3.83
A ghost resides in a local landscape, a particular grove or an object, even a star (e.g., as an ancestor; §3.56). The same is true of other spirits. In such cases, the prismatic god for a being has let the other god/spirit/ghost in: through loss in struggle, cooperation and friendship, indifference or being caught unaware.
These dalliances may not be suitable for the being in question: it may be unbecoming for this stone to house a ghost. And yet, the stone has let the ghost in. This may be a kind of error (§3.76), a weakness. Or it may not.
We feel uncanny in particular places. This doesn’t mean that there’s a ghost inhabiting it, but it may; maybe a ghost just passed. — I’m not speaking superstitiously, abdicating reason for unbridled passion or unreason: I’m speaking of a feeling we get, a wave of goosebumps, a way that things show themselves: a melancholy, a dis-ease, something of that ilk.