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HYPNOSIS the Outcast Science
What's Happening to HYPNOSIS The Outcast Science By Carolyn G. Hart, '58journ YPNOSIS to the general public has M. Ralph Kaufman, New York, N . Y., and Liable and proper as long as the hypnotist is gained a rather shady reputation, Dr. Zigmond M. Lebensohn, Washington, using the tool in an area in which he is bringing to mind visions of mustachioed D. C. trained. A dentist using hypnotism to pre- Svengalis practicing witchcraft on a vaude- The committee's findings will supple- vent pain in tooth extraction is clearly with- ville stage. ment a report made in September, 1958, in in his own sphere of competence . This The stage practitioner of hypnosis finds a the American Medical Association Journal would not be the case if he were to use hyp- willing volunteer from the audience and by the Council of Mental Health working notism to treat marital problems or psycho- proceeds by uttering in a soothing mono- as a committee of the whole. In this report neuroses for here he would be outside the tone such instructions as "`Fix your eyes on the Council for the first time endorsed the field of the dental profession . mine. Gaze deep into my eyes . you are proper use of hypnosis in medicine, but The interest of O.U.'s Dr . West, how- relaxing . relaxing . relaxing." stressed its opposition to the use of hypno- ever, is not only in the clinical applications The spiel is usually effective and the vol- sis for entertainment purposes or by any un- of hypnosis in general medicine, psychi- unteer enters a trance-like mesmerized state qualified persons . -
Mesmer, Franz Anton. in Robert W. Rieber
Thomas, R. K. (2012). Mesmer, Franz Anton. In Encyclopedia of the history of psychological theories (Vol. 2, pp. 672-673. New York, NY: Springer-Verlag Manuscript Version. ©Springer-Verlag holds the Copyright If you wish to quote from this entry you must consult the Springer-Verlag published version for precise location of page and quotation Mesmer, Franz Anton Roger K. Thomas1 t0 (1) Department of Psychology, University of Georgia, 30602-3013 Athens, GA, USA t0 Roger K. Thomas Email: [email protected] Without Abstract Basic Biographical Information Mesmer (1734-1815) was born in Iznang on the German shore of Lake Constance. Mesmer's secondary education was in Jesuit schools, and his post-secondary education continued at the Jesuit universities in Dilligen and Ingolstadt. Pursuing a theological degree, Mesmer was exposed to rationalism which led him to question Catholicism and away from theology. The years 1755-1759 are unaccounted for in Mesmer's life, and some sources report that he earned a doctorate in philosophy in 1759. That claim was included in the title page of his medical dissertation (see facsimile in Pattie 2004, p. 14). However, Pattie, a reliable Mesmerian scholar, concluded that it was likely "self-conferred" (p. 15). In 1759, Mesmer began studying law in Vienna, but he soon abandoned law to study medicine. He earned a medical doctorate in Vienna in 1766, and his medical dissertation was Dissertatio physico-medica de planetarum influx. The dissertation presented a theoretical argument that gravitation could influence the body and that gravitational tides in the body could be manipulated to treat disease. -
Essay Review
Essay Review ALAN GAULD, A history of hypnotism, Cambridge University Press, 1992, pp. xvii, 738, illus., £75.00 (0-521-30675-2). ADAM CRABTREE, From Mesmer to Freud: magnetic sleep and the roots of psychological healing, New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 1993, pp. 472, £30.00 (0-300-05-58-89). For generations, the history of mesmerism and animal magnetism has been trivialized in inaccurate, anecdotal, sensationalistic accounts. However, with these two massive, intricately detailed, and admirably comprehensive studies, this has changed. Practitioners generally require a present-day context for studying a medical-historical figure or movement; the inspirations for these two volumes are the contemporary revival of interest in hypnotherapeutics and the rapid growth of the diagnostic category multiple personality. Alan Gauld is senior lecturer in psychology at the University of Nottingham and has written widely on hypnosis and parapsychology; Adam Crabtree is an English-Canadian clinical psychologist in private practice, who in 1988 published the most complete bibliography available of writings on animal magnetism and early hypnotism. With overlapping interests and backgrounds, Gauld and Crabtree have co-ordinated enormous quantities of primary source material to produce what are likely to remain the best informed and most authoritative accounts of their subject for a long time to come. The two volumes, which complement one another beautifully, brim with interesting historical and clinical material. Both books start with the life -
An Introduction to the History of Hypnotism and Hypnotherapy
An introduction to the history of hypnotism and hypnotherapy In this article I have sought to put together a potted history of hypnotism and hypnotherapy through the ages. The key events and people who played the most important roles in the discoveries and developments of what has become today’s hypnotherapy treatments are the main focus of this essay. I hope this may give interested people more of an insight and understanding into the world of Hypnotherapy The early days Primitive societies used hypnotic phenomena throughout the ages for spiritual beliefs. Tribal drama and rituals, e.g. dances have been a part of many societies around the globe. This rhythmic pattern greatly assisted the participants to make the transition into a trance like state. Shamanistic rituals have played a very large part in tribal cultures around the world and there are still many cultures today where shamanism is actively practised. Shamanism is also practised in the west and has gained some credibility in most notably the new age movement. In ancient tribal cultures the shaman was the most respected member of the tribe because it was believed that not only could he commune with the spirit world and receive direct sacred knowledge that other members of the tribal community were unable to receive, but it was also believed he had special curative magical powers that could not only produce magical healings and changes in state, but he could also guide the rest of the tribe into a hypnotic state where they could also commune with the spirit world and experience a different reality. -
Springer International Publishing AG 2016 V
UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Previously Published Works Title Unconscious Mental Life Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/13r1q6qd ISBN 9780123977533 Author Kihlstrom, JF Publication Date 2016 DOI 10.1016/B978-0-12-397045-9.00269-X Peer reviewed eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California H Hypnosis Mesmer’s theory of animal magnetism was discredited by a commission led by Benjamin John F. Kihlstrom Franklin in 1784 (Kihlstrom 2002), but mesmer- University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, ism was revived in the 1840s when James USA Elliotson and James Esdaile used it successfully to relieve pain in surgical patients. Scientific inter- est was further stimulated by William James, who Synonyms believed that hypnosis was relevant to the prob- lem of the will (Kihlstrom and McConkey 1990), Animal magnetism, Artificial somnambulism, and by Jean-Martin Charcot and Pierre Janet, who Hypnotic suggestion, Mesmerism, Suggestion, viewed hypnosis as an analog of hysteria (now Trance known as the dissociative and conversion disor- ders; see Kihlstrom 1994). In the 1920s, research on hypnosis was carried out by P.C. Young and Definition others at Harvard; and in the 1930s, before he ventured into learning theory, C.L. Hull carried Hypnosis is an altered state of consciousness in out an extensive program of hypnosis research at which the subject responds to suggestions by the Wisconsin in the 1930s. Beginning in the late hypnotist for alterations in perception, memory, 1950s, hypnosis entered a sort of Golden Age, and the voluntary control of action. In the classic with research by E.R. Hilgard, M.T. -
1 Greetings, We Now Have Available a Group of Books Related to the Study of Psychology That May Be of Interest to You. Topics In
Greetings, We now have available a group of books related to the study of Psychology that may be of interest to you. Topics include hypnosis, hypnotic therapy, and mesmerism, as well as applications in psychotherapy, medicine, surgery, and for treatment of various conditions. Detailed bibliographic descriptions and images can be found on the following pages. If you are interested in any of these books, or have additional questions, please contact the shop at your earliest convenience. We accept most major credit cards, including MasterCard, Visa, American Express, and Discover, as well as checks. Any book is returnable for any reason. If you would like to visit us at the shop, please call ahead. Thank you. Cordially, Donald and Teresa Johanson Johanson Rare Books 1 Psychology Books Hypnosis in Health and Sickness By Gordon Ambrose and George Newbold Describes Uses of Hypnosis in Various Health Fields Ambrose, Gordon; Newbold, George. Hypnosis in Health and Sickness. London: Staples Press Limited, 1957. First Edition. Descriptions of uses of hypnosis in various capacities, including for midwifery, dentistry, obesity and smoking, alcoholism, and sports. Very good- in blue cloth, spine stamped in blue. Small, ¼ inch tear to edge of front board. Illustrated with figures. Some toning of pages, but text is clean and bright. 12mo. 196pp. $12. Suggestion and Autosuggestion By Charles Baudouin Previously Owned by the Head of Propaganda for the British During WWI & II Baudouin, Charles. Suggestion and Autosuggestion. A Psychological and Pedagogical Study Based upon the Investigations made by the New Nancy School. London: George Allen & Unwin, Ltd., 1924. Second Edition. Translated from the French by Eden and Cedar Paul. -
A Simple Introduction to Hypnosis
A Simple Introduction to Hypnosis An approach to Hypnosis and All it may offer by Ines Simpson A Simple Introduction to Hypnosis Printed by: SimpsonProtocl press Copyright © 2017 inessimpson.com No parts of this publication may be reproduced without correct attribution to the author of this book. For more information on this or other ines simpson publications Contact me at [email protected], Contents Introduction to Hypnosis – The Book .......................................... 1 Ines Simpson - Who is she? .......................................................... 2 PART ONE ..................................................................................... 4 Approaching Hypnosis ................................................................. 4 Hypnosis is Everywhere? ......................................................... 4 Is Hypnosis really something I choose to be done to me? .......... 7 Where did Hypnosis come from? ................................................ 9 What’s the best form of Hypnosis? ........................................... 12 PART TWO .................................................................................. 16 What is Hypnosis to Me? ........................................................... 16 All hypnosis is self-hypnosis. ...................................................... 18 And then there is Hypnosis as a tool. ........................................ 21 PART THREE ................................................................................ 24 Hypnosis is something to do with the -
Some Important Historical Figures of Hypnosis
Some Important Historical Figures of Hypnosis Franz Anton Mesmer Usually referred to as Anton Mesmer, he was the self proclaimed discoverer of Animal Magnetism. Mesmer abandoned healing magnets for hand passes (stroking), and vats magnetised with the Ethereal Fluid, that were filled with water and “certain substances” to produce energetic states often resulted in a healing catharsis. Contrary to common assumption, Franz Anton Mesmer was not a hypnotist; he was a magnetist and did not consider the trance state necessary or even a mechanism of Animal Magnetism. Armand-Marie-Jacques de Chastenet, Marquis de Puységur Born in 1751, Puysegur died in 1825. He was a French aristocrat from one of the most illustrious families of the French nobility; he is now remembered as one of the pre-scientific founders of hypnotism. Puységur learned about Mesmerism from his brother Antoine-Hyacinthe, the Count of Chastenet. One of his first and most important patients was Victor Race, a 23-year-old peasant in the employ of the Puységur family. Race was easily hypnotized by Puységur, but displayed a strange form of sleeping trance not before seen in the early history of Mesmerism. Puységur noted the similarity between this sleeping trance and natural sleep-walking or somnambulism, and he named it "artificial somnambulism". He became a highly successful hypnotist, to whom people came from all over France. In 1785, Puységur taught a course in animal magnetism to the local Masonic society, which he concluded with these words: I believe in the existence within myself of a power. From this belief derives my will to exert it. -
Course Material for the Certified Hypnotherapist Program
Handout 110 COURSE MATERIAL FOR THE CERTIFIED HYPNOTHERAPIST PROGRAM 110 - History of Hypnosis The ancient religious rites of the early Persian, Greek and Egyptian civilizations, as well as other cultures such as; the Chinese, Hindu and African describe behavior suggestive of hypnosis. In the middle ages the “royal touch” of kings, and such renowned figures as Paracelsus, Valentine Greatrakes and Johann Gassner influenced the scientific world of Franz Mesmer, who in his limited way, made the first serious attempts to bring scientific credence to the phenomena. Two people who deserve mention because they initiated major trends are Franz Anton Mesmer, and Dr. James Braid. Mesmer Gave Hypnosis its original name. Produced his first theories of Mesmerism in 1765. Believed that he possessed the power to magnetize people into his control. Discredited as a physician, branded a fraud and as a result hypnosis was disclaimed by the scientific world. Only a few “brave souls” dared to investigate its significance as a scientific modality. James Braid He was a physician in the 1840’s. He studied Hypnosis in a scientific way. Believed that Mesmerism was a suggestible state resembling a nervous sleep. He coined the word, “hypnotism” from the Greek word meaning sleep. 1 | P a g e ©Copyright 2012. Atlanta National Hypnotherapy Institute Handout 110 COURSE MATERIAL FOR THE CERTIFIED HYPNOTHERAPIST PROGRAM A hyper suggestible state is a position, which is currently held by most authorities today. He made the discovery of the division within the consciousness. It was this discovery which helped to shift the emphasis in hypnosis from the physiological to the psychological Braid found that many physiological changes took place in the hypnotic state. -
A Brief History of Hypnosis the Longstanding Use And
A BRIEF HISTORY OF HYPNOSIS THE LONGSTANDING USE AND ACCEPTANCE OF HYPNOSIS Long before our modern anesthetics and counseling we know from their writings that the ancient Greeks, Egyptians as well as the Sumerians and other ancient peoples used what we now call hypnosis for emotional health, pain management and even surgeries. Many of these surgeries and procedures we would recognize today as common modern procedures such as cataract and brain surgery as well as the setting of broken bones. In more modern times, during the 1820s hypnosis gained popularity in Europe as an anesthetic for major surgery. It was during this period that a British surgeon, Doctor James Esdaile (1805-1859) successfully performed thousands of major operations as a surgeon in India using hypnosis as the only anesthetic. In 1841, the Scottish surgeon Doctor James Braid, famous for his original treatment for clubbed foot, fails after strict examination to find any fraud in the hypnotic demonstrations of hypnotist Charles Lafontaine and adopts hypnotism as a treatment. In the coming years Doctor Braid would greatly expand both the knowledge and use of hypnotism in the medical field. In 1892 the British Medical Association unanimously endorsed the findings of Sir William Broadbent, Sir William Gairdner, and a Committee of nine doctors “to investigate the nature of the phenomenon of hypnotism”. An excerpt of that report follows: “The Committee are of opinion that as a therapeutic agent hypnotism is frequently effective in relieving pain, procuring sleep, and alleviating -
Clairvoyants and Mediums Search for Franklin W
Polar Record 39 (208): 1–18 (2003). Printed in the United Kingdom. DOI: 10.1017/S0032247402002723 1 Clairvoyants and mediums search for Franklin W. Gillies Ross Department of Geography, Bishop’s University, Lennoxville, Quebec J1M 1Z7, Canada Received March 2002 ABSTRACT. The search for Sir John Franklin (1847–59) coincided with a growing interest in mesmerism and modern spiritualism in Britain. Several clairvoyants, claiming to ‘see’ Franklin’s ships and crews in the Arctic, made statements about the status and location of the overdue expedition, and at least three mediums described communications with Franklin’s spirit. Although the Admiralty provided assistance to Dr Haddock, the mesmerist of Emma, the Bolton clairvoyant, they did not take any action on the basis of her statements, probably because the various accounts were contradictory and could not be verified, and because the Admiralty Lords were sceptical of paranormal phenomena. Lady Franklin, on the other hand, visited clairvoyants and altered the plans for her search expeditions under Forsyth and Kennedy on the basis of a revelation. Recently, an American medium has described more than two dozen conversations with the spirits of Sir John and Lady Franklin. Contents range of ordinary knowledge there existed a mysterious Introduction 1 force that, if properly exploited, could cure diseases and Clairvoyants and Franklin 2 provide other practical benefits. Mesmer used hypnotism Parker Snow’s vision 9 to harness the invisible power, and later another German, Weesy Coppin’s revelation 9 Baron Karl von Reichenbach, experimented with magnet- Mediums and Franklin 10 ism, electricity, heat, light, crystallization, and chemical The ebb and flow of belief 13 attraction, to facilitate access to what he called the ‘vital Influence on the Franklin search 15 force’ or ‘odyle.’ His influential work was translated into Acknowledgements 17 English by William Gregory, Professor of Chemistry at References 17 the University of Edinburgh, and published during the Franklin search (Reichenbach 1850). -
Download the Exhibition Booklet
In 1837, when 19-year-old Queen Victoria ascended the British throne, medicine was a bleak and brutal business. Operations were performed without pain relief while the standard medical therapies were bloodletting, purging and dosing with toxic potions. But that summer a promising medical innovation crossed the Channel from Paris: mesmerism. Most of the British medical establishment scorned this new- fangled French idea but one doctor, the highly esteemed physician John Elliotson, embraced mesmerism with zeal. For 18 months in 1837 and 1838 Elliotson staged dramatic demonstrations on his patients at University College Hospital which drew fascinated audiences, provoked sensational headlines and – ultimately – split the medical profession. This exhibition tells the story of John Elliotson and his battle to promote mesmerism – hypnotism as it was later renamed – in the face of furious opposition from the medical establishment and medical press. Elliotson was President of the Medical and Chirurgical Society of London in 1833, and it was during his term of office that the Society was granted a Royal Charter to become, in 1834, the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society. Elliotson commenced a series of mesmeric demonstrations in May 1838. Large audiences gathered at the lecture theatre at University College Hospital. Answering charges of publicity-seeking, Elliotson declared that “the hospital was not founded to fill the pockets of the professors, but to throw light on truth and nature, and to expose fallacies.” Source: Wikimedia Commons Two sisters, aged sixteen and seventeen respectively, had been admitted to the hospital to treat the epileptic fits suffered by both of them. Described as being of “diminutive stature and childish features,” their names were Elizabeth and Jane Okey.