“Major Darget, placing his fingers together, projected his will on a sensitive plate, saying ‘In the interest of science, I want this plate to receive an impression.’ Numerous pearls are seen on it, produced by the exterioration of the will. (Without apparatus and electricity, in red light, in Major Darget's cellar.)”
Featured on PDR in the collection Imaging Inscape: The Human Soul (1913)
In The Human Soul: Its Movements, Its Lights, and the Iconography of the Fluidic Invisible, originally published in French in 1896, Dr. Hippolyte Baraduc (1850–1909) postulates the existence of “the fluidic invisible” — a “vital cosmic force”, which he calls Odic liquid, that extends across the universe and “saturates the organism of living beings and constitutes our fluidic body”. Instead of all things being composed of one elementary substance, as in philosophical accounts of the monad, in this cosmic vision, we all live in a sea that we cannot see, which Baraduc names Somod.