Albert de Rochas explained

Albert de Rochas
Birth Name:Albert de Rochas
Birth Date:20 May 1837
Birth Place:Saint-Firmin, Hautes-Alpes, France
Death Place:Grenoble
Occupation:parapsychologist, science historian, military engineer
Parents:Joseph Eugène de Rochas d'Aiglun
Félicité Camille Jayet

Eugène Auguste Albert de Rochas d'Aiglun (20 May 1837 – 2 September 1914) was a French parapsychologist, historian, translator, writer, military engineer and administrator.

Biography

Life and career

Rochas was born in Saint Firmin in the department of Hautes-Alpes, the son of Marie Joseph Eugène de Rochas d'Aiglun, a judge at the court in Briançon, and of Félicité Camille Jayet. He studied literature and mathematics at the Lycée de Grenoble, then, in 1857, entered the École Polytechnique in Paris, intending to follow a military career.

In 1861, he was commissioned as a Lieutenant in the Military Engineers ("Le Génie militaire") and distinguished himself as a soldier, engineer and administrator. He rose to the rank of battalion commander in 1880 and was made chief of engineers in 1887. He retired from the military in 1888 as a Lieutenant-Colonel. He had also been inspector of studies and director at the École Polytechnique but had to resign due to his involvement in paranormal research activities.

Rochas was made a Chevalier (Knight) in the Legion d'Honneur in 1875 and an officer in 1889.

Scientific writing

As a scholar, he made significant contributions to the study of military engineering history, producing, for example, a French translation of an 11th-century Alexandrian treatise on fortification and machines of war called Veterum Mathematicorum Opera (1693), and publishing the correspondence of the distinguished 17th century military engineer, Vauban. He also wrote about ancient technology, exploring subjects as diverse as hydraulic organs,[1] water clocks,[2] ancient surveying instruments,[3] temple machinery,[4] Greek artillery,[5] and ancient railways.[6] He was well respected as a researcher and won a medal from the "Société des Études Grecques" for his translations of Greek texts.

Paranormal research

Rochas is now best known for his extensive parapsychological research and writing, in which he attempted to explore a scientific basis for occult phenomena. His first book on the subject, Les Forces non définies ("Undefined Forces", 1887), was followed by numerous books and articles over the course of nearly thirty years, on subjects such as hypnotism, telekinesis, "magnetic emanations" reincarnation, spirit photography, etc.

Rochas was part of the committee that investigated the famous Italian medium, Eusapia Palladino, detailed in his book, L'extériorisation de la motricité (1896).[7] He carried out research into hypnosis, and documented the phenomenon of "externalisation of sensibility" whereby hypnotised subjects acquire a physical sensitivity to stimuli at a distance; for example, the subject can be made to feel pain if a certain spot is pinched or pricked away from the body and can even be made to feel the sensations of the hypnotist.[8] [9] He investigated other "magnetic" phenomena such as the transference of disease from one organism to another,[10] past life regression, the effects of music on human emotion (see Les Sentiments, la musique et le geste), etc. He also introduced the French public to the work of Carl Reichenbach and his theory of odic force.

See also

References

Bibliography

Parapsychology books

Scientific books

Scientific articles

The following articles are available to read online. See index of volumes at Le Conservatoire numérique des Arts & Métiers.

The articles in these papers are published under the names of A. de Rochas or M. D'Aiglun Lt-Colonel de Rochas.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://cnum.cnam.fr/CGI/fpage.cgi?4KY28.19/192/100/432/0/0 Les Orgues Hydrauliques
  2. http://cnum.cnam.fr/CGI/fpage.cgi?4KY28.23/201/100/432/0/0 Les Horloges Hydrauliques dans l'antiquité
  3. http://cnum.cnam.fr/CGI/fpage.cgi?4KY28.20/255/100/432/0/0 Les instruments de geodésie
  4. http://cnum.cnam.fr/CGI/fpage.cgi?4KY28.21/108/100/432/0/0 La Machinerie de temple
  5. http://cnum.cnam.fr/CGI/fpage.cgi?4KY28.21/30/100/432/0/0 L'artillerie des Grecs'
  6. Les rainures des chemins antiques - La Nature - no. 1683 - 26 Aug 1905
  7. Hereward Carrington. Eusapia Palladino and Her Phenomena (New York: B.W. Dodge & Co., 1909) p. 57.
  8. Boirac, Émile. Psychic science, an introduction and contribution to the experimental study of psychical phenomena (London, Rider, 1918) pp. 36, 92
  9. [Paul Joire|Joire, Paul]
  10. See, for example, Augusta, Lady Gregory's Visions and Beliefs in the West of Ireland p. 300 ff.