not feel that the electrical control excludes [fraud] any better than the older methods which Mr Price describes as obsolete".[30]

Eugéne Osty

[edit]

In 1930, Schneider began working with French paranormal investigator Eugéne Osty at the Institut Metapsychique.[6] Osty placed an object in the room with Schneider and targeted it with a camera that had an infrared trigger designed to take a picture if it detected movement around the object. The alarm was triggered several times though the photographs showed no evidence of Schneider having interfered with it.[6] Osty concluded that he was recording the passage of an ectoplasm like substance that was indicative of telekinetic movement.[6] He wrote that the substance registered on sound recording equipment when it moved, and that it could pass through objects put in place to impede it.[4][6]

Osty's experiments with Schneider have been criticized by skeptics. D. H. Rawcliffe for example noted that "various discrepancies have come to light which throw the whole of Osty's experiments into doubt. Price made a prolonged investigation of Rudi Schneider and proved conclusively that the medium resorted to trickery when he believed himself to be unobserved... Osty has too often shown in the past, despite some intellectual ability, evidence of an amateurish and uncritical approach to his subject."[31]

Other tests

[edit]
Price testing Rudi Schneider.

In the 1920s Fritz Wittels who had attended séances with Schneider wrote that "With occult waves running high in Vienna, there was a famous medium named Rudi Schneider, a few of whose meetings I attended. Whenever I came, however, either nothing happened at all or the things which did happen were obvious frauds."[32] It was reported by Stefan Meyer that Schneider was exposed as a fraud by Dr. Lothar Lenkei.[33]

In 1928, E. R. Dodds and V. J. Woolley attended six séances in dim red light with Schneider and absolutely no phenomena occurred. Dodds wrote that semen was found after one of the séances.[34]

In a series of mediumship sessions in 1932 which included the researchers and scientists Dr. William Brown, C. E. M. Joad, Professor D. F. Fraser-Harris, Professor John Alexander Gunn and Julian Huxley, no paranormal phenomena was observed in the séance room with Schneider. Huxley wrote that there was "no proof of any communication with departed spirits".[35] Zoologist Solly Zuckerman also attended some séance sittings and wrote that the mediumship of Schneider had not passed any scientific tests.[36]

William Howard Livens on 15 November 1932 attended a séance with Schneider and no paranormal phenomenon was observed.[37]

Between October 1933 and March 1934 Schneider was investigated by the Society for Psychical Research in fifty-five sittings and not a single paranormal phenomenon was observed. Infrared ray apparatus was installed by Oliver Gatty working with Theodore Besterman. The experiments proved negative, no telekinetic phenomena of any kind were observed or any absorption of the infrared rays. Every chance was given to Schneider to prove his alleged paranormal abilities but nothing paranormal occurred. Another researcher, Whately Carington had proven by tests that the spirit "Olga" which Schneider channeled in reality was indistinguishable in psychological make-up from himself.[38] Oliver Gatty and Theodore Besterman communicated their results to Nature, concluding that in their tests there was "no good evidence that Rudi Schneider possesses supernormal powers."[39]

There were no more investigations as in his later years Schneider gave up mediumship to become an auto mechanic.[22]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Underwood, Peter. (1978). Dictionary of the Supernatural. Harrap. ISBN 0-245-52784-2
  2. ^ Roach, Mary. (2005). Spook: Science Tackles the Afterlife. W. W. Norton. ISBN 0-393-05962-6
  3. ^ a b c d Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research: (Dates, Author). 1925-12-01 (Thirring), 1926-01-01 (Price), 1926-03-01 (Kogelnik), 1926-05-01 (Gruber)
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Fodor, Nandor. (2003). An Encyclopedia of Psychic Science. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 0-7661-3931-X (reprint)
  5. ^ a b Randi, James. (1995). An encyclopedia of claims, frauds, and hoaxes of the occult and supernatural: decidedly sceptical definitions of alternative realities. St. Martin's Griffin.
  6. ^ a b c d e Osty, Eugene. (1933). Supernormal Aspects of Energy and Matter. Society for Psychical Research.
  7. ^ Price, Harry. (1936). Confessions of a Ghost-Hunter. Putnam. p. 233. "Rudi has been accused of producing spurious phenomena many times, by many persons. In 1924 Professors Meyer and Przibram, of Vienna, accused him of evading control. On April 28, 1933, Professor Przibram wrote me: "We know that Rudi evaded control at the [Vienna] séances and we have no reason to believe that any of the phenomena we saw were of supranormal character."
  8. ^ Thruelsen, Richard. (1961). Adventures of the Mind. Knopf. p. 325. "An analogous case was that of the Schneider brothers, Willy and Rudy, who performed a series of teleplastic manifestations that were carefully examined by Professor Przibram of the University of Vienna and discovered to be nothing but deceptions."
  9. ^ Shepard, Leslie. (1991). Encyclopedia of Occultism & Parapsychology. Gale Research Company. p. 1463. "In 1923-24, Prof. Dr. Stefan Meyer and Prof. Dr. Karl Przibram, of the Institut fur Radiumforschung der Academie der Wissenschaffen, Vienna, detected Rudi evading control. After that they had no reason to believe that any of the phenomena were of supernormal character."
  10. ^ Vinton, Warren. (1927). The Famous Schneider Mediumship: A Critical Study of Alleged Supernormal Events. No. 4 April in Ogden, Charles. (1995). Psyche: An Annual General and Linguistic Psychology 1920-1952. Routledge/Thoemmes Press. ISBN 0415127793
  11. ^ Reuter, William. (1941). An Objective Study in Extra-sensory Perception. Temple University. p. 60. "In Rudi's home in Braunau, Vinton found that any of the phenomena were possible because of the cooperation of confederates both in the circle and in the cabinet, combined with the use of reaching rods."
  12. ^ Douglas, Alfred. (1982). Extra-Sensory Powers: A Century of Psychical Research. Overlook Press. p. 202. "In August 1926 Dr. E. J. Dingwall, accompanied by the American journalist W. J. Vinton, again visited Braunau for sittings with Willi and Rudi. They hoped to substantiate Dingwall's theory that the sittings in the Schneider Home were fraudulent, perpetrated by the various members of the family. Vinton wrote a report in which he concluded that the phenomena observed during the ten séances he had attended were caused by someone who had entered the séance room secretly, unknown to the sitters."
  13. ^ Guiley, Rosemary. (1994). The Guinness Encyclopedia of Ghosts and Spirits. Guinness World Records Limited. p. 293. ISBN 0-85112-748-7 "The first major controversy erupted following publication in the metaphysical journal Psyche of a hypothesis of fraud that involved a confederate sneaking into the séance room unobserved. The article was written by an American journalist, W. J. Vinton, who had attended 10 séances along with Dingwall. Vinton's hypothesis was supported by Malcolm Bird of the American Society for Psychical Research (ASPR), who attended only a single séance during which he was supposed to have been guarding the door. Another skeptic was Walter Franklin Prince, who attended 10 sittings and saw only some curtains blowing, which he concluded could have been contrived."
  14. ^ Franklyn, Julian. (2003). Dictionary of the Occult. Kessinger Reprint Edition. p. 228. "In 1926 Mr. W. J. Vinton sat several times with Rudi at the latter's home in Braunau and came to the conclusion that the movements of objects were fraudulently produced by other members of the Schneider family concealed in the room. In 1927 Mr. Malcolm Bird, the editor of The Scientific American, also had a sitting at Braunau and came to the same conclusion of a conspiracy of fraud."
  15. ^ Spence, Lewis. (2003). Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Kessinger Reprint Edition. p. 805
  16. ^ Douglas, Alfred. (1982). Extra-Sensory Powers: A Century of Psychical Research. Overlook Press. p. 203
  17. ^ Underwood, Peter. (1972). Into the Occult. Harrap. p. 126
  18. ^ Devereux, George. (1974). Psychoanalysis and the Occult. Souvenir Press.
  19. ^ Rawcliffe, Donovan. (1988). Occult and Supernatural Phenomena. Dover Publications. p. 313. "Rudi, and his brother Willi, had been repeatedly and comprehensively exposed as fraudulent tricksters, yet such is the faith of those imbued with a penchant for the mysterious that both spiritualists and psychical researchers alike continued to believe in the possibility of their supernatural powers. "Ectoplasm" and other "teleplastic manifestations" were their main specialities. These, however, were investigated by Professor Przibram of the University of Vienna and found to be nothing more than deceptions."
  20. ^ Price, Harry. (2003). Fifty Years of Psychical Research. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-0766142428 (reprint)
  21. ^ Holroyd, Stuart. (1976). Minds Without Boundaries. Aldus Books. p. 63. Holroyd reprinted a large version of the photograph in his book and a zoom in on Schneider. The photograph depicts Schneider in a pajama jacket with a freed hand reaching out to move a handkerchief from the table.
  22. ^ a b Spence, Lewis. (2003). Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Kessinger Reprint Edition. p. 806
  23. ^ Tabori, Paul. (1966). Harry Price: The Biography of a Ghosthunter. Living Books. pp. 114-115
  24. ^ Evans, Hilary. (1982). Intrusions: Society and the Paranormal. Routledge Kegan & Paul. p. 166. ISBN 978-0710009272
  25. ^ Gregory, Anita. (1977). Anatomy of a Fraud: Harry Price and the Medium Rudi Schneider. Annals of Science 34: 449-549.
  26. ^ Gauld, Alan. (1978). Review of Anita Gregory's Anatomy of a Fraud: Harry Price and the Medium Rudi Schneider. Journal of the Society for Psychical Research (Vol. 49, pp. 828-835).
  27. ^ Harrison, Vernon. (1979). Letter to the Editor. Journal of the Society for Psychical Research. 50: 45-46.
  28. ^ Harrison, Vernon. (1987). The Mediumship of Willi and Rudi Schneider. Journal of the Unitarian Society for Psychical Studies. No. 38, Winter.
  29. ^ Randall, John. (2000). Harry Price: The Case for the Defence. Journal of the Society for Psychical Research (Vol. 64.3, No. 860).
  30. ^ Woolley, V. J. (1930). Harry Price. Rudi Schneider: A Scientific Examination of His Mediumship. Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 25: 125-126.
  31. ^ Rawcliffe, D. H. (1987). Occult and Supernatural Phenomena. Dover Publications. p. 315
  32. ^ Wittels, Fritz. (1996). Freud and the Child Woman: The Memoirs of Fritz Wittels. Yale University Press. p. 6
  33. ^ Besterman, Theodore. (1968). Collected Papers on the Paranormal. Garrett Publications. p. 377
  34. ^ Dodds, E. R. (2000). Missing Persons: An Autobiography. Oxford University Press. pp. 101-102. ISBN 978-0198120865
  35. ^ Huxley, Julian. (1970). Memories. Allen & Unwin. p. 177
  36. ^ Zuckerman, Solly. (1979). From Apes to Warlords: The Autobiography (1904-1946) of Solly Zuckerman. Hamilton. p. 49. ISBN 978-0241896863
  37. ^ Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research. 1932. Volume 41.
  38. ^ Franklyn, Julian. (2003). Dictionary of the Occult. Kessinger Reprint Edition. p. 230
  39. ^ "Further Tests of the Medium Rudi Schneider". Nature. 134 (3399): 965–966. 1934. Bibcode:1934Natur.134S.965.. doi:10.1038/134965c0.
[edit]