In Occultism and Common-Sense by Beckles Willson, the author examines the widespread interest in spiritualism, psychic phenomena, and occult practices that captured public imagination in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Rather than accepting such claims at face value, Willson approaches them with a critical and investigative eye.
Surveying s ances, mediums, spirit communications, and other supposed manifestations of supernatural power, he explores how these phenomena were presented, experienced, and often misunderstood. Through detailed discussion, he considers the roles of suggestion, deception, and human credulity in sustaining belief in the occult.
At once historical and analytical, the work seeks to separate genuine inquiry from illusion, urging readers to apply reason and evidence where mystery is most readily embraced. Occultism and Common-Sense offers a thoughtful critique of the supernatural claims of its time-and a reminder of the enduring tension between belief and skepticism.