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Charles Arthur Mercier

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Name
  
Charles Mercier

Education
  
University of London

Died
  
1919, Bournemouth, United Kingdom

Books
  
Sanity and insanity, A New Logic, The Nervous System a, Criminal responsibility, Spiritualism and Sir Oliver Lo

Charles Arthur Mercier (1851–1919) M.D., F.R.C.P., F.R.C.S. was a British psychiatrist and leading expert on forensic psychiatry and insanity.

Contents

Biography

Mercier was born on 21 June 1851. He studied medicine at the University of London where he graduated. He worked at Buckinghamshire County Asylum in Stone, near Aylesbury. He became the Assistant Medical Officer at Leavesden Hospital and at the City of London Asylum in Dartford, Kent. He also worked as a surgeon at the Jenny Lind Hospital. He was the resident physician at Flower House, a private asylum in Catford. In 1902 became a lecturer in insanity at the Westminster Hospital Medical School. He was also a physician for mental diseases at Charing Cross Hospital.

In 1894 Mercier was secretary of a committee of the Medico-Psychological Association. He published articles in the Journal of Mental Science. He joined the Medico-Legal Society in 1905, and became the president of the Medico-Psychological Association in 1908. Mercier has been described as a pioneer in the field of forensic psychiatry.

He was the author of many important works on crime, insanity, and psychology.

Spiritualism

Mercier who spent most of his career studying insanity and mental disorders did not believe human personality could survive death.

Mercier attacked spiritualism in the Hibbert Journal for 1917. His book Spiritualism and Sir Oliver Lodge (1917) was an exposure of trance mediumship and a criticism of the spiritualist views of Oliver Lodge. In the book he criticized Lodge for ignoring Occam's razor and invoking miracles.

In his book Spirit Experiences (1919), Mercier claimed to have converted to spiritualism and apologized for his previous book. He claimed that after investigating the subject he had personally experienced communications with the dead, levitation and telepathy. The book was heavily criticized in a review. However, the book was actually a satire that intended on mocking the credulity shown by believers in spiritualism. It was published by Watts & Co, a publishing company that has historical links with the Rationalist Association. The book was positively reviewed by the British Journal of Psychiatry which described it as a well written parody of spiritualist phenomena.

Publications

  • The Nervous System and the Mind (1888)
  • Sanity and Insanity (1890)
  • Lunatic Asylums, Their Organisation and Management (1894)
  • Psychology, Normal and Morbid (1901)
  • A Text-Book of Insanity (1902)
  • Criminal Responsibility (1905)
  • Crime and Insanity (1911)
  • Conduct and Its Disorders (1911)
  • A New Logic (1912)
  • Human Temperaments: Studies in Character (1916)
  • On Causation (1916)
  • Food, Sleep, and Efficiency (1917)
  • Spiritualism and Sir Oliver Lodge (1917)
  • Crime and Criminals (1918)
  • Spirit Experiences (1919)
  • References

    Charles Arthur Mercier Wikipedia