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Animal magnetism

Animal magnetism, also known as mesmerism, is a theory invented by German doctor Franz Mesmer in the 18th century. It posits the existence of an invisible natural force (Lebensmagnetismus) possessed by all living things, including humans, animals, and vegetables. He claimed that the force could have physical effects, including healing.[1]

The vitalist theory attracted numerous followers in Europe and the United States and was popular into the 19th century. Practitioners were often known as magnetizers rather than mesmerists. It had an important influence in medicine for about 75 years from its beginnings in 1779, and continued to have some influence for another 50 years. Hundreds of books were written on the subject between 1766 and 1925, but it is no longer practiced today except as a form of alternative medicine in some places.[2]

Etymology and definitions edit

"Magnetizer" edit

The terms "magnetizer" and "mesmerizer" have been applied to people who study and practice animal magnetism.[3] These terms have been distinguished from "mesmerist" and "magnetist", which are regarded as denoting those who study animal magnetism without being practitioners;[4] and from "hypnotist", someone who practises hypnosis.[4]

The etymology of the word magnetizer comes from the French "magnétiseur" ("practicing the methods of mesmerism"),[3] which in turn is derived from the French verb magnétiser.[5] The term refers to an individual who has the power to manipulate the "magnetic fluid"[6] with effects upon other people present that were regarded as analogous to magnetic effects.[7] This sense of the term is found, for example, in the expression of Antoine Joseph Gorsas: "The magnetizer is the imam of vital energy".[8]

"Mesmerism" edit

A tendency emerged amongst British magnetizers to call their clinical techniques "mesmerism"; they wanted to distance themselves from the theoretical orientation of animal magnetism that was based on the concept of "magnetic fluid". At the time, some magnetizers attempted to channel what they thought was a magnetic "fluid", and sometimes they attempted this with a "laying on of hands". Reported effects included various feelings: intense heat, trembling, trances, and seizures.[9]

Many practitioners took a scientific approach, such as Joseph Philippe François Deleuze (1753–1835), a French physician, anatomist, gynecologist, and physicist. One of his pupils was Théodore Léger (1799–1853), who wrote that the label "mesmerism" was "most improper".[10]

Noting that, by 1846, the term "galvanism" had been replaced by "electricity", Léger wrote that year:[10]

Mesmerism, of all the names proposed [to replace the term animal magnetism], is decidedly the most improper; for, in the first place, no true science has ever been designated by the name of a man, whatever be the claims he could urge in his favor; and secondly, what are the claims of Mesmer for such an honor? He is not the inventor of the practical part of the science, since we can trace the practice of it through the most remote ages; and in that respect, the part which he introduced has been completely abandoned. He proposed for it a theory which is now [viz., 1846] exploded, and which, on account of his errors, has been fatal to our progress. He never spoke of the phenomena which have rehabilitated our cause among scientific men; and since nothing remains to be attributed to Mesmer, either in the practice and theory, or the discoveries that constitute our science, why should it be called mesmerism?

Royal Commission edit

In 1784 two French Royal Commissions appointed by Louis XVI studied Mesmer's magnetic fluid theory to try to establish it by scientific evidence.[11][12] The commission of the Academy of Sciences included Majault, Benjamin Franklin, Jean Sylvain Bailly, Jean-Baptiste Le Roy, Sallin, Jean Darcet, de Borey, Joseph-Ignace Guillotin, and Antoine Lavoisier. The Commission of the Royal Society of Medicine was composed of Poissonnier, Caille, Mauduyt de la Varenne, Andry, and Antoine Laurent de Jussieu.

Whilst the commission agreed that the cures claimed by Mesmer were indeed cures,[11] it also concluded there was no evidence of the existence of his "magnetic fluid", and that its effects derived from either the imaginations of its subjects or charlatanry.[11]

Royal Academy investigation edit

A generation later, another investigating committee, appointed by a majority vote in 1826 in The Royal Academy of Medicine in Paris, studied the effects and clinical potentials of the mesmeric procedure - without trying to establish the physical nature of any magnetic fluidum. The report says:

what we have seen in the course of our experiments bears no sort of resemblance to what the Report of 1784 relates with regard to the magnetizers of that period. We neither admit nor reject the existence of the fluid, because we have not verified the fact ; we do not speak of the baquet ... nor of the assemblage of a great number of people together, who were magnetized in the presence of a crowd of witnesses; because all our experiments were made in the most complete stillness ... and always upon a single person at a time. We do not speak of ... the crisis.[13]

Among the conclusions were:

Magnetism has taken effect upon persons of different sexes and ages.
... In general, magnetism does not act upon persons in a sound state of health.
... Neither does it act upon all sick persons.
... we may conclude with certainty that this state exists, when it gives rise to the development of new faculties, which have been designated by the names of clairvoyance; intuition; internal prevision; or when it produces great changes in the physical economy, such as insensibility; a sudden and considerable increase of strength; and when these effects cannot be referred to any other cause.
... We can not only act upon the magnetized person, but even place him in a complete state of somnambulism, and bring him out of it without his knowledge, out of his sight, at a certain distance, and with doors intervening.
... The greater number of the somnambulists whom we have seen, were completely insensible ... we might pinch their skin, so as to leave a mark, prick them with pins under the nails, &c. without producing any pain, without even their perceiving it. Finally, we saw one who was insensible to one of the most painful operations in surgery, and who did not manifest the slightest emotion in her countenance, her pulse, or her respiration.
... Magnetism is as intense, and as speedily felt, at a distance of six feet as of six inches; and the phenomena developed are the same in both cases.
...Magnetism ought to be allowed a place within the circle of medical sciences...[14]

Mesmerism and hypnotism edit

 
Baquet. Interior view: Drawing room scene with many people sitting and standing around a large table; a man on a crutch has an iron band wrapped around his ankle; others in the group are holding bands similarly; to the left, a man has magnetised a woman. (1780)
 
Advertisement poster of 1857:
Instant sleep. Miscellaneous effects of paralysis, partial and complete catalepsy, partial or complete attraction. Phreno-magnetic effects (...) Musical ectasy (...) Insensitivity to physical pain and instant awakening (...) transfusion of magnetic power to others

Faria and "oriental hypnosis" edit

Abbé Faria was one of the disciples of Franz Anton Mesmer who continued with Mesmer's work following the conclusions of the Royal Commission. In the early 19th century, Abbé Faria is said to have introduced oriental hypnosis to Paris[15] and to have conducted experiments to prove that "no special force was necessary for the production of the mesmeric phenomena such as the trance, but that the determining cause lay within the subject himself"—in other words, that it worked purely by the power of suggestion.[16]

Braid and "hypnotism" edit

Hypnotism, a designation coined by the Scottish surgeon, James Braid,[17] originates in Braid's response to an 1841 exhibition of "animal magnetism", by Charles Lafontaine, in Manchester.[18] Writing in 1851, Braid was adamant that, in the absence of the sorts of "higher phenomena" reportedly produced by the mesmerists,

and in contra-distinction to the Transcendental [i.e., metaphysical] Mesmerism of the Mesmerists … [allegedly] induced through the transmission of an occult influence from [the body of the operator to that of the subject,] Hypnotism, [by which] I mean a peculiar condition of the nervous system, into which it can be thrown by artificial contrivance … [a theoretical position that is entirely] consistent with generally admitted principles in physiological and psychological science [would] therefore [be most aptly] designated Rational Mesmerism.[19]

"Mesmerism" and "hypnotism" edit

While there is a great range of theories and practices collectively denoted mesmerism,[20] research has clearly identified that there are substantial and significant differences between "mesmerism" and "hypnotism" however they may be defined.[21]

Vital fluid and animal magnetism edit

A 1791 London publication explains Mesmer's theory of the vital fluid:

Modern philosophy has admitted a plenum or universal principle of fluid matter, which occupies all space; and that as all bodies moving in the world, abound with pores, this fluid matter introduces itself through the interstices and returns backwards and forwards, flowing through one body by the currents which issue therefrom to another, as in a magnet, which produces that phenomenon which we call Animal Magnetism. This fluid consists of fire, air and spirit, and like all other fluids tends to an equilibrium, therefore it is easy to conceive how the efforts which the bodies make towards each other produce animal electricity, which in fact is no more than the effect produced between two bodies, one of which has more motion than the other; a phenomenon serving to prove that the body which has most motion communicates it to the other, until the medium of motion becomes an equilibrium between the two bodies, and then this equality of motion produces animal electricity.[22]

According to an anonymous writer of a series of letters published by editor John Pearson in 1790, animal magnetism can cause a wide range of effects ranging from vomiting to what is termed the "crisis". The purpose of the treatment (inducing the "crisis") was to shock the body into convulsion in order to remove obstructions in the humoral system that were causing sicknesses.[23] Furthermore, this anonymous supporter of the animal magnetism theory purported that the "crisis" created two effects: first, a state in which the "[individual who is] completely reduced under Magnetic influence, although he should seem to be possessed of his senses, yet he ceases to be an accountable creature",[24] and a second "remarkable" state, which would be "conferred upon the [magnetized] subject … [namely] that of perfect and unobstructed vision … in other words, all opacity is removed, and every object becomes luminous and transparent".[25] A patient under crisis was believed to be able to see through the body and find the cause of illness, either in themselves or in other patients.

The Marquis of Puységur's miraculous healing of a young man named Victor in 1784 was attributed to, and used as evidence in support of, this "crisis" treatment. The Marquis was allegedly able to hypnotize Victor and, while hypnotized, Victor was said to have been able to speak articulately and diagnose his own sickness.

Jacob Melo discusses in his books some mechanisms by which the perceived effects of animal magnetism have been claimed to operate.[26]

Skepticism in the Romantic Era edit

A caricature of Mesmer filmed by George Mèliés, 1905

The study of animal magnetism spurred the creation of the Societies of Harmony in France,[27] where members paid to join and learn the practice of magnetism. Doctor John Bell was a member of the Philosophical Harmonic Society of Paris, and was certified by the society to lecture and teach on animal magnetism in England.[28] The existence of the societies transformed animal magnetism into a secretive art, where its practitioners and lecturers did not reveal the techniques of the practice based on the society members that have paid for instruction, veiling the idea that it was unfair to reveal the practice to others for free.[29] Although the heightened secrecy of the practice contributed to the skepticism about it, many supporters and practitioners of animal magnetism touted the ease and possibility for everyone to acquire the skills to perform its techniques.[30]

Popularization of animal magnetism was denounced and ridiculed by newspaper journals and theatre during the Romantic Era. Many deemed animal magnetism to be nothing more than a theatrical falsity or quackery. In a 1790 publication, an editor presented a series of letters written by an avid supporter of animal magnetism and included his own thoughts in an appendix stating: "No fanatics ever divulged notions more wild and extravagant; no impudent empiric ever retailed promises more preposterous, or histories of cures more devoid of reality, than the tribe of magnetisers".[31]

The novelist and playwright Elizabeth Inchbald wrote the farce Animal Magnetism in the late 1780s. The plot revolved around multiple love triangles and the absurdity of animal magnetism. The following passage mocks the medical prowess of those qualified only as mesmerists:

Doctor: They have refused to grant me a diploma—forbid me to practice as a physician, and all because I don't know a parcel of insignificant words; but exercise my profession according to the rules of reason and nature; Is it not natural to die, then if a dozen or two of my patients have died under my hands, is not that natural? ...[32]

Although the doctor's obsession with the use of animal magnetism, not merely to cure but to force his ward to fall in love with him, made for a humorous storyline, Inchbald's light-hearted play commented on what society perceived as threats posed by the practice.

De Mainanduc brought animal magnetism to England in 1787 and promulgated it into the social arena. In 1785, he had published proposals to the ladies of Britain to establish a "hygean society" or society of health, by which they would pay to join and enjoy his treatments.[33] As both popularity and skepticism increased, many became convinced that animal magnetism could lead to sexual exploitation of women. Not only did the practice involve close personal contact via the waving of hands over the body, but people were concerned that the animal magnetists could hypnotize women and direct them at will.

Having removed all misconceptions, foretelling of the future, explicit or implicit invocation of the devil, the use of animal magnetism is indeed merely an act of making use of physical media that are otherwise licit and hence it is not morally forbidden, provided it does not tend toward an illicit end or toward anything depraved. (The Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office: 28 July 1847.)

Political influence edit

The French Revolution catalyzed existing internal political friction in Britain in the 1790s; a few political radicals used animal magnetism as more than just a moral threat but also a political threat. Among many lectures warning society against government oppression, Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote:

William Pitt, the great political Animal Magnetist, ... has most foully worked on the diseased fancy of Englishmen ... thrown the nation into a feverish slumber, and is now bringing it to a crisis which may convulse mortality![34]

Major politicians and people in power were accused by radicals of practising animal magnetism on the general population.

In his article "Under the Influence: Mesmerism in England", Roy Porter notes that James Tilly Matthews suggested that the French were infiltrating England via animal magnetism. Matthews believed that "magnetic spies" would invade England and bring it under subjection by transmitting waves of animal magnetism to subdue the government and people.[35] Such an invasion from foreign influences was perceived as a radical threat.

Mesmerism and spiritual healing practices edit

During the Romantic period, mesmerism produced enthusiasm and inspired horror in the spiritual and religious context. Though discredited as a medical practice, mesmerism created a venue for spiritual healing. Some animal magnetists advertised their practices by stressing the "spiritual rather than physical benefits to be gained from animal magnetism" and were able to gather a good clientele from among the spiritually inspired population.[36]

Mesmerism has been used in parts of the world as an attempt to treat illness in humans, as well as disease in domestic, farm, circus, and zoo animals.[37]

Authors Johann Peter Lange[38][39] and Allan Kardec[40][41] wrote that the source of Jesus' miracles was animal magnetism. Other, like John Campbell Colquhoun[42] and Mary Baker Eddy,[43] denounced the comparison. Mary Baker Eddy went so far as to claim animal magnetism "lead[s] to moral and to physical death."

Professional magnetizers edit

In the Classical era of animal magnetism, the late 17th century to the mid-19th century, there were professional magnetizers,[44] whose techniques were described by authors of the time as particularly effective. Their method was to spend prolonged periods "magnetizing" their customers directly or through "mesmeric magnets". It was observed that in some conditions, certain mesmerizers were more likely to achieve the result than others, regardless of their degree of knowledge.[4]

In literature edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Wolfart, Karl Christian; Friedrich Anton Mesmer. Mesmerismus: Oder, System der Wechselwirkungen, Theorie und Anwendung des thierischen Magnetismus als die allgemeine Heilkunde zur Erhaltung des Menschen (in German, facsimile of the 1811 edition). Cambridge University Press, 2011. ISBN 9781108072694. Foreword.
  2. ^ Adam Crabtree Animal Magnetism, Early Hypnotism, and Psychical Research, 1766–1925 – An Annotated Bibliography ISBN 0-527-20006-9
  3. ^ a b Dictionnaire Notre Famille, (1987), Magnetiseur, notrefamille.com. Accessed 19 August 2015
  4. ^ a b c Hector Durville, Theory and Animal Magnetism procedures, Rio de Jan ed. Léon Denis, 2012 ISBN 978-85-7297-510-0.
  5. ^ Thouvenel, Pierre, Mémoire et medical physique 28 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine Paris Ed. Didot Chez le jeune, Quai des Auguftins. (1781) p. 300
  6. ^ Baron du Potet, Student Handbook Magnetizer , ed. Life – 3rd Edition, 2013
  7. ^ Franz Anton Mesmer, Mémoire sur la découverte du animals magnétisme , 1779,   Édition numérique disponible sur Wikisource. Il ya aussi une édition papier chez Allia, 2006 ISBN 2844852262
  8. ^ Gorsas, Antoine-Joseph, L'Ane promeneur, 1784, p. 41 and p. 342
  9. ^ Connor C. (2005). A People's History of Science, Nation Books, pp. 404–5
  10. ^ a b Léger, 1846, p.14.
  11. ^ a b c Orsucci, 2009, p.66
  12. ^ Lopez, 1993
  13. ^ COLQUHOUN, John Campbell, Isis Revelata, Volume 2, p. 199
  14. ^ COLQUHOUN, John Campbell, Isis Revelata, Volume 2, pp. 283-293
  15. ^ See Carrer (2004), passim.
  16. ^ Hull, Clark L. "Hypnotism in Scientific Perspective", The Scientific Monthly 29.2 (1929): p. 156.
  17. ^ Yeates, (2013), passim.
  18. ^ Gilles de la Tourette. "The Wonders of Animal Magnetism", The North American Review 146.375 (1888): p.131-132.
  19. ^ Braid (1850), p.6.
  20. ^ See, for example, The Zoist, 1854-1855, Vols. 1-13, passim; Podmore (1909), pp.1- 150; Edmondston (1986), pp.1-121; Gauld (1992), pp.1-270; and Crabtree (1993), pp.109-144.
  21. ^ See, for example, Hallaji (1962); Völgyesi (1966); MacHovec (1975, 1979); Pulos (1980); Chester (1982), McGarry (1987); Gauld (1988, 1992); and Gibson & Heap (1991), etc.
  22. ^ Wonders and mysteries of animal magnetism displayed; or the history, art, practice, and progress of that useful science, from its first rise in the city of Paris, to the present time. With several Curious Cases and new Anecdotes of the Principal Professors. Eighteenth Century Collections Online. London (1791): pp. 11–12
  23. ^ Pearson (1790), p.12.
  24. ^ Pearson (1790), pp. 13–15.
  25. ^ Pearson (1790), p.15.
  26. ^ Lecture given at the III World Meeting of Magnetizers
  27. ^ Ceci, Andrea (2020). "Deaf-Mutism and Savagery Through the Lens of Animal Magnetism in France During the Early Nineteenth-Century". Cromohs - Cyber Review of Modern Historiography: 61–75. doi:10.13128/cromohs-11704.
  28. ^ Bell, John, Professor of Animal Magnetism. "The general and particular principles of animal electricity and magnetism, &c. in which are found Dr. Bell's secrets and practice, AS Delivered To His Pupils in Paris, London, Dublin, Bristol, Glocester, Worcester, Birmingham, Wolverhampton, Shrewsbury, Chester, Liverpool, Manchester, &c. &c. Shewing how to Magnetise and Cure different Diseases; to produce Crises, as well as Somnambulism, or Sleep-Walking; and in that State of Sleep to make a Person eat, drink, walk, sing and play upon any Instruments they are used to, &c. to make Apparatus and other Accessaries to produce Magnetical Facts; also to Magnetise Rivers, Rooms, Trees, and other Bodies, animate and inanimate; to raise the Arms, Legs of a Person awake, and to make him rise from his Chair; to raise the Arm of a Person absent from one Room to another; also to treat him at a Distance. All the New Experiments and Phenomena are explained by Monsieur le Docteur Bell, Professor of that Science, And Member of the Philosophical Harmonic Society at Paris, Fellow Correspondent of M. Le Court de Geblin's Museum; and the only Person authorised by Patent from the First Noblemen in France, to teach and practise that Science in England, Ireland, &c". Price Five Shillings. Eighteenth Century Collections Online. [London](1792): p.2
  29. ^ Pearson, John (1790). A plain account, p. 6
  30. ^ "Wonders and mysteries of animal magnetism displayed; or the history, art, practice, and progress of that useful science, from its first rise in the city of Paris, to the present time. With several Curious Cases and new Anecdotes of the Principal Professors". Eighteenth Century Collections Online. London (1791): p.16
  31. ^ Pearson, John (1790). A plain account, p. 37
  32. ^ Inchbald, Elizabeth. Animal Magnetism. p. 9
  33. ^ Wonders and mysteries of animal magnetism displayed; or the history, art, practice, and progress of that useful science, from its first rise in the city of Paris, to the present time. With several Curious Cases and new Anecdotes of the Principal Professors. Eighteenth Century Collections Online. London (1791): p.7
  34. ^ Requoted from: Fulford, Tim. "Conducting and Vital Fluid: The Politics and Poetics of Mesmerism in the 1790s", Studies in Romanticism 43.1 (2004): p. 1
  35. ^ Porter, Roy. "UNDER THE INFLUENCE: MESMERISM IN ENGLAND," History Today 35.9 (1985): pg.28
  36. ^ Fara. "An attractive therapy: animal magnetism in eighteenth-century England", History of science 33 (1995): pg:142
  37. ^ See, for example, Wilson (1839), Völgyesi (1938), Hallaji, 1962; MacHovec, 1975, 1979; and Yeates (2018), pp.48-52.
  38. ^ LANGE, Johann Peter, A Commentary on the Holy Scriptures: Kings, Ed. C. Scribner & Company, 1872.
  39. ^ LANGE, Johann Peter, The Life of The Lord Jesus Christ: A Complete Critical Examination of the Origin, Contents and Connection of the Gospels, Volume 1, Ed. Smith, English and Company, 1872
  40. ^ KARDEC, Allan, Genesis – FEB 53 rd Ed. – Cap.XV – Item 1 – p. 273
  41. ^ KARDEC, Allan, Genesis – FEB 53rd Ed – Cap.XV – Item 2 – pag.274
  42. ^ COLQUHOUN, John Campbell, An History of Magic, Witchcraft, and Animal Magnetism, Volume 1, Ed. Longman, Brown, Green, & Longmans, 1851.
  43. ^ Eddy, Mary Baker, "Animal Magnetism Unmasked," Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, Trustees Under the Will of Maker Baker G. Eddy, Boston, 1934. pp.101
  44. ^ Franklin Rausky, Mesmer ou la révolution thérapeutique ("Mesmer, or the therapeutic revolution"), Paris, 1977
  45. ^ The Zoist, Facts and Observations on the Mesmeric and Magnetic Fluids. Offprint from The Zoist: A Journal of Cerebral Physiology and Mesmerism, April 1846
  46. ^ Teste, Alphonse (1843). A Practical Manual of Animal Magnetism: containing an exposition of the methods employed in producing the magnetic phenomena; with its application to the treatment and cure of diseases. H. Baillière.
  47. ^ Coale, S. (1994). The Romance of Mesmerism: Hawthorne’s Medium of Romance. Studies in the American Renaissance, 271–288. http://www.jstor.org/stable/30227659

General references edit

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  • Pattie, F.A., "Mesmer's Medical Dissertation and Its Debt to Mead's De Imperio Solis ac Lunae", Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, Vol.11, (July 1956), pp. 275–287.
  • Pattie, F.A., Mesmer and Animal Magnetism: A Chapter in the History of Medicine, Edmonston Publishing, (Hamilton), 1994.
  • Pearson, John (ed.), A Plain and Rational Account of the Nature and Effects of Animal Magnetism: In a Series of letters. With Notes and an Appendix, W. and J. Stratford, (London), 1790.
  • Pintar, Judith; Lynn, Steven J. (2008). Hypnosis: a brief history. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-4051-3451-4.
  • Podmore, F. (1909), Mesmerism and Christian Science: A Short History of Mental Healing, Philadelphia, PA: George W. Jacobs & Company.
  • Porter, R., "'Under the Influence' Mesmerism in England", History Today, Vol.35, No.9, (September 1985), pp. 22–29.
  • Pulos, L., "Mesmerism Revisited: The Effectiveness of Esdaile's Techniques in the Production of Deep Hypnosis and Total Body Hypnoanaesthesia", American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, Vol.22, No.4, (April 1980), pp. 206–211.
  • Rosen, G., "Mesmerism and Surgery: A Strange Chapter in the History of Anesthesia", Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, Vol.1, No.4, (October 1946), pp. 527–550.
  • Sutton, G., "Electric Medicine and Mesmerism", Isis, Vol.72, No.3, (September 1981), pp. 375–392.
  • van Schlun, Betsy (2007). Science and the imagination: mesmerism, media, and the mind in nineteenth-century English and American literature. Galda & Wilch. ISBN 978-3-931397-60-9.
  • Völgyesi, F. (1938). "Eigene Hypnoseversuche mit gefangenen wilden Tieren ['(The author's) hypnotic experiments with captive wild animals']", pp.90-101 in F. Völgyesi, Menschen- und Tierhypnose ['Human and Animal Hypnosis'], Zürich & Leipzig: Orell Füssli.
  • Völgyesi, F.A. (1966), Hypnosis of Man and Animals, London: Baillière, Tindall & Cassell.
  • Wilson, J. (1839), Trials of Animal Magnetism on the Brute Creation, London: Sherwood, Gilbert, and Piper.
  • Winter, A., Mesmerized: Powers of Mind in Victorian Britain, The University of Chicago Press, (Chicago), 1998.
  • Wonders and mysteries of animal magnetism displayed; or the history, art, practice, and progress of that useful science, from its first rise in the city of Paris, to the present time. With several Curious Cases and new Anecdotes of the Principal Professors. Eighteenth Century Collections Online. London (1791)
  • Wyckoff, J. [1975], Franz Anton Mesmer: Between God and Devil, Prentice-Hall, (Englewood Cliffs), 1975.
  • Yeates, L.B. (2013), James Braid: Surgeon, Gentleman Scientist, and Hypnotist, Ph.D. Dissertation, School of History and Philosophy of Science, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, University of New South Wales, January 2013.
  • Yeates, L. B. (2018), "James Braid (II): Mesmerism, Braid's Crucial Experiment, and Braid's Discovery of Neuro-Hypnotism", Australian Journal of Clinical Hypnotherapy & Hypnosis, Vol. 40, No. 1 (Autumn 2018), pp. 40–92.

Further reading edit

  • Anton Mesmer, (1779), from: Binet, A. & Féré, C. Animal Magnetism, New York: Appleton and Co., 1888; web archive
  • The Baron Dupotet de Sennevoy. An Introduction to the Study of Animal Magnetism. London: Saunders & Otley, 1838; full text
  • William Gregory. Letters to a Candid Inquirer on Animal Magnetism. Philadelphia: Blanchard and Lea, 1851; full text
  • Charles Poyen. Animal magnetism. Boston: Weeks, Jordan & co., 1837; full text

External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of animal magnetism at Wiktionary
  • Ripley, George; Dana, Charles A., eds. (1879). "Animal Magnetism" . The American Cyclopædia.
  •   Media related to Animal magnetism at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Animal magnetism at Wikiquote

animal, magnetism, confused, with, magnetoception, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, factual, accuracy, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, please, help, ensure, that, disputed, statements, reliably, sourced, july, 2023, learn, when, remove,. Not to be confused with magnetoception For other uses see Animal magnetism disambiguation This article s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on Talk Animal magnetism Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Animal magnetism also known as mesmerism is a theory invented by German doctor Franz Mesmer in the 18th century It posits the existence of an invisible natural force Lebensmagnetismus possessed by all living things including humans animals and vegetables He claimed that the force could have physical effects including healing 1 The vitalist theory attracted numerous followers in Europe and the United States and was popular into the 19th century Practitioners were often known as magnetizers rather than mesmerists It had an important influence in medicine for about 75 years from its beginnings in 1779 and continued to have some influence for another 50 years Hundreds of books were written on the subject between 1766 and 1925 but it is no longer practiced today except as a form of alternative medicine in some places 2 Contents 1 Etymology and definitions 1 1 Magnetizer 1 2 Mesmerism 2 Royal Commission 3 Royal Academy investigation 4 Mesmerism and hypnotism 4 1 Faria and oriental hypnosis 4 2 Braid and hypnotism 4 3 Mesmerism and hypnotism 5 Vital fluid and animal magnetism 6 Skepticism in the Romantic Era 7 Political influence 8 Mesmerism and spiritual healing practices 9 Professional magnetizers 10 In literature 11 See also 12 References 13 General references 14 Further reading 15 External linksEtymology and definitions edit Magnetizer edit The terms magnetizer and mesmerizer have been applied to people who study and practice animal magnetism 3 These terms have been distinguished from mesmerist and magnetist which are regarded as denoting those who study animal magnetism without being practitioners 4 and from hypnotist someone who practises hypnosis 4 The etymology of the word magnetizer comes from the French magnetiseur practicing the methods of mesmerism 3 which in turn is derived from the French verb magnetiser 5 The term refers to an individual who has the power to manipulate the magnetic fluid 6 with effects upon other people present that were regarded as analogous to magnetic effects 7 This sense of the term is found for example in the expression of Antoine Joseph Gorsas The magnetizer is the imam of vital energy 8 Mesmerism edit A tendency emerged amongst British magnetizers to call their clinical techniques mesmerism they wanted to distance themselves from the theoretical orientation of animal magnetism that was based on the concept of magnetic fluid At the time some magnetizers attempted to channel what they thought was a magnetic fluid and sometimes they attempted this with a laying on of hands Reported effects included various feelings intense heat trembling trances and seizures 9 Many practitioners took a scientific approach such as Joseph Philippe Francois Deleuze 1753 1835 a French physician anatomist gynecologist and physicist One of his pupils was Theodore Leger 1799 1853 who wrote that the label mesmerism was most improper 10 Noting that by 1846 the term galvanism had been replaced by electricity Leger wrote that year 10 Mesmerism of all the names proposed to replace the term animal magnetism is decidedly the most improper for in the first place no true science has ever been designated by the name of a man whatever be the claims he could urge in his favor and secondly what are the claims of Mesmer for such an honor He is not the inventor of the practical part of the science since we can trace the practice of it through the most remote ages and in that respect the part which he introduced has been completely abandoned He proposed for it a theory which is now viz 1846 exploded and which on account of his errors has been fatal to our progress He never spoke of the phenomena which have rehabilitated our cause among scientific men and since nothing remains to be attributed to Mesmer either in the practice and theory or the discoveries that constitute our science why should it be called mesmerism Royal Commission editMain article Royal Commission on Animal Magnetism In 1784 two French Royal Commissions appointed by Louis XVI studied Mesmer s magnetic fluid theory to try to establish it by scientific evidence 11 12 The commission of the Academy of Sciences included Majault Benjamin Franklin Jean Sylvain Bailly Jean Baptiste Le Roy Sallin Jean Darcet de Borey Joseph Ignace Guillotin and Antoine Lavoisier The Commission of the Royal Society of Medicine was composed of Poissonnier Caille Mauduyt de la Varenne Andry and Antoine Laurent de Jussieu Whilst the commission agreed that the cures claimed by Mesmer were indeed cures 11 it also concluded there was no evidence of the existence of his magnetic fluid and that its effects derived from either the imaginations of its subjects or charlatanry 11 Royal Academy investigation editA generation later another investigating committee appointed by a majority vote in 1826 in The Royal Academy of Medicine in Paris studied the effects and clinical potentials of the mesmeric procedure without trying to establish the physical nature of any magnetic fluidum The report says what we have seen in the course of our experiments bears no sort of resemblance to what the Report of 1784 relates with regard to the magnetizers of that period We neither admit nor reject the existence of the fluid because we have not verified the fact we do not speak of the baquet nor of the assemblage of a great number of people together who were magnetized in the presence of a crowd of witnesses because all our experiments were made in the most complete stillness and always upon a single person at a time We do not speak of the crisis 13 Among the conclusions were Magnetism has taken effect upon persons of different sexes and ages In general magnetism does not act upon persons in a sound state of health Neither does it act upon all sick persons we may conclude with certainty that this state exists when it gives rise to the development of new faculties which have been designated by the names of clairvoyance intuition internal prevision or when it produces great changes in the physical economy such as insensibility a sudden and considerable increase of strength and when these effects cannot be referred to any other cause We can not only act upon the magnetized person but even place him in a complete state of somnambulism and bring him out of it without his knowledge out of his sight at a certain distance and with doors intervening The greater number of the somnambulists whom we have seen were completely insensible we might pinch their skin so as to leave a mark prick them with pins under the nails amp c without producing any pain without even their perceiving it Finally we saw one who was insensible to one of the most painful operations in surgery and who did not manifest the slightest emotion in her countenance her pulse or her respiration Magnetism is as intense and as speedily felt at a distance of six feet as of six inches and the phenomena developed are the same in both cases Magnetism ought to be allowed a place within the circle of medical sciences 14 Mesmerism and hypnotism edit nbsp Baquet Interior view Drawing room scene with many people sitting and standing around a large table a man on a crutch has an iron band wrapped around his ankle others in the group are holding bands similarly to the left a man has magnetised a woman 1780 nbsp Advertisement poster of 1857 Instant sleep Miscellaneous effects of paralysis partial and complete catalepsy partial or complete attraction Phreno magnetic effects Musical ectasy Insensitivity to physical pain and instant awakening transfusion of magnetic power to othersFaria and oriental hypnosis edit Abbe Faria was one of the disciples of Franz Anton Mesmer who continued with Mesmer s work following the conclusions of the Royal Commission In the early 19th century Abbe Faria is said to have introduced oriental hypnosis to Paris 15 and to have conducted experiments to prove that no special force was necessary for the production of the mesmeric phenomena such as the trance but that the determining cause lay within the subject himself in other words that it worked purely by the power of suggestion 16 Braid and hypnotism edit Hypnotism a designation coined by the Scottish surgeon James Braid 17 originates in Braid s response to an 1841 exhibition of animal magnetism by Charles Lafontaine in Manchester 18 Writing in 1851 Braid was adamant that in the absence of the sorts of higher phenomena reportedly produced by the mesmerists and in contra distinction to the Transcendental i e metaphysical Mesmerism of the Mesmerists allegedly induced through the transmission of an occult influence from the body of the operator to that of the subject Hypnotism by which I mean a peculiar condition of the nervous system into which it can be thrown by artificial contrivance a theoretical position that is entirely consistent with generally admitted principles in physiological and psychological science would therefore be most aptly designated Rational Mesmerism 19 Mesmerism and hypnotism edit While there is a great range of theories and practices collectively denoted mesmerism 20 research has clearly identified that there are substantial and significant differences between mesmerism and hypnotism however they may be defined 21 Vital fluid and animal magnetism editA 1791 London publication explains Mesmer s theory of the vital fluid Modern philosophy has admitted a plenum or universal principle of fluid matter which occupies all space and that as all bodies moving in the world abound with pores this fluid matter introduces itself through the interstices and returns backwards and forwards flowing through one body by the currents which issue therefrom to another as in a magnet which produces that phenomenon which we call Animal Magnetism This fluid consists of fire air and spirit and like all other fluids tends to an equilibrium therefore it is easy to conceive how the efforts which the bodies make towards each other produce animal electricity which in fact is no more than the effect produced between two bodies one of which has more motion than the other a phenomenon serving to prove that the body which has most motion communicates it to the other until the medium of motion becomes an equilibrium between the two bodies and then this equality of motion produces animal electricity 22 According to an anonymous writer of a series of letters published by editor John Pearson in 1790 animal magnetism can cause a wide range of effects ranging from vomiting to what is termed the crisis The purpose of the treatment inducing the crisis was to shock the body into convulsion in order to remove obstructions in the humoral system that were causing sicknesses 23 Furthermore this anonymous supporter of the animal magnetism theory purported that the crisis created two effects first a state in which the individual who is completely reduced under Magnetic influence although he should seem to be possessed of his senses yet he ceases to be an accountable creature 24 and a second remarkable state which would be conferred upon the magnetized subject namely that of perfect and unobstructed vision in other words all opacity is removed and every object becomes luminous and transparent 25 A patient under crisis was believed to be able to see through the body and find the cause of illness either in themselves or in other patients The Marquis of Puysegur s miraculous healing of a young man named Victor in 1784 was attributed to and used as evidence in support of this crisis treatment The Marquis was allegedly able to hypnotize Victor and while hypnotized Victor was said to have been able to speak articulately and diagnose his own sickness Jacob Melo discusses in his books some mechanisms by which the perceived effects of animal magnetism have been claimed to operate 26 Skepticism in the Romantic Era edit source source source A caricature of Mesmer filmed by George Melies 1905The study of animal magnetism spurred the creation of the Societies of Harmony in France 27 where members paid to join and learn the practice of magnetism Doctor John Bell was a member of the Philosophical Harmonic Society of Paris and was certified by the society to lecture and teach on animal magnetism in England 28 The existence of the societies transformed animal magnetism into a secretive art where its practitioners and lecturers did not reveal the techniques of the practice based on the society members that have paid for instruction veiling the idea that it was unfair to reveal the practice to others for free 29 Although the heightened secrecy of the practice contributed to the skepticism about it many supporters and practitioners of animal magnetism touted the ease and possibility for everyone to acquire the skills to perform its techniques 30 Popularization of animal magnetism was denounced and ridiculed by newspaper journals and theatre during the Romantic Era Many deemed animal magnetism to be nothing more than a theatrical falsity or quackery In a 1790 publication an editor presented a series of letters written by an avid supporter of animal magnetism and included his own thoughts in an appendix stating No fanatics ever divulged notions more wild and extravagant no impudent empiric ever retailed promises more preposterous or histories of cures more devoid of reality than the tribe of magnetisers 31 The novelist and playwright Elizabeth Inchbald wrote the farce Animal Magnetism in the late 1780s The plot revolved around multiple love triangles and the absurdity of animal magnetism The following passage mocks the medical prowess of those qualified only as mesmerists Doctor They have refused to grant me a diploma forbid me to practice as a physician and all because I don t know a parcel of insignificant words but exercise my profession according to the rules of reason and nature Is it not natural to die then if a dozen or two of my patients have died under my hands is not that natural 32 Although the doctor s obsession with the use of animal magnetism not merely to cure but to force his ward to fall in love with him made for a humorous storyline Inchbald s light hearted play commented on what society perceived as threats posed by the practice De Mainanduc brought animal magnetism to England in 1787 and promulgated it into the social arena In 1785 he had published proposals to the ladies of Britain to establish a hygean society or society of health by which they would pay to join and enjoy his treatments 33 As both popularity and skepticism increased many became convinced that animal magnetism could lead to sexual exploitation of women Not only did the practice involve close personal contact via the waving of hands over the body but people were concerned that the animal magnetists could hypnotize women and direct them at will Having removed all misconceptions foretelling of the future explicit or implicit invocation of the devil the use of animal magnetism is indeed merely an act of making use of physical media that are otherwise licit and hence it is not morally forbidden provided it does not tend toward an illicit end or toward anything depraved The Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office 28 July 1847 Political influence editThe French Revolution catalyzed existing internal political friction in Britain in the 1790s a few political radicals used animal magnetism as more than just a moral threat but also a political threat Among many lectures warning society against government oppression Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote William Pitt the great political Animal Magnetist has most foully worked on the diseased fancy of Englishmen thrown the nation into a feverish slumber and is now bringing it to a crisis which may convulse mortality 34 Major politicians and people in power were accused by radicals of practising animal magnetism on the general population In his article Under the Influence Mesmerism in England Roy Porter notes that James Tilly Matthews suggested that the French were infiltrating England via animal magnetism Matthews believed that magnetic spies would invade England and bring it under subjection by transmitting waves of animal magnetism to subdue the government and people 35 Such an invasion from foreign influences was perceived as a radical threat Mesmerism and spiritual healing practices editDuring the Romantic period mesmerism produced enthusiasm and inspired horror in the spiritual and religious context Though discredited as a medical practice mesmerism created a venue for spiritual healing Some animal magnetists advertised their practices by stressing the spiritual rather than physical benefits to be gained from animal magnetism and were able to gather a good clientele from among the spiritually inspired population 36 Mesmerism has been used in parts of the world as an attempt to treat illness in humans as well as disease in domestic farm circus and zoo animals 37 Authors Johann Peter Lange 38 39 and Allan Kardec 40 41 wrote that the source of Jesus miracles was animal magnetism Other like John Campbell Colquhoun 42 and Mary Baker Eddy 43 denounced the comparison Mary Baker Eddy went so far as to claim animal magnetism lead s to moral and to physical death Professional magnetizers editIn the Classical era of animal magnetism the late 17th century to the mid 19th century there were professional magnetizers 44 whose techniques were described by authors of the time as particularly effective Their method was to spend prolonged periods magnetizing their customers directly or through mesmeric magnets It was observed that in some conditions certain mesmerizers were more likely to achieve the result than others regardless of their degree of knowledge 4 Alexandre Jacques Francois Bertrand Richard Chenevix Etienne Felix d Henin de Cuvillers Andrew Jackson Davis Jules Denis Dupotet de Sennevoy Hector Durville Adam Karl August von Eschenmayer Abade Faria Charles Foster 45 Paul Gibier Valentine Greatrakes Allan Kardec Justinus Kerner Charles Lafontaine Johann Kaspar Lavater William Maxwell Franz Anton Mesmer Marquis of Puysegur Phineas Parkhurst Quimby Albert de Rochas Alphonse Teste 46 Georges Gilles de la Tourette Charles de Villers Alfred Russel WallaceIn literature editUrsule Mirouet an 1841 novel by Honore de Balzac features a character who converts to Christianity in part because of an experience with animal magnetism Edgar Allan Poe s 1845 short story The Facts in the Case of M Valdemar is based on the premise that a person could be mesmerised at the moment of death Poe published the work without explicitly stating that it was fictional leading some readers to believe it was a true account citation needed Nathaniel Hawthorne s writings show his curiosity with mesmerism particularly his 1851 novel The House of the Seven Gables in which Alice and later Phoebe are apparently mesmerised by members of the Maule family 47 Aldous Huxley s 1962 novel Island References Professor John Elliotson and animal magnetism as a way to perform painless surgery without anaesthesia Mesmerism Magnestism Hypnosis are themes running throughout the book Used primarily as a tool to enhance independent thought within the population Axel Munthe s 1929 book of memoirs The Story of San Michele A lightly embellished biography of Dr Axel Munthe and his history around owning Villa San Michele in Ana Capri with a series of completely unsubstantiated fanciful references to Charcot and mesmerism in chapter XIX Hypnotism William Faulkner s 1930 novel As I Lay Dying references animal magnetism in a brief chapter in which the character Cash explains his rationale for the design of the wooden coffin he built for his mother Addie Robert Browning s poem Mesmerism was published in 1855 It describes the experience of violent passion for a woman In after years Ezra Pound wrote a poem of the same name acknowledging his debt to Browning while gently mocking the poet s obscure style See also editBiomagnetism James Esdaile Magnetoception Royal Commission on Animal Magnetism The Zoist A Journal of Cerebral Physiology amp Mesmerism and Their Applications to Human Welfare Caloric theoryReferences edit Wolfart Karl Christian Friedrich Anton Mesmer Mesmerismus Oder System der Wechselwirkungen Theorie und Anwendung des thierischen Magnetismus als die allgemeine Heilkunde zur Erhaltung des Menschen in German facsimile of the 1811 edition Cambridge University Press 2011 ISBN 9781108072694 Foreword Adam Crabtree Animal Magnetism Early Hypnotism and Psychical Research 1766 1925 An Annotated Bibliography ISBN 0 527 20006 9 a b Dictionnaire Notre Famille 1987 Magnetiseur notrefamille com Accessed 19 August 2015 a b c Hector Durville Theory and Animal Magnetism procedures Rio de Jan ed Leon Denis 2012 ISBN 978 85 7297 510 0 Thouvenel Pierre Memoire et medical physique Archived 28 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine Paris Ed Didot Chez le jeune Quai des Auguftins 1781 p 300 Baron du Potet Student Handbook Magnetizer ed Life 3rd Edition 2013 Franz Anton Mesmer Memoire sur la decouverte du animals magnetisme 1779 nbsp Edition numerique disponible sur Wikisource Il ya aussi une edition papier chez Allia 2006 ISBN 2844852262 Gorsas Antoine Joseph L Ane promeneur 1784 p 41 and p 342 Connor C 2005 A People s History of Science Nation Books pp 404 5 a b Leger 1846 p 14 a b c Orsucci 2009 p 66 Lopez 1993 COLQUHOUN John Campbell Isis Revelata Volume 2 p 199 COLQUHOUN John Campbell Isis Revelata Volume 2 pp 283 293 See Carrer 2004 passim Hull Clark L Hypnotism in Scientific Perspective The Scientific Monthly 29 2 1929 p 156 Yeates 2013 passim Gilles de la Tourette The Wonders of Animal Magnetism The North American Review 146 375 1888 p 131 132 Braid 1850 p 6 See for example The Zoist 1854 1855 Vols 1 13 passim Podmore 1909 pp 1 150 Edmondston 1986 pp 1 121 Gauld 1992 pp 1 270 and Crabtree 1993 pp 109 144 See for example Hallaji 1962 Volgyesi 1966 MacHovec 1975 1979 Pulos 1980 Chester 1982 McGarry 1987 Gauld 1988 1992 and Gibson amp Heap 1991 etc Wonders and mysteries of animal magnetism displayed or the history art practice and progress of that useful science from its first rise in the city of Paris to the present time With several Curious Cases and new Anecdotes of the Principal Professors Eighteenth Century Collections Online London 1791 pp 11 12 Pearson 1790 p 12 Pearson 1790 pp 13 15 Pearson 1790 p 15 Lecture given at the III World Meeting of Magnetizers Ceci Andrea 2020 Deaf Mutism and Savagery Through the Lens of Animal Magnetism in France During the Early Nineteenth Century Cromohs Cyber Review of Modern Historiography 61 75 doi 10 13128 cromohs 11704 Bell John Professor of Animal Magnetism The general and particular principles of animal electricity and magnetism amp c in which are found Dr Bell s secrets and practice AS Delivered To His Pupils in Paris London Dublin Bristol Glocester Worcester Birmingham Wolverhampton Shrewsbury Chester Liverpool Manchester amp c amp c Shewing how to Magnetise and Cure different Diseases to produce Crises as well as Somnambulism or Sleep Walking and in that State of Sleep to make a Person eat drink walk sing and play upon any Instruments they are used to amp c to make Apparatus and other Accessaries to produce Magnetical Facts also to Magnetise Rivers Rooms Trees and other Bodies animate and inanimate to raise the Arms Legs of a Person awake and to make him rise from his Chair to raise the Arm of a Person absent from one Room to another also to treat him at a Distance All the New Experiments and Phenomena are explained by Monsieur le Docteur Bell Professor of that Science And Member of the Philosophical Harmonic Society at Paris Fellow Correspondent of M Le Court de Geblin s Museum and the only Person authorised by Patent from the First Noblemen in France to teach and practise that Science in England Ireland amp c Price Five Shillings Eighteenth Century Collections Online London 1792 p 2 Pearson John 1790 A plain account p 6 Wonders and mysteries of animal magnetism displayed or the history art practice and progress of that useful science from its first rise in the city of Paris to the present time With several Curious Cases and new Anecdotes of the Principal Professors Eighteenth Century Collections Online London 1791 p 16 Pearson John 1790 A plain account p 37 Inchbald Elizabeth Animal Magnetism p 9 Wonders and mysteries of animal magnetism displayed or the history art practice and progress of that useful science from its first rise in the city of Paris to the present time With several Curious Cases and new Anecdotes of the Principal Professors Eighteenth Century Collections Online London 1791 p 7 Requoted from Fulford Tim Conducting and Vital Fluid The Politics and Poetics of Mesmerism in the 1790s Studies in Romanticism 43 1 2004 p 1 Porter Roy UNDER THE INFLUENCE MESMERISM IN ENGLAND History Today 35 9 1985 pg 28 Fara An attractive therapy animal magnetism in eighteenth century England History of science 33 1995 pg 142 See for example Wilson 1839 Volgyesi 1938 Hallaji 1962 MacHovec 1975 1979 and Yeates 2018 pp 48 52 LANGE Johann Peter A Commentary on the Holy Scriptures Kings Ed C Scribner amp Company 1872 LANGE Johann Peter The Life of The Lord Jesus Christ A Complete Critical Examination of the Origin Contents and Connection of the Gospels Volume 1 Ed Smith English and Company 1872 KARDEC Allan Genesis FEB 53 rd Ed Cap XV Item 1 p 273 KARDEC Allan Genesis FEB 53rd Ed Cap XV Item 2 pag 274 COLQUHOUN John Campbell An History of Magic Witchcraft and Animal Magnetism Volume 1 Ed Longman Brown Green amp Longmans 1851 Eddy Mary Baker Animal Magnetism Unmasked Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures Trustees Under the Will of Maker Baker G Eddy Boston 1934 pp 101 Franklin Rausky Mesmer ou la revolution therapeutique Mesmer or the therapeutic revolution Paris 1977 The Zoist Facts and Observations on the Mesmeric and Magnetic Fluids Offprint from The Zoist A Journal of Cerebral Physiology and Mesmerism April 1846 Teste Alphonse 1843 A Practical Manual of Animal Magnetism containing an exposition of the methods employed in producing the magnetic phenomena with its application to the treatment and cure of diseases H Bailliere Coale S 1994 The Romance of Mesmerism Hawthorne s Medium of Romance Studies in the American Renaissance 271 288 http www jstor org stable 30227659General references editBailly Jean Sylvain 2002 Secret report on mesmerism or animal magnetism International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 50 4 364 368 doi 10 1080 00207140208410110 PMID 12362952 S2CID 143420875 Barth George H The Mesmerist s Manual London 1851 Reprint ISBN 978 1532953002 Bloch G Mesmerism A Translation of the Original Scientific and Medical Writings of F A Mesmer William Kaufmann Inc Los Altos 1980 Braid J Observations on Trance or Human Hybernation John Churchill London 1850 Buranelli V The Wizard from Vienna Franz Anton Mesmer Coward McCann amp Geoghegan New York 1975 Carrer L Jose Custodio de Faria Hypnotist Priest and Revolutionary Trafford Victoria 2004 Chenevix R On Mesmerism Improperly Denominated Animal Magnetism London Medical and Physical Journal Vol 61 No 361 March 1829 pp 219 230 No 364 June 1829 pp 491 501 Vol 62 No 366 August 1829 pp 114 125 No 367 September 1829 pp 210 220 No 368 October 1829 pp 315 324 Chester R J 1982 Hypnotism in East and West Twenty Hypnotic Methods London The Octagon Press Colquhoun John Campbell Isis Revelata An Inquiry Into the Origin Progress and Present State of Animal Magnetism Vol 2 1836 Reprint London Forgotten Books Crabtree Alan 1993 From Mesmer to Freud Magnetic Sleep and the Roots of Psychological Healing Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 05588 7 Darnton R Mesmerism and the End of the Enlightenment in France Harvard University Press Cambridge 1968 Deleuze Practical Instruction in Animal Magnetism 1843 Donaldson I M L Mesmer s 1780 Proposal for a Controlled Trial to Test his Method of Treatment Using Animal Magnetism Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine Vol 98 No 12 December 2005 pp 572 575 Edmonston W E 1986 The Induction of Hypnosis New York NY John Wiley amp Sons Engledue W C Cerebral Physiology and Materialism With the Result of the Application of Animal Magnetism to the Cerebral Organs An Address Delivered to the Phrenological Association in London June 20th 1842 by W C Engledue M D with a Letter from Dr Elliotson on Mesmeric Phrenology and Materialism H Balliere London 1842 Fulford T Conducting the Vital Fluid The Politics and Poetics of Mesmerism in the 1790s Studies in Romanticism Vol 43 No 1 Spring 2004 pp 57 78 Franklin Benjamin Majault Roy Le Sallin Bailly Jean Sylvain d Arcet Bory De Guillotin Joseph Ignace Lavoisier Antoine 2002 Report of the commissioners charged by the king with the examination of animal magnetism International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 50 4 332 363 doi 10 1080 00207140208410109 PMID 12362951 S2CID 36506710 Gauld A 1988 Reflections on Mesmeric Analgesia British Journal of Experimental and Clinical Hypnosis 5 17 24 Gauld Alan 1992 A history of hypnotism Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 48329 2 Retrieved 30 January 2012 Gibson H B amp Heap M 1991 Hypnosis in Therapy Hove Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Goldsmith M Franz Anton Mesmer A History of Mesmerism Doubleday Doran amp Co New York 1934 Hallaji Jafar Hypnotherapeutic Techniques in a Central Asian Community International Journal of Experimental and Clinical Hypnosis Vol 10 No 4 October 1962 pp 271 274 doi 10 1080 00207146208415886 Harte R Hypnotism and the Doctors Volume I Animal Magnetism Mesmer De Puysegur L N Fowler amp Co London 1902 Harte R Hypnotism and the Doctors Volume II The Second Commission Dupotet And Lafontaine The English School Braid s Hypnotism Statuvolism Pathetism Electro Biology L N Fowler amp Co London 1903 Kaplan F The Mesmeric Mania The Early Victorians and Animal Magnetism Journal of the History of Ideas Vol 35 No 4 October December 1974 pp 691 702 Kaplan F Dickens and Mesmerism The Hidden Springs of Fiction Princeton University Press Princeton 1975 Kaplan F John Elliotson on Mesmerism Da Capo Press New York 1982 Leger T sic Animal Magnetism or Psycodunamy D Appleton New York 1846 N B author is Theodore Leger 1799 1853 Lopez C A 1993 Franklin and Mesmer An encounter The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 66 4 325 31 PMC 2588895 PMID 8209564 MacHovec F J Hypnosis Before Mesmer American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis Vol 17 No 4 April 1975 pp 215 220 doi 10 1080 00029157 1975 10403747 MacHovec F J The Cult of Asklipios American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis Vol 22 No 2 October 1979 pp 85 90 doi 10 1080 00029157 1979 10403203 Mancini S amp Vale J Animal Magnetism and Psychic Sciences 1784 1935 The Rediscovery of a Lost Continent Diogenes Vol 48 No 2 1 June 2000 pp 94 101 McGarry J Mesmerism vs Hypnosis A Comparison of Relaxation Responses and Evaluation of Mental and Psychophysiological Outcomes Australian Journal of Clinical Hypnotherapy amp Hypnosis Vol 8 No 1 March 1987 pp 7 36 Moore W The Mesmerist The Society Doctor Who Held Victorian London Spellbound Weidenfeld amp Nicolson London 2017 ISBN 978 1 4746 0229 7 Orsucci Franco Mind force on human attractions World Scientific London 2009 ISBN 978 981 277 122 3 Parssinen T M Mesmeric Performers Victorian Studies Vol 21 No 1 Autumn 1977 pp 87 104 Pattie F A Mesmer s Medical Dissertation and Its Debt to Mead s De Imperio Solis ac Lunae Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences Vol 11 July 1956 pp 275 287 Pattie F A Mesmer and Animal Magnetism A Chapter in the History of Medicine Edmonston Publishing Hamilton 1994 Pearson John ed A Plain and Rational Account of the Nature and Effects of Animal Magnetism In a Series of letters With Notes and an Appendix W and J Stratford London 1790 Pintar Judith Lynn Steven J 2008 Hypnosis a brief history John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 4051 3451 4 Podmore F 1909 Mesmerism and Christian Science A Short History of Mental Healing Philadelphia PA George W Jacobs amp Company Porter R Under the Influence Mesmerism in England History Today Vol 35 No 9 September 1985 pp 22 29 Pulos L Mesmerism Revisited The Effectiveness of Esdaile s Techniques in the Production of Deep Hypnosis and Total Body Hypnoanaesthesia American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis Vol 22 No 4 April 1980 pp 206 211 Rosen G Mesmerism and Surgery A Strange Chapter in the History of Anesthesia Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences Vol 1 No 4 October 1946 pp 527 550 Sutton G Electric Medicine and Mesmerism Isis Vol 72 No 3 September 1981 pp 375 392 van Schlun Betsy 2007 Science and the imagination mesmerism media and the mind in nineteenth century English and American literature Galda amp Wilch ISBN 978 3 931397 60 9 Volgyesi F 1938 Eigene Hypnoseversuche mit gefangenen wilden Tieren The author s hypnotic experiments with captive wild animals pp 90 101 in F Volgyesi Menschen und Tierhypnose Human and Animal Hypnosis Zurich amp Leipzig Orell Fussli Volgyesi F A 1966 Hypnosis of Man and Animals London Bailliere Tindall amp Cassell Wilson J 1839 Trials of Animal Magnetism on the Brute Creation London Sherwood Gilbert and Piper Winter A Mesmerized Powers of Mind in Victorian Britain The University of Chicago Press Chicago 1998 Wonders and mysteries of animal magnetism displayed or the history art practice and progress of that useful science from its first rise in the city of Paris to the present time With several Curious Cases and new Anecdotes of the Principal Professors Eighteenth Century Collections Online London 1791 Wyckoff J 1975 Franz Anton Mesmer Between God and Devil Prentice Hall Englewood Cliffs 1975 Yeates L B 2013 James Braid Surgeon Gentleman Scientist and Hypnotist Ph D Dissertation School of History and Philosophy of Science Faculty of Arts amp Social Sciences University of New South Wales January 2013 Yeates L B 2018 James Braid II Mesmerism Braid s Crucial Experiment and Braid s Discovery of Neuro Hypnotism Australian Journal of Clinical Hypnotherapy amp Hypnosis Vol 40 No 1 Autumn 2018 pp 40 92 Further reading editAnton Mesmer Propositions Concerning Animal Magnetism 1779 from Binet A amp Fere C Animal Magnetism New York Appleton and Co 1888 web archive The Baron Dupotet de Sennevoy An Introduction to the Study of Animal Magnetism London Saunders amp Otley 1838 full text William Gregory Letters to a Candid Inquirer on Animal Magnetism Philadelphia Blanchard and Lea 1851 full text Charles Poyen Animal magnetism Boston Weeks Jordan amp co 1837 full textExternal links edit nbsp The dictionary definition of animal magnetism at Wiktionary Ripley George Dana Charles A eds 1879 Animal Magnetism The American Cyclopaedia nbsp Media related to Animal magnetism at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Quotations related to Animal magnetism at Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Animal magnetism amp oldid 1189884781, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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