This guy is the most fantastic prophet that I have ever read about...... his medical readings are enough by themselves to prove that he couldn't be a fraud, imo.
So if you believe in Cayce , than do the Akashic Records actually exist?
2007-01-05
17:24:38
·
10 answers
·
asked by
Craig R
3
in
Society & Culture
➔ Religion & Spirituality
ofcourse he existed, that is fact. Do you believe he had powers??? and what about the akashic records...... I do know a great deal about the man, and have been to the A.R.E. and am a member. ( ***. for research and enlightenment).
2007-01-05
17:31:49 ·
update #1
First, no one is perfect........but overall he did have a huge success rate and enough so that there is a foundation or institution founded on his 'readings' and their validity.
2007-01-05 17:29:49
·
answer #1
·
answered by drpsholder 4
·
1⤊
1⤋
i'm conscious of a few of Edgar Cayce's works and could ought to admit that he grew to become into staggering. Psychics are in many situations demonized through skeptics and others that have closed minds to issues like that and are in many situations apprehensive through issues that are each and every so often "no longer common" to describe. yet what gets me at situations with human beings's pre-judgment, is that God has continuously been a secret, yet there have been frauds interior the previous and recent that screw issues up too and create "chaos" (which ought to sound greater huge-unfold to you), that ought to describe a minimum of the skepticism in touch. Reincarnation is unquestionably worth attempting to appreciate in a greater logical methodical thought than what has been positioned forth subsequently some distance. there's a definite advantages in reincarnation...the unlucky section is that frauds and saboteurs can truly mess issues up. i did no longer verify your links this time, yet i'll when I hit the submit button in this question and my answer.
2016-11-26 23:16:57
·
answer #2
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
I beleive he existed, is that what you mean?
"He used this "knowledge" to predict that California will slide into the ocean and that New York City will be destroyed in some sort of cataclysm. He predicted that in 1958 the U.S. would discover some sort of death ray used on Atlantis. Cayce is one of the main people responsible for some of the sillier notions about Atlantis, including the idea that the Atlantaeans had some sort of Great Crystal. Cayce called the Great Crystal the Tuaoi Stone and said it was a huge cylindrical prism that was used to gather and focus "energy," allowing the Atlanteans to do all kinds of fantastic things. But they got greedy and stupid, tuned up their Crystal to too high a frequency and set off volcanic disturbances that led to the destruction of that ancient world. He made other predictions concerning such things as the Great Depression (that 1933 would be a good year) and the Lindbergh kidnapping (most of it wrong, all of it useless), and that China would be converted to Christianity by 1968."
"Martin Gardner cites Cayce's reading of Cayce's own wife as an example. The woman was suffering from tuberculosis:
.... from the head, pains along through the body from the second, fifth and sixth dorsals, and from the first and second lumbar...tie-ups here, floating lesions, or lateral lesions, in the muscular and nerve fibers which supply the lower end of the lung and the diaphragm...in conjunction with the sympathetic nerve of the solar plexus, coming in conjunction with the solar plexus at the end of the stomach....
The fact that Cayce mentions the lung is taken by his followers as evidence of a correct diagnosis; it counts as a psychic "hit." But what about the incorrect diagnoses: dorsals, lumbar, floating lesions, solar plexus and stomach? Why aren't those counted as diagnostic misses? And why did Cayce recommend osteopathic treatment for people with tuberculosis, epilepsy and cancer?
In addition to osteopathy, Cayce was knowledgeable of homeopathy and naturopathy. He was the first to recommend laetrile as a cancer cure. (Laetrile contains cyanide and is known to be ineffective for cancer.) He also recommended "oil of smoke" for a leg sore; "peach-tree poultice" for convulsions; "bedbug juice" for dropsy; and "fumes of apple brandy from a charred keg" for tuberculosis."
2007-01-05 17:26:17
·
answer #3
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
1⤋
Edgar Cayce he was an interesting guy. I think that we are all psychic in someway. He had and still has a large following so he most have been pretty accurate.
2007-01-05 17:36:16
·
answer #4
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
Read Larsen's Book of Cults. They were proved as a hoax, right along with the DaVinci Code and Nostradamus.... To be a prophet everything has to happen, exactly as they said it.
2007-01-05 17:33:36
·
answer #5
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
1⤋
Edgar was a phenomenon not a prophet...so why not buy roman meal bread and look for the Virgin Mary in the slices....
peace out
2007-01-05 17:28:34
·
answer #6
·
answered by dogpatch USA 7
·
1⤊
1⤋
His life story is interesting. I guess he could be a "seer".
I'm not so sure anyone really has magical healing powers or the ability to truly see the future.
2007-01-05 17:29:22
·
answer #7
·
answered by Speedoguy 3
·
1⤊
1⤋
Cayce did exist...a good man.
2007-01-05 17:27:17
·
answer #8
·
answered by Royal Racer Hell=Grave © 7
·
1⤊
1⤋
I heard that him and pat robertson are gay.
2007-01-05 17:33:52
·
answer #9
·
answered by Annmaree 5
·
0⤊
1⤋
interesting stuff
2007-01-05 17:29:47
·
answer #10
·
answered by wind cries mary 3
·
1⤊
1⤋