Healing Revelations Of Mary B Edd
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Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #2343003 in Books
- Published on: 1990-12-31
- Original language: English
- Binding: Hardcover
- 1 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Kirkus Reviews
Gardner (The Whys of a Philosophical Scrivener, 1983, etc.), world-class debunker of paranormal phenomena, now turns his demolition skills on the woman who founded one of America's most successful home-grown religions. The title is bitingly ironic, for Gardner considers Mary Baker Eddy's Christian Science to be neither healing nor revelatory but, rather, a farrago of wild imaginings. According to Gardner, Eddy (1821-1910) suffered from ``delusions of grandeur'' and ``delusions of persecution,'' and wrote her books by plagiarizing other writers. In fact, he declares, Christian Science's central precept- -that Divine Mind is the sole reality, and illness and death illusions--was lifted by Eddy from the teachings of a ``quack'' named Phineas Parkhurst, who cured her of a spinal ailment. Eddy always denied her connection to Parkhurst, claiming that her doctrines came as a direct transmission from God; to Gardner, this is yet more evidence of her ``outrageous lying.'' He makes a strong case, demonstrating Eddy's plagiarism in damning fashion by placing her writings side-by-side with her apparent sources, and detailing her relentless persecution of heretics, her nervous disorders (including lifelong morphine addiction), and her extraordinary fears (she believed enemies were killing her through ``malicious animal magnetism''). Most welcome from the standpoint of literary history is the author's favorable reassessment of Mark Twain's forgotten booklength battering of Eddy, Christian Science (1907). More inquisition than objective report, but on target: a well- aimed tomato to the face. (Photographs--not seen) -- Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Ingram
In a penetrating biography, famed science writer Martin Gardner profiles the life and teachings of the controversial founder of Christian Science, showing her to be a power-hungry individual whose life included spiritualism, drug addiction, and frequent hysterical rages. Includes Mark Twain's famous essay attacking Eddy, and more.
