Théodore Flournoy

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Théodore Flournoy (1854-1920) was a professor of psychology at the University of Geneva and author of books on spiritism and psychic phenomena. He is most known for his study of the medium Helen Smith (or Hélène Smith - a pseudonym for Catherine Muller) who relayed information about past lives through a trance state. He proposed this information as 'romances of the subliminal imagination', and a product of the unconscious mind (Stevens 1994). Flournoy was a contemporary of Freud, and his work influenced C. G. Jung's study of another medium - his cousin Héléne Preiswerk - which was turned into Jung's doctoral dissertation in 1902.

[edit] References

  • Stevens, Anthony (1994): Jung, A very short introduction, Oxford University Press, Oxford & N.Y.
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