| 52. Z. | L, P, K, J. |
| 53. B. | B. |
| 54. T. | S, T, F. |
| 55. N. | M, N. |
| 56. P. | R, Z, A. |
| 57. Y. | V, Y. |
| 58. E. | E. |
| 59. Gustave. | F, J, Gabriel. |
| 60. Duch. | E, O. |
| 61. Ba. | B, A. |
| 62. No. | F, K, O. |
| A Number. | |
|---|---|
| 63. 44. | 6, 8, 12. |
| 64. 2. | 7, 5, 9. |
(I told my assistant to imagine the look of the number when written, and not its sound.)
| 65. 3. | 8, 3. |
| 66. 7. | 7. |
| 67. 8. | 8; no, 0, 6, 9. |
Then followed thirteen trials with fantastic figures, details of which Dr. Ochorowicz does not record. He tells us, however, that only five of the representations presented even a general resemblance to the originals.
It is to be observed that in this series of experiments contact was not completely excluded in all the trials. But if Dr. Ochorowicz's memory may be relied upon for the statement that the agent looked at the original letters and diagrams, and not at the percipient's attempts at reproducing them, the hypothesis of involuntary muscular guidance must be severely strained to account for the results. At any rate, in the three remaining trials in this series it seems clear that muscle-reading is inadequate as an explanation.
| A person thought of. | |
| Subject. | Answer. |
| 68. The percipient. | M. O——; no, it's myself. |
| 69. M. D——. | M. D——. |
| An Image. | |
| 70. We pictured to ourselves a crescent moon. M. P—— on a background of clouds, I in a clear dark blue sky. | I see passing clouds ... a light ... (in a satisfied tone)—it is the moon. |
Transference of Visual Images.