Charmstone
A charmstone is a mineral specimen believed by adherents of certain cultural or religions traditions to have healing, mystical or paranormal powers or energy. The mineral specimen can be either natural and complete or cleaved from a natural stone; in some cases, the article may be entirely manufactured as in the case of certain Mayan pottery finds. For example, the Miwok and Pomo tribes of Northern California have left thousands of charmstones in the bed of Tolay Lake in Sonoma County.[1] Charmstones are evidenced by the Shalagram and lingam in the Hindu tradition and by maban in the indigenous Australian tradition. The worship of the Black Stone as a charmstone is of particular importance to Islam. Jigme Lingpa in the Vajrayana tradition wrote a treatise on charmstone usage which Namkhai Norbu mentions. Charmstones were used in prehistoric Native American ceremonies for broad spiritual purposes including securing of productive harvests.[2] Today charmstones remain very popular among certain subcultures within Western society, such as the New Age movement, particularly in the form of crystal healing. However, belief in the powers of charmstones is criticized as baseless by scientists and medical professionals who point out that there is no known scientific basis for a crystal healing effect.[3]
References
- A Charmstone Discovery in the Redwood Forests of Mendocino County, California by: Susan M. Hector, Daniel G. Foster, Linda C. Pollack Gerrit L. Fenenga, and J. Charles Whatford of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection , Archaeology Office. November 30, 2005
- Campbell, Dan, Edgar Cayce, on the Power of Color, Stones, and Crystals, Warner Books Edition, New York, NY, 1989.
- Helwig, David, Crystal Healing in Encyclopedia of Alternative Medicine, 2006 [1]
Notes
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External links
eo:Gemoterapio fr:Lithothérapie it:Cristalloterapia nl:Edelsteentherapie ja:パワーストーン pt:Pedra curativa
fi:Hoitava kivi- ↑ Sculati, Christine (January 01, 2005). "Tolay Ranch Purchase". Bay Nature (January-March, 2005). Check date values in:
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(help) - ↑ Tolay Lake Park: Natural and Cultural History
- ↑ http://skepdic.com/crystals.html Skeptic's Dictionary on Crystal Power