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Allan Kardec

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Cause of death
  
Aneurysm

Name
  
Allan Kardec


Role
  
Educator

Movies
  
O Filme dos Espiritos

Allan Kardec httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons99

Full Name
  
Hippolyte Leon Denizard Rivail

Born
  
3 October 1804 (
1804-10-03
)
Lyon, France

Known for
  
Systematizer of Spiritism

Died
  
March 31, 1869, Paris, France

Spouse
  
Amelie Gabrielle Boudet (m. 1832–1869)

Parents
  
Jeanne Louise Duhamel, Jean-Baptiste Antoine Rivail

Books
  
Spiritualist philosophy, L'evangile selon le spiritisme, The Book on Mediums, Heaven and Hell, El Libro de Los Mediums

Similar People
  
Chico Xavier, Adolpho Justo Bezerra d, Alan Kardec, Amelie Gabrielle Boudet

Radio ici maintenant allan kardec spiritisme j peccatte j prieur


Allan Kardec ([kaʁdɛk]) is the pen name of the French educator, translator and author Hippolyte Léon Denizard Rivail ([ʁivɑj]; 3 October 1804 – 31 March 1869). He is the author of the five books known as the Spiritist Codification, and is the founder of Spiritism.

Contents

Allan Kardec About the Medium39s book by Allan Kardec Bezerra de

Spiritism who was allan kardec question 10 10


Early life

Allan Kardec Allan Kardec UEVC

Rivail was born in Lyon in 1804 and raised as a Roman Catholic. He pursued interests in philosophy and the sciences, and became an acolyte and colleague of Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi. Rivail completed a number of educational courses including a Bachelor of Arts degrees in science and a doctorate in medicine. He was also fluent in German, English, Italian, and Spanish in addition to his native French.

He was a member of several scholarly societies, including the Historic Institute of Paris (Institut Historique), Society of Natural Sciences of France (Société des Sciences Naturelles de France), Society for the Encouragement of National Industry (Société d'Encouragement pour l'Industrie Nationale), and The Royal Academy of Arras (Académie d'Arras, Société Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Arts). He organized and taught free courses for the underprivileged.

Rivail's work with Pestalozzi helped lay the foundations for the teaching model in schools in France and Germany. For several decades he helped advance Pestalozzi's pedagogy in France, founding schools and working as a teacher, educational writer and translator.

Family

In February 6, 1832, he married Amélie Gabrielle Boudet.

Spiritism

Rivail was in his early 50s when he became interested in séances, which were a popular entertainment at the time. Strange phenomena attributed to the action of spirits were considered a novelty, featuring objects that moved or "tapped", purportedly under the control of 'spirits'. In some cases, this was alleged to be a type of communication: the supposed spirits answered questions by controlling the movements of objects so as to pick out letters to form words, or simply indicate "yes" or "no". At the time, Franz Mesmer's theory of animal magnetism had become popular. When confronted with the phenomena described, some researchers, including Rivail, pointed out that animal magnetism might explain them. Rivail, however, after seeing a demonstration, dismissed animal magnetism as insufficient to explain his observations.

As a result of these influences, Rivail began his own investigation of psychic phenomena, mainly mediumship. During his initial investigation, he stated that before accepting a spiritual or paranormal cause for some phenomena, it would be necessary first to test if ordinary material causes could explain them. He proposed that fraud, hallucination and unconscious mental activity might explain many phenomena regarded as mediumistic, and also proposed that telepathy and clairvoyance may be responsible.

He compiled over one thousand questions concerning the nature and mechanisms of spirit communications, the reasons for human life on earth, and aspects of the spiritual realm. He asked those questions to ten mediums, all purportedly unknown to each other, and documented their responses. From these, he concluded that the best explanation was that personalities that had survived death were the source of at least some mediumistic communications. He became convinced that the mediums:

  • provided accurate information unknown to themselves or others present (e.g. personal information about deceased individuals);
  • demonstrated unlearned skills such as writing by illiterate mediums, handwriting similar to the alleged communicating personality, and speaking or writing in a language unknown to the medium (xenoglossy and xenography);
  • accurately portrayed a range of personality characteristics of deceased individuals.
  • He compiled the mediums' responses that were consistent and adapted them into a philosophy that he called Spiritism, which he initially defined as "a science that deals with the nature, origin, and destiny of spirits, and their relation with the corporeal world."

    Rivail wrote under the name "Allan Kardec", allegedly following the suggestion of a spirit identified as Truth. On 18 April 1857, Rivail (as Allan Kardec) published his first book on Spiritism, The Spirits' Book, comprising a series of answered questions (502 in the first edition and 1,019 in later editions) exploring matters concerning the nature of spirits, the spirit world, and the relationship between the spirit world and the material world. This was followed by a series of other books, including The Medium's Book, The Gospel According to Spiritism, Heaven and Hell and The Genesis According to Spiritism, and by a periodical, the Revue Spirite, which Kardec published until his death. Collectively, the books became known as the Spiritist Codification.

    Kardec's research influenced the psychical research of Charles Richet, Camille Flammarion and Gabriel Delanne.

    Memorial

    After his death caused by aneurysm, Kardec was buried at the Cimetière du Père Lachaise.

    Writings

  • Cours pratique et théorique d’arithmétique (1824)
  • Plan proposé pour l’amélioration de l’éducation publique (1828)
  • Catéchisme grammatical de la langue française (1848)
  • Le Livre des Esprits (The Spirits' Book, 1857, PDF)
  • Le Livre des Médiums ('The Book on Mediums, 1861, PDF)
  • L’Évangile selon le Spiritisme (The Gospel According To The Spiritism, 1864, PDF, french)
  • Le Ciel et L’Enfer (Heaven and Hell, 1865, PDF, french)
  • La Genèse (Genesis, 1868, PDF, french)
  • References

    Allan Kardec Wikipedia