Edwin Dingle

Edwin John Dingle (6 April 1881, Cornwall – 27 January 1972) was an English journalist, author and founder of the Institute of Mentalphysics in California, US. He was also a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society of Great Britain.

Dingle claimed to have learned advanced spiritual disciplines from a Tibetan mystic, and styled himself as a spiritual teacher with the name Ding Le Mei (Chinese: 丁乐梅). As the President and Preceptor Emeritus of the Institute of Mentalphysics, he described himself as a "psychologist, author and philosopher".

Biography

Edwin J. Dingle was born in Cornwall, England and became an orphan at nine. As a journalist, Dingle moved to Singapore (Straits Settlements) in 1900 to cover the affairs of the Far East. He was one of the first Caucasians to go into China and to actually stay for a substantial period of time in a Tibetan Monastery. There, he learnt meditation and yoga from a teacher.

In 1910, he traveled to Tibet and stayed there for nine months. He claimed to have learned closely guarded advanced spiritual methods from the Tibetan Lamas. These techniques included the "Eight Key Breaths", a form of pranayama. He spent nearly 21 years in the Asia, in China, India, Tibet and Burma.[1] During the 1911 Revolution, he was in Wuhan and then Shanghai. He witnessed the brutal civil wars in Hankou and Hanyang. He later wrote a book to tell his personal experience during the revolution. He spoke highly of Li Yuanhong, Yuan Shikai and Sun Yatsen. In many ways, he sympathized with the revolution but believed that Yuan could be able to be a unifier of the country.

In 1917, the North China Daily News & Herald of Shanghai published his The New Atlas and Commercial Gazetteer of China, which was devoted to China's "geography & resources and economic & commercial development". The book served as a standard reference for years, and was described by the Millard's Review of the Far East as "The biggest and best book on the resources of China".[2] After his return to England, Dingle also wrote about his experiences in the East which were eventually published as the book Across China on Foot by Earnshaw Books.

In 1921, Dingle settled in Oakland, California and lived in retreat till 1927. In 1927, he began preaching on what he called the science of mentalphysics - a "universalist spirtiual development" technique based on vegetarian diet, pranayama and development of extrasensory perception.[3] This technique was purported as the ancient wisdom preserved by the Tibetan mystics. Dingle's Institute of Mentalphysics was incorporated in 1933-34, and a retreat center was established in Joshua Tree (then Yucca Valley), California, in 1941.[4] The Institute of Mentalphysics sits on 385 acres, and most of its buildings were designed by Lloyd Wright.[5]

Dingle also established a center at the International Church of the Holy Trinity in Los Angeles, where he taught classes and also conducted correspondence courses on Mentalphysics across North America. As a spiritual teacher, he adopted the Chinese name "Ding Le Mei", the name given to him in the monastery of Tibet.

Dingle died on 27 January 1972, and was succeeded as head of the center by Donald L. Waldrop.

Bibliography

References

  1. The Art of True Living by Edwin J. Dingle. Founder of the Institute of Mentalphysics, Joshua Tree, CA 760 365-8371. 1937.
  2. W. Reginald Wheeler (2007) [1919]. "An Introductory Bibliography on China (Appendix)". China and the World War. READ Books. p. 254. ISBN 978-1-4067-5834-4. Retrieved 2010-03-07.
  3. Lewis Spence (2003). Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Kessinger Publishing. p. 240. ISBN 978-0-7661-2815-6.
  4. Institute of Mentalphysics. The Center for Land Use Interpretation. Archive ID# CA4936.
  5. Melton, J. G. (Ed.) (2003). Institute of Mentalphysics. In Encyclopedia of American Religions, 7th ed. (p.627). Detroit: Gale.

External links

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