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Edgar
Cayce
(pronounced
"Kay-see")
was a man who, over the span of his lifetime (1877-1945),
had more near-death experiences than anyone ever documented. Cayce
learned that when he was
hypnotized, he could leave his body and journey into the afterlife
realms. Cayce made over
14,000 otherworldly journeys in his life and the information he
gained from these journeys has astounded people all over the world.
In 1910, the New York Times carried two pages of headlines and pictures
in which he was declared the "World's
Most Mysterious Man"
A national magazine ran an article titled, "Miracle
Man of Virginia Beach", and Cayce was swamped with an avalanche of
25,000 requests for medical help.
President Woodrow Wilson sought the services of Edgar Cayce for
healing and guidance while he was President and conceiving the idea of
the League of Nations.
In 1954, the University of
Chicago accepted a Ph.D. thesis based on a study of his life and work.
Cayce is also considered to be the father of
holistic medicine by
JAMA,
the prestigious medical journal. Cayce was a wonder to the medical
community because of his ability to diagnose and specify a treatment for
gravely ill people often hundreds of miles away through his out-of-body
journeys. Cayce was able to gain a tremendous amount of information
through his frequent NDEs. Much of this information solved some of the
greatest mysteries of humanity. The following web pages contain Cayce's
answers to some of these mysteries. |