Complete Hypnotism,
Mesmerism, Mind-Reading
by
A. Alpheus
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Mind-Reading
and Spritualism, by A. Alpheus
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Title: Complete Hypnotism, Mesmerism, Mind-Reading and
Spritualism How to Hypnotize: Being an Exhaustive and Practical
System of Method, Application, and Use
Author: A. Alpheus
Release Date: September 20, 2006 [eBook #19342]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COMPLETE
HYPNOTISM, MESMERISM, MIND-READING AND
SPRITUALISM***
E-text prepared by Jerry Kuntz as part of the Lawson's Progress Project
COMPLETE HYPNOTISM: MESMERISM, MIND-READING AND
SPIRITUALISM
How to Hypnotize: Being an Exhaustive and Practical System of
Method, Application, and Use
by
A. ALPHEUS
1903
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION--History of
hypnotism--Mesmer--Puysegur--Braid--What is hypnotism?--Theories
of hypnotism: 1. Animal magnetism; 2. The Neurosis Theory; 3.
Suggestion Theory
CHAPTER I
--How to Hypnotize--Dr. Cocke's method-Dr. Flint's method--The
French method at Paris--At Nancy--The Hindoo silent method--How to
wake a subject from hypnotic sleep--Frauds of public hypnotic
entertainments.
CHAPTER II
--Amusing experiments--Hypnotizing on the stage--"You can't pull
your hands apart!"--Post-hypnotic suggestion--The newsboy, the hunter,
and the young man with the rag doll--A whip becomes hot
iron--Courting a broom stick--The side-show
CHAPTER III
--The stages of hypnotism--Lethargy-Catalepsy--The somnambulistic
stage--Fascination
CHAPTER IV
--How the subject feels under hypnotization--Dr. Cocke's
experience--Effect of music--Dr. Alfred Warthin's experiments
CHAPTER V
--Self hypnotization--How it may be done--An
experience--Accountable for children's crusade--Oriental prophets
self-hypnotized
CHAPTER VI
--Simulation--Deception in hypnotism very common--Examples of
Neuropathic deceit--Detecting simulation--Professional subjects--How
Dr. Luys of the Charity Hospital at Paris was deceived--Impossibility
of detecting deception in all cases--Confessions of a professional
hypnotic subject
CHAPTER VII
--Criminal suggestion--Laboratory crimes--Dr. Cocke's experiments
showing criminal suggestion is not possible--Dr. William James'
theory--A bad man cannot be made good, why expect to make a good
man bad?
CHAPTER VIII
--Dangers in being hypnotized Condemnation of public
performances--A commonsense view--Evidence furnished by
Lafontaine; by Dr. Courmelles; by Dr. Hart; by Dr. Cocke--No danger
in hypnotism if rightly used by physicians or scientists
CHAPTER IX
--Hypnotism in medicine--Anesthesia--Restoring the use of
muscles--Hallucination--Bad habits
CHAPTER X
--Hypnotism of animals--Snake charming
CHAPTER XI
--A scientific explanation of hypnotism--Dr. Hart's theory
CHAPTER XII
--Telepathy and Clairvoyance--Peculiar power in hypnotic
state--Experiments--"Phantasms of the living" explained by telepathy
CHAPTER XIII
--The Confessions of a Medium--Spiritualistic phenomena explained
on theory of telepathy--Interesting statement of Mrs. Piper, the famous
medium of the Psychical Research Society
INTRODUCTION.
There is no doubt that hypnotism is a very old subject, though the name
was not invented till 1850. In it was wrapped up the "mysteries of Isis"
in Egypt thousands of years ago, and probably it was one of the
weapons, if not the chief instrument of operation, of the magi
mentioned in the Bible and of the "wise men" of Babylon and Egypt.
"Laying on of hands" must have been a form of mesmerism, and Greek
oracles of Delphi and other places seem to have been delivered by
priests or priestesses who went into trances of self-induced hypnotism.
It is suspected that the fakirs of India who make trees grow from dry
twigs in a few minutes, or transform a rod into a serpent (as Aaron did
in Bible history), operate by some form of hypnotism. The people of
the East are much more subject to influences of this kind than Western
peoples are, and there can be no question that the religious orgies of
heathendom were merely a form of that hysteria which is so closely
related to the modern phenomenon of hypnotism. Though various
scientific men spoke of magnetism, and understood that there was a
power of a peculiar kind which one man could exercise over another, it
was not until Frederick Anton Mesmer (a doctor of Vienna) appeared in
1775 that the general public gave any special attention to the subject. In
the year mentioned, Mesmer sent out a circular letter to various
scientific societies or "Academies" as they are called in Europe, stating
his belief that "animal magnetism" existed, and that through it one man
could influence another. No attention was given his letter, except by the
Academy of Berlin, which sent him an unfavorable reply.
In 1778 Mesmer was obliged for some unknown reason to leave Vienna,
and went to Paris, where he was fortunate in converting to his ideas
d'Eslon, the Comte d'Artois's physician, and one of the medical
professors at the Faculty of Medicine. His success was very great;
everybody was anxious to be magnetized, and the lucky Viennese
doctor was soon obliged to call in assistants. Deleuze, the librarian at
the Jardin des Plantes, who has been called the Hippocrates of
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