(2023). Sherlock Holmes and the Adventure of Theosophy: Spiritual Underpinnings of the Science of Deduction. The Journal of Religion and Popular Culture, 35(2), 96-113.
Abstract
Sherlock Holmes is often oversimplified as a secular modern professional, with a remorselessly scientific outlook. This hypothesis overlooks late-nineteenth-century English societyโs pursuit of new social possibilities for spiritualism, following challenges from Darwinist biological determinism to orthodox biblical mythology and morality. If we see Holmes in a default empirical scientism affiliated to imperial ideologies, we will remain blind to the effects of multiple countercultural and spiritual tones that also underpin the โscience of deduction.โ Holmesโ methods were subliminally informed by theosophy, as Doyle gleaned much of his spiritual knowledge from first- or second-hand readings on Blavatsky. Thus, Vedantic and Buddhist philosophy find inadvertentโbut not coincidentalโtraces in Holmes through theosophy. An intellectual offspring of the trinity of Darwin, Huxley, and Tyndall, Holmes was also a child of Blavatskyโs occult philosophy. Adopting a decolonial praxis, this paper argues that comparisons between the materialistic principles of Darwin, Huxley, and Tyndall, on the one hand, and Holmes on the other, are as useful as comparing the detectiveโs work to Blavatskyโs theosophy.
Keywords
Arthur Conan Doyle; Blavatsky; Darwin; Decoloniality; Sherlock Holmes; Sinnett; Theosophy; Tyndall.
