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Royal Commission on Animal Magnetism

The Royal Commission on Animal Magnetism involved two entirely separate and independent French Royal Commissions, each appointed by Louis XVI in 1784, that were conducted simultaneously by a committee composed of four physicians from the Paris Faculty of Medicine (Faculté de médecine de Paris) and five scientists from the Royal Academy of Sciences (Académie des sciences) (i.e., the "Franklin Commission", named for Benjamin Franklin), and a second committee composed of five physicians from the Royal Society of Medicine (Société Royale de Médecine) (i.e., the "Society Commission").

Each Commission took five months to complete its investigations. The "Franklin" Report was presented to the King on 11 August 1784 – and was immediately published and very widely circulated throughout France and neighbouring countries – and the "Society" Report was presented to the King five days later on 16 August 1784.

The "Franklin Commission's" investigations are notable as a very early "classic" example of a systematic controlled trial, which not only applied "sham" and "genuine" procedures to patients with "sham" and "genuine" disorders, but, significantly, was the first to use the "blindfolding" of both the investigators and their subjects.[1][2][3]

"The report of the ["Franklin"] Royal Commission of 1784 . . . is a masterpiece of its genre, and enduring testimony to the power and beauty of reason. . . . Never in history has such an extraordinary and luminous group [as the "Franklin Commission"] been gathered together in the service of rational inquiry by the methods of experimental science. For this reason alone the [Report of the "Franklin Commission"] . . . is a key document in the history of human reason. It should be rescued from obscurity, translated into all languages, and reprinted by organizations dedicated to the unmasking of quackery and the defense of rational thought." – Stephen Jay Gould (1989).[4]

Both sets of Commissioners were specifically charged with investigating the claims made by Charles d’Eslon for the existence of a substantial (rather than metaphorical) "animal magnetism", "le magnétisme animal", and of a similarly (non-metaphorical) physical "magnetic fluid", "le fluide magnétique". Further, having completed their investigations into the claims of d'Eslon – that is, they did not examine Franz Mesmer, Mesmer's theories, Mesmer's principles, Mesmer's practices, Mesmer's techniques, Mesmer's apparatus, Mesmer's claims, Mesmer's "cures" or, even, "mesmerism"[5] itself – they were each required to make "a separate and distinct report".[6]

"Before the ["Franklin" Commission's] investigations began, [Antoine Lavoisier] had studied the writings of d'Eslon and [had] drawn up a plan for the conduct of the inquiry. He decided that the commissioners should not study any of the alleged cures, but [that] they should determine whether animal magnetism existed by trying to magnetize a person without his knowledge or making him think that he had been magnetized when in fact he had not. This plan was adopted by the commissioners, and the results came out as Lavoisier had predicted." – Frank A. Pattie (1994).[7]

From their investigations both Commissions concluded (a) that there was no evidence of any kind to support d'Eslon's claim for the substantial physical existence of either his supposed "animal magnetism" or his supposed "magnetic fluid", and (b) that all of the effects that they had observed could be attributed to a physiological (rather than metaphysical) agency. Whilst each Commission implicitly accepted that there was no collusion, pretence, or extensive subject training involved on the part of d'Eslon, they both (independently) concluded that all of the phenomena they had observed during each of their investigations could be directly attributed to "contact",[8][9] "imagination",[10] and/or "imitation".[11]

"For clearness of reasoning and strict impartiality [the "Franklin" Commissioners' report] has never been surpassed. After detailing the various experiments made, and their results, they came to the conclusion that the only proof advanced in support of Animal Magnetism was the effects it produced on the human body – that those effects could be produced without passes or other magnetic manipulations – that all these manipulations, and passes, and ceremonies never produce any effect at all if employed without the patient's knowledge; and that therefore imagination did, and animal magnetism did not, account for the phenomena." – Charles Mackay (1841, emphasis added to original).[12]

Reasons for the investigation

 
King Louis XVI (1776).
 
Marie Antoinette.
 
Chancellor von Kaunitz.
 
Princess of Lamballe.
 
Jean-Frédéric Phélypeaux, the French Minister of State.
 
The execution of King Louis XVI.
 
The execution of Marie Antoinette.
"The rise of mesmerism [was] symptomatic of several philosophical and psychological conflicts: spirit/mind vs. body; science and philosophy vs. psychology and the imagination; rationalism and empiricism vs. the irrational and unknown; [and] consciousness vs. the unconscious" (Faflack, 2009, p. 53).

According to Armando & Belhoste (2018, pp. 6–8), the true history of Mesmer, of Mesmer's version of 'animal magnetism', and of the rationale, conduct, investigations, experimentation, and findings of the 1784 Royal Commissions has been seriously distorted by the modern ("cherry picking") concentration upon "the transformations of animal magnetism after 1820 [in relation to] hypnotism",[13] and, especially, upon "the elements of continuity and analogy between mesmerism [sic] and the various versions of psychoanalysis".[14]

Consequently, to accurately understand the contemporary significance of the Commissions' work, and the matters that they severally and collectively examined (and, as well, those which they did not) it is important to identify the wide range of significant tensions, disputes, and circumstances prevailing at the time, which prompted the need for an official investigation of the particular nature and type that was undertaken, and the sort of (implicit) issues – in addition to the more specific questions of medicine and of science – that their inquiries would, hopefully, address.

Moreover, in order to gain a balanced understanding of the contemporary significance of the Commissions – as stand-alone historical events – appointed at a specific time, in specific circumstances, with specific goals and, further, in order to apprehend the nature of their investigations, their findings, and the immediate consequences of their reports, a complex of different factors need to be examined (as has been suggested by Craver & Darnden, 2013):

"From the perspective of a given phenomenon, one can look down to the entities and activities composing it. One can look up to the higher-level mechanisms of which it is a component. One can look back to the mechanisms that come before it or by which it developed. One can look forward to what comes after it. [And, finally] one can look around to see the wider context with which it operates." (p. 163)

Tensions within the Royal family

Prior to his arrival in Paris in 1777 – with a letter of recommendation from Chancellor von Kaunitz of the Habsburg monarchy to the Austrian Ambassador to France, the Comte de Mercy-Argenteau (who, in turn, introduced Mesmer to Jean-Baptiste Le Roy (1720–1800), the Director of the Academy of Sciences) – Mesmer was already known to Marie Antoinette.[15]

At the urging of her two closest friends, Marie-Paule Angelique d’Albert de Luynes (1744–1781), "the Duchesse de Chaulnes" and Marie Thérèse Louise de Savoie Carignan (1749–1792), "the Princess of Lambelle", both of whom "had benefited from Mesmer's treatment", Marie Antoinette had been able to arrange for both Mesmer and d'Eslon to be officially "interviewed" by (an otherwise unidentified) representative of the King on 14 March 1781 (Walmsley, 1967, p. 267). At the conclusion of the interview, Mesmer reluctantly agreed to the proposed conditions: that a number of his (previous and current) patients be examined by a team of "commissioners" – it was also stipulated that, as a "requirement" of the King, Mesmer was to "remain in France", until his "doctrines" and his "principles" had been thereby "established", and that he was "not [to] leave except by permission of the King" – and that, if the commissioners' reports were "favourable", the government would issue "a ministerial letter" to that effect (Pattie, 1994, p. 110).

Within two weeks Mesmer had rescinded his agreement, on the grounds that it had been made under duress,[16] and a new "interview" was conducted, involving Mesmer, d'Eslon, the unidentified bureaucrat, and the Minister of State, Jean-Frédéric Phélypeaux (1701–1781) [fr].

"The Minister . . . began by saying that the King, informed of Mesmer's dislike of being investigated by commissioners, wished to excuse him from that formality and would grant him a life annuity of 20,000 French livres and pay 10,000 livres a year for the instruction of students, of whom three were to be selected by the government. "The rest of the benefits would be granted when the government's students recognize the utility of the discovery"." (Pattie, 1994, p. 111).

Once again, Mesmer rejected the offer made on behalf of the King; and, having been told that the King's decision was final, and given that the impetus for the first interview had come from the Queen, Mesmer wrote an extraordinary letter (translated at Pattie, 1994, pp. 112–115), the nature of which would have meant imprisonment in the Bastille, if it had been written 20 years earlier.

"Meditating [on the Minister's use of the word "final",] Mesmer returned to his clinic and put his name to what would surely be one of the most extraordinary letters ever written to a queen of France [who also shared his "native land"] even if he had sent it privately. Instead, he had it printed, [be]rating her in public about the offer [that had been] made in her name and giving her an ultimatum."[17]

So, there were many reasons for the 1784 Commission to satisfy the (French) interests of the King, rather than the (Austrian) interests of his queen.

Social impact

It is already more than six years since Animal Magnetism was announced to Europe, particularly in France and in this Capital. But it is only over about the last two years that it has been of particular interested to a considerable number of citizens and that it has become the object of public discussion. Never had a more extraordinary question divided the opinions of an enlightened nation. – The Franklin Commission's Report to the Royal Academy of Sciences (September 1784, emphasis added)[18]

Mesmer's overall stress on the quest for "harmony" as a therapeutic outcome and, especially, given the demonstrated fact that the effects of his 'animal magnetism' – predicated upon the presence of a force analogous to gravity – were equally demonstrated by all, regardless of age, gender, class, race, intellect, etc.,[19] was an important influence on many of the moves (and 'movers') within French society towards democracy and greater equality.[20][21]

Festering political issues

The increasingly unpopular "Ancien Régime" was under considerable pressure from many quarters; and, within five years of the Commissions' Reports, the French Revolution had broken out. The storming of the Bastille took place on 14 July 1789; and four years later, King Louis XVI was executed on 21 January 1793, and his Queen, Marie Antoinette, the daughter of Empress Maria Theresa, and the sister of Emperor Joseph II, was executed on 16 October 1793.

Professional tensions

Apart from the wider issue of having to evaluate and decide how to deal with those within the medical profession "who saw animal magnetism as an interesting therapeutic resource" (Armando & Belmonte, 2018, p. 13) – namely, the boundary disputes between the conventional therapeutic practices of the sorts that Brockliss and Jones (1997) usefully identify as lying within the established "medical penumbra" (pp. 230–283) and the novel and innovative practices at the "frontier" that were (potentially) responsible for the "expansion of the medicable" (pp. 441–459) – there were also significant tensions, differences, and boundary disputes between the more theory- and principle-centred Paris Faculty of Medicine (formed some five centuries earlier), and the more practitioner-centred Royal Society of Medicine (formed just 5 years earlier), the "primary function" of which was "to evaluate patent medicines and, by extension, new forms of therapy" (Forrest, 1999, pp. 18–19).

Scientific issues

In a prevailing atmosphere of "[an overall] redefinition of frontiers in the legitimacy of knowledge" – and, in relation to Mesmer's claims, a redefinition "which did not necessarily match the public popularity that they attracted" (Zanetti, 2018), p. 59) – the issue of the existence (or not) of a substantial "magnetic fluid" and/or "animal magnetism" required resolution.

Medical issues

At a time when, in relation to "healers and healing", the conglomerate of "physicians, empirics, surgeons, apothecaries, folk healers, and religious personalities all vied with each other (as well as worked together) for medical legitimacy and patients" (Broomhall, 2004, p. 5), Mesmer was not only a "foreign national",[22][23] but also one that had no affiliation of any kind with any known professional medical association within France (or elsewhere in Europe); and, as a consequence, his professional conduct, his medical practice, his medico-commercial enterprises, and his therapeutic endeavours were not regulated in any way.

Moreover, the efficacy of Mesmer's interventions had never been objectively tested, neither the agency nor the (pre- and post-intervention) veracity of his supposed "cures" had ever been objectively verified, and, finally, in relation to the presenting conditions of those with (supposedly) 'real' ailments, the question of whether the pre-intervention conditions of each case were of "organic" or "psychogenic" origins had never been objectively determined.

Religious issues

As discussed at considerable length by Spanos and Gottlieb (1979) there were not only a wide range of controversial secular and religious issues relating to the similarities and differences between the induction, manifestations, and immediate and long-term consequences of the "crises" that were (sporadically) produced by the 'magnetic' interventions, and the exorcisms of the Roman Catholic Church, but, also, of greater significance, to the occasional (apparently veridical) reports of post-magnetic "clairvoyance"[24] – a condition that was one of the classic indications for an exorcism whenever it was considered to be "demonically inspired" (as distinct from those cases in which it was considered to be "divinely inspired" (Spanos and Gottlieb, 1979, p. 538)).[25][26]

The two Commissions

 
Baron de Breteuil (c.1787).

The Commissions were appointed in early 1784 by the Baron de Breteuil, Secretary of State for the King's Household and Minister of the Department of Paris at the command of King Louis XVI.[27]

"At length [the matter of Animal Magnetism] was thought to deserve the attention of government, and a committee, partly physicians, and partly members of the royal academy of Sciences, with doctor Benjamin Franklin at their head, were appointed to examine it. M. Mesmer refused to have any communication with these gentlemen; but M. Deslon, the most considerable of his pupils, consented to disclose to them his principles, and assist them in their enquiries." – William Godwin (1785).[28]

"Franklin Commission"

 
Benjamin Franklin, 1778.

The first of the two Royal Commissions, usually referred to as the "Franklin Commission", was appointed on 12 March 1784.

It was composed of four physicians from the Paris Faculty of Medicine – the physician and chemist Jean d'Arcet, the physician and close friend of Franklin, Joseph-Ignace Guillotin(1738–1814),[29] the Hôtel-Dieu physician, Michel-Joseph Majault (1714–1790),[30] and the Professor (of physiology and pathology) Charles Louis Sallin – and, at the request of those four physicians,[31] five scientists from the Royal Academy of Sciences – the astronomer (and first mayor of Paris) Jean Sylvain Bailly(1736–1793), the geographer, cartographer, and former governor of St. Domingue, Gabriel de Bory de Saint-Vincent (1720–1801) [fr], Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790), the chemist and biologist Antoine Lavoisier (1743-1794), and the physicist (and expert on things electrical), Jean-Baptiste Le Roy, the Director of the Academy of Sciences.

"If the effects of magnetism . . . can be as well explained by the effects of an excited or exalted imagination, all the efforts of the Commissioners must be directed to distinguishing in "magnetism" . . . [per medium of] a single conclusive experiment [viz., une seule expérience concluante] . . . those things that are related to physical causes [viz., causes physiques] from those that are related to [psychological] causes [viz., causes morales], [that is,] the effects of a real agent [viz, les effets d'un agent réel] from those due to the imagination. . . .
By magnetising people without their knowledge and by persuading them that they are being magnetised when they are not . . . one will obtain separately the effects of magnetism and those of the imagination and, from this, one will be able to conclude what should be attributed to the one and what to the other." – Antoine Lavoisier (1784).[32][33]

It is important to note that, despite the contemporary and modern salience given to Benjamin Franklin – who, as the most eminent of the Commission's eleven members, was recognized as its titular head[34] – it is a matter of record that Franklin, now aged 78, and otherwise engaged in his duties as the U.S. Ambassador to France, had little involvement in any of the Commission's investigations. In particular, this was because his own ill-health prevented him from leaving his residence in Passy and participating in the Paris-centred investigations[35][36] – although the Commission's Report does note that several experiments were conducted at Franklin's Passy residence in Franklin's presence.[37]

In addition to his general scientific interests in electricity and (terrestrial) magnetism, "Franklin had known Mesmer for some years prior to the investigation and was familiar with the practice of animal magnetism",[38] and, on occasion, he and Mesmer had even "dined together" – and, also there was "no doubt [that] Franklin's curiosity was aroused by the mere connotation of the term animal magnetism, for it implied something in connexion with electricity, and [Franklin] himself had already made [25 years earlier] a number of experiments on the effect of electric discharges on paralytics, epileptics, etc." (Duveen & Klickstein, 1955, p. 287).[39][40]

"Society Commission"

 
Charles-Louis-François Andry (1741-1829).

The second of the two Royal Commissions, usually referred to as the "Society Commission", was appointed on 5 April 1784.

It was composed of five eminent physicians from the Royal Society of Medicine – the physician and one of the first members of the Royal Society, Charles-Louis-François Andry (1741-1829) [fr], the physician Claude-Antoine Caille (1743-), the botanist Antoine Laurent de Jussieu (1748-1836), the physician, Collège de France professor, one of the original directors of the Royal Society, and committed advocate of the therapeutic applications of electricity, Pierre Jean Claude Mauduyt de La Varenne (1732–1792) [fr],[41][42] and the physician and Professor of chemistry in the Collège de France, Pierre-Isaac Poissonnier (1720–1798) [fr] – and, as Pattie remarks (1994, p. 156), "the impression given by [their] report is that the commissioners were busy practitioners who wanted to devote no more time to the project than was necessary".

Although the investigations of the "Society Commission" were less thorough and less detailed than those of the "Franklin Commission" they were essentially of the same nature, and it is a matter of fact that neither Commission examined Mesmer's practices – they only examined the practices of d'Eslon.[43]

Franz Mesmer

 
Franz Mesmer c.1800.
 
Title page of Mesmer's (1766) dissertation.
 
Mesmer's Précis Historique (1781).
 
Mesmer's Mémoire (1799).

Franz Anton Mesmer (1734–1815), born in Swabia, having first studied law at Dillingen and Ingolstadt universities, transferred to the University of Vienna and began a study of medicine, graduating Medicinae Doctor (M.D.) at the age of 32, in 1766: his doctoral dissertation (Mesmer, 1766) had the official title A Physico-Medical Dissertation on the Influence of the Planets.[44][45][46]

Although he was made a member of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities in 1775,[47] and, despite his M.D. qualification, there is no record of Mesmer ever having been accepted as a member of any medical "learned society" anywhere in Europe at any time.

Mesmer left Austria in 1777, in controversial circumstances, following his treatment of the young Austrian Pianist Maria Theresia von Paradis for her blindness, and established himself, in Paris, in February 1778. He spent several years in Paris itself – during which time he published his Précis Historique (i.e., Mesmer, 1781)[48] – interspersed with time spent in various parts of France, a complete absence from France (1792–1798), a return to France in 1798, and his final departure from France in 1802.

While in France it was his habit to travel to the town of Spa, in Belgium to "take the waters"; and he was enjoying an extended stay at Spa when the reports of the two Royal Commissions were released. Mesmer lived for another 31 years after the Royal Commissions. He died at the age of 80, in Meersburg, in the Grand Duchy of Baden, on 5 March 1815.

Positioner of a concept

Rather than being the "inventor" of "a technique", as some (mis)represent the circumstances, it is clear that Mesmer's significance was in his "positioning" of an overarching "concept" (or "construct") through his creation and development – using analogies with gravity, terrestrial magnetism, and hydraulics (as they were understood at the time) – of "an explanatory model to represent the way that healers had been healing people for thousands of years" (Yeates, 2018, p. 48).[49][50]

The (oft-forgotten) value and long-term significance of Mesmer's "positioning", according to Rosen (1959, pp. 7-8), is that "Mesmer's theory [in] itself . . . diverted attention from the phenomena produced by animal magnetism to the agent alleged to produce them"; yet, both 1784 Commissions side-stepped this issue, and "simply ascribed the magnetic cures to imagination, but never bothered to ask how imagination can produce a cure".[51]

Mesmer's "protoscience", rather than "pseudoscience"

According to Tatar (1990, p. 49), rather than Mesmer's proposal being some sort of "occult theory", "[Mesmer] actually remained well within the bounds of eighteenth-century thought when he formulated his theories" and "the theories [that Mesmer] invoked to explain [the agency of "animal magnetism"] fit squarely into the frame of eighteenth-century cosmology": and, moreover, "to consider animal magnetism independently of the tradition out of which it emerged is to magnify its distinctively occult characteristics and to diminish in importance those features that mirror the scientific and philosophical temper of the age in which it flourished."

Rosen (1959, pp. 4-5) noted that, it was clear that

Mesmer's theory of animal magnetism . . . [within which] he employed the term magnetism to characterize a reciprocal relationship between the forces of nature and the human body, and [which] conceived of nature as the harmony of these relations in action . . . contains a number of themes and theoretical concepts common to the medical world of the eighteenth century . . . [which] is evident, for example, in his interpretation of disease as a disharmony attributable to a functional disturbance of the nervous fluid . . . [which is a] concept . . . derived from the ancient humoral pathology with its doctrines of dyscrasia and critical days, from the irritability theory of Albrecht von Haller (1708–1777),[52][53][54] and from the excitation theory of John Brown (1735–1788).[55]

In other words, as a product of its time,[56] Mesmer's enterprise was one of protoscience, rather than being one of pseudoscience – or, even, one of fringe science.

A concept that must not be reified

It is clear from his Mémoire (1799) that Mesmer was very aware of the human propensity – in the normal, conventional use of language (la langue de convention) – to speak of "properties" or "qualities" (i.e., these "metaphysical abstractions", illusions de la méthaphysique), as if they were "substances": in Mesmer's words, "substantivise the properties", substantisia les propriétiés (Mesmer 1799, pp. 15–17).[57] – in other words, "reification", in the manner of Whitehead's "fallacy of misplaced concreteness".[58]

Mesmer was also well aware of the extent to which, through the "distortion" caused by these "substantive words" (mot substantif) – which inappropriately "personified" (personnifia) these metaphysical abstractions (p. 16) – one is induced to believe in the actual physical existence of the "substance" itself. Given these observations, Mesmer was most emphatic in his continuous warnings that his abstract "principles" should not be "substantivised"

It is significant that Mesmer (1799) describes how, once he had formulated the abstract, overarching (metaphorical) construct/concept of "animal magnetism" as the therapeutic agent (a quarter of a century earlier) – and with his hope that this newly described "principle of action" (principe de action), when considered as an agent, "could become a means of healing and, even, one of preserving/defending oneself against disease" (p. 7, Mesmer's emphasis)[59] – the primary focus of his enterprise had become the threefold quest for the acquisition of an understanding of:

  • (a) how to rouse (and maintain) this agent, by every possible means – and acquire the knowledge of how, so-roused, it might be therapeutically harnessed in the most efficacious fashion (Mesmer, 1799, p. 48);
  • (b) (given that the agent's therapeutic effects were observed to be gradual, rather than instantaneous) the "obstacles" that typically divert, disturb, or impede the agent's capacity to attain the optimal treatment outcomes – and, once these "obstacles" had been identified, determine appropriate ways to "clear them away" ("de connoître et lever les obstacles qui peuvent troubler ou empêcher son action", p. 48); and
  • (c) the natural pathway along which the agent's therapeutic effects are realized, so that, in its application, these outcomes can be systematically anticipated – meaning that, with this knowledge, the (otherwise random) clinical applications can be controlled, regulated, and incrementally applied in a systematic way, until the target goal of a "cure" is attained (p. 49).

Based on natural principles

 
Gassner, the exorcist, in action.

Mesmer held the materialist position – that his therapies, which involved easily understood, systematic natural principles, were "physiological", rather than "psychological" interventions[60] – in contrast to the supernatural positions of, say, the exorcist Johann Joseph Gassner (1727–1779),[61]

By contrast with many "faith healers", [Gassner] had a quasi-scientific method of diagnosis, according to which he separated diseases that should be treated by a physician from those that he should treat. He first admonished the patient that faith in the name of Jesus was essential. He then obtained consent to use the method of "trial" exorcism. He entreated the Devil to defy Jesus by producing the patient's symptoms. If the convulsions or other symptoms appeared, Gassner believed they were the work of the Devil; he proceeded to exorcise the responsible demon. If symptoms failed to appear, he could not attribute them to a demon and sent the patient to a physician. – Ernest Hilgard, (1980).[62][63]

the mystic José Custódio de Faria, a.k.a. "Abbé Faria" (1756-1819), and the magnetists, such as d'Eslon, and, later, Charles Lafontaine (1803-1892),[64] whose demonstrations of "animal magnetism" were attended by James Braid in November 1841,

"Mesmer's approach to healing and his healing theory were physically oriented. His explanation of the phenomena of animal magnetism was consistently formulated in terms of matter and motion, and he believed that every aspect of animal magnetism could sooner or later be verified through physical experimentation and research." (Crabtree, 1993, p. 51)
"When Mesmer took a patient, his first concern was to determine whether the ailment was organic or functional. If it was organic, the result of physical damage to the tissue, he considered it, following [his] Proposition 23,[65] beyond the aid of animal magnetism. If it was functional, a physiological disorder affected by the nerves, it fell within the class of diseases he felt uniquely qualified to handle with his therapeutic technique." (Buranelli, 1975, pp. 107-108).

Charles d'Eslon

Charles-Nicholas d’Eslon (1750–1786) [fr], "a disciple of the [eminent French] surgeon J.L. Petit",[66] was a docteur-régent of the Paris Faculty of Medicine, and the one-time personal physician to the King's brother, Charles Philippe, Comte d’Artoir – who, later (following the Bourbon Restoration in France) became King Charles X.

Association with Mesmer

 
d'Eslon's Observations (1780).

d’Eslon, a one-time patient, pupil, and associate of Mesmer,[67] published a work on Mesmer's version of animal magnetism (while still associated with Mesmer), Observations sur le Magnétisme Animal (1780),[68] which presented details of 18 cases (10 male, 8 female) treated by Mesmer.[69]

In stressing the efficacy of Mesmer's "animal magnetism" interventions, d'Eslon defended (at p. 124) the absence of clear explanations (from Mesmer) of the mechanism through which "animal magnetism" effects its "cures" with an observation that, although the purgative actions of rhubarb and Shir-Khesht manna (a.k.a. purgative manna) are well known to the medical profession, the mechanisms involved are not; and, so, in these cases, "facts" and "experience" are "our only guides" – and, in a similar fashion, asserts d'Eslon, "in relation to Animal Magnetism, it is the same, I don't know how it works, but I do know that it does work".

d'Eslon also directly addressed the charge that Mesmer had "discovered" nothing, and that the "extraordinary things" (des choses extraordinaires) that Mesmer had demonstrably effected were due to his "captivation of the imagination" (en séduisant l’imagination),[70] with the comment that,

"If [it were to be true that] Mesmer had no other secret than that he has been able to make the imagination exert an influence upon health, would he not still be a wonderful doctor? If treatment by the use of the imagination is the best treatment, why do we not make use of it?" (1780, pp. 46-47).[71]

Ostracism

On 7 October 1780 – still associated with Mesmer and still a member of the Paris Faculty of Medicine – d'Eslon made an official request "that an investigation of the authenticity and efficacy of Mesmer's claims and cures be made. The Faculté rejected his plea, and in refusing accused [d'Eslon] personally of misdemeanour".[72]

 
d'Eslon's Lettre (1782).

On 15 May 1782, d'Eslon presented the Faculty with his arguments in the form of a 144-page pamphlet;[73] and then, "on 26 October 1782, [d'Eslon] was finally struck from the [Faculty's] roster and forbidden to attend any meeting for a period of two years" (Duveen & Klickstein, 1955, p. 286).[74]

Post-Mesmer

In late 1782, and eighteen months before the Royal Commission, d'Eslon had (acrimoniously) parted ways with Mesmer; and, despite a brief reconciliation, the relationship was terminated in late 1783. On 28 December 1783, d'Eslon wrote a letter to the Journal de Paris, which not only described the difficulties he had experienced with Mesmer, but also announced that he was opening his own (entirely independent) clinic.[75]

Following his break with Mesmer, d’Eslon not only launched his own clinical operation – on his break with Mesmer, d'Eslon took all of the patients he had brought to Mesmer with him[76] – but also began teaching his own theories and practices (i.e., rather than those of Mesmer).[77] According to d'Eslon's own account (d'Eslon, 1784b, pp. 25-26), Mesmer had taught 300 students, 160 of whom were medical men (Médecins), and d'Eslon himself had taught 160 medical men (this group included 21 members of the Paris Faculty of Medicine).

Given that many of those who had privately paid Mesmer for details of "the secret" were greatly dissatisfied, and "[justifiably] accused [Mesmer] of having enunciated a theory which was merely a collection of obscure principles" (Binet & Féré, 1888, p. 13), it seems that d'Eslon's version was little better. Greatly confused by d'Eslon's version of "the secret", d'Eslon's student and associate, François Amédée Doppet, is said to have remarked that those to whom d'Eslon had revealed "the secret" doubted it even more than those to whom it had not been revealed.[78]

It was under these circumstances that a decision was made to investigate the work of d'Eslon – although he was already ostracized from the Paris Faculty of Medicine – when "d’Eslon, through influential friends, and tact, and other favourable circumstances, procured [the commissions'] establishment [specifically] to investigate animal magnetism as practised in his own clinic" (Gauld, 1992, p. 7, emphasis added).[79]

Last days

Once d'Eslon had been expelled from the rank of docteur-régent, his membership of the Faculty of Medicine was never reinstated; and unlike Mesmer, he remained in Paris following the publication of the reports of the two Commissions. Although apparently in good health in the preceding months, he died somewhat suddenly in Paris, on 21 August 1786, at the age of 47,[80] from a complex of disorders including pneumonia, a malignant fever (une fièvre maligne), and renal colic.[81]

Aspects of Mesmer's evolving practices

Mesmer's early experiments with magnets

 
Maximillian Hell.

It is significant that Mesmer, initially impressed by the therapeutic enterprises of the Jesuit astronomer, explorer, and healer Maximilian Hell (1720–1792) – which involved the application of steel magnets that had been specifically shaped either to fit particular body contours, or to match the actual dimensions of a specific organ (e.g., the liver)[82] – and, immediately recognizing the "prima facie plausiblity"[83] of Hell's approach, purchased a number of steel magnets from Hell in 1774 and began applying them to his patients; however, as Pattie reports (1994, p. 2), Mesmer "had [entirely] abandoned the use of magnets" by 1776,[84] because his own clinical experimentation had proved them to be utterly useless.

By 1779, Mesmer (1779, pp. 34-35) was expressing his concern that many had "confused" – such as the "Berlin Academy" in 1775[85] – and were continuing to "confuse" the "properties" of his (abstract/theoretical) "Magnétisime animal" with those of an actual physical magnet (l'aimant): objects of which, he stressed, he had only ever spoken of as possible "conductors" of "animal magnetism".

 
Benjamin Franklin's glass Armonica (c.1776).

And, he argued, from this "confusion" of his "animal magnetism" with "mineral magnetism", his use of magnets – which, although "useful", were always "imperfect', unless they had been applied according to "la théorie du Magnétisime animal" – was being consistently misrepresented and misunderstood.

The glass armonica

Mesmer developed particular theatrical therapeutic rituals, often accompanied by the sounds of the Glass Armonica[86][87] – an instrument invented by Benjamin Franklin himself[88][89] – that were associated with a wide range of (figurative) magnetic connotations, such as the use of "magnetic wands", and the treatment tub known as "the baquet", which, in the view of Yeates (2018, p. 48), were "obviously, designed to amplify each subject's "response expectancy" (Kirsch, 1997, etc.) via impressive "metonymical acts" (Topley, 1976, p. 254)".

The "baquet"

 
The sole remaining example of Mesmer's "baquet": at the Museum of the History of Medicine and Pharmacy at Lyon.[90]
 
Three of Mesmer's subjects, with linked hands, at the "baquet".

The "baquet" (lit. 'a tub') was a device of Mesmer's design, that he had constructed by analogy with the newly invented "Leyden Bottle" – i.e., "the first electric condenser [viz., capacitor] in history" (Morabito, 2019, p. 90) – which was "supposed by analogy to 'store' animal magnetism" (Forrest, 1999, p. 20).[91]

In its initial conception, Mesmer's "baquet" was "a vat containing bottles of magnetized water from which steel bars escaped through which the 'magnetization’ took place in the [subjects or patients], who were arranged around the tub holding their hands" (Morabito, loc.cit.). According to Mesmer's own description, in the (undated) "Catechism" that he had delivered exclusively to his followers,

"[The baquet] is a vat about six to seven feet, more or less, in diameter by eighteen inches in height. There is a double bottom in the interior of this vat, in which fragments of broken bottles, gravel, stones, and sticks of pounded sulfur and iron filings are placed. All of this is filled with water and covered up with a floor nailed into the vat. On the surface of the lid, six inches in from the rim, one makes various holes in order to allow the passage of iron rods which are arranged so that one end penetrates the bottom of the vat and the other is directed, by means of a curve, over the pit of the stomach of the patient or other affected parts of the body."[92]

Mesmer specifically stressed the primary importance of the patients' hand-holding as a factor in the "augmentation" of the force/quality of the power of the "animal magnetism".[93]

Moreover, and significantly, Mesmer (separately)[94] acknowledged that, if it was ever to come to pass that he had a suitable "establishment" – i.e., one with sufficient space available for all the assembled patients to hold hands[95] – he would "abolish the use of baquets" (je supprimerois les baquets) and, as well, also significantly remarking (loc. cit.) that, "In general, I only use these little devices [sc. "baquets"] when I am forced to do so" (En general, je n'use des petits moyes que lorsque j'y suis forcé).

The "magnetic crisis"

"One feature of Mesmer's methods . . . was the "mesmeric crisis". Some patients, especially those suffering from more serious symptoms, experienced nervous trembling, nausea, occasionally delirium or convulsions. Mesmer regarded these as an inevitable accompaniment of the process of normalization of the flow of animal magnetism, and had special padded "crisis rooms" [salle de crises] in which patients could throw themselves about without hurting themselves, while Mesmer or his assistants gave them individual attention. The depth of the crisis naturally varied from case to case, but Mesmer insisted that some degree of crisis, no matter how slight or transient, would always be found if it was looked for carefully enough." — (Anthony Campbell, 1988, p. 36)

Given Mesmer's regular (analogical) references throughout his works to the efficient grinding activities of smoothly functioning mills – speaking of how the windmills are driven by the wind, and watermills by the flow of water.[96] – he usefully extended those analogies to explain the circumstances in which "crises" occur, especially in relation to the magnitude of the "crises": i.e., the dramatic circumstances of the sudden restoration of the lost function of a watermill installation – a direct consequence of the magnitude of the force of the flow of water that has been applied (through the currently stationary waterwheel) to the milling mechanism, which is, in and of itself, directly related to the extent to which the (now-operative) milling mechanism was formerly stationary, out of order, or, even, jammed:

"Mesmer states that magnetism is to the bodily organs as the wind is to the windmill . . . If the wind ceases to blow, the milling process comes to a halt, and should the cessation continue for long enough, the windmill may fall into disrepair or even ruin. The salvation of the miller comes when the wind begins to blow again, making the machinery of the windmill work again. . . . [A] greater effort is required to start a windmill after it has stopped than to keep it going, especially if disrepair has set in. . . . [In a similar fashion,] when animal magnetism ceases to course freely through the nervous system, the organs begin to malfunction and the whole physiology slows down. Fluids become stagnant and viscous and begin to block the blood vessels and other canals of the body. . . . The symptoms become worse because the organs grow weaker as the obstructions grow larger and larger and vice versa. Mesmer thought the organs then must be galvanized into a greater effort than ever before to push the fluids through the natural channels, and it is animal magnetism that galvinizes them." – (Buranelli, 1975, p. 108)

The Commissions' observations and description of d'Eslon's "magnetic crises"

The Commissions' remarks on d'Eslon's "magnetic crises"

Noting that some of those who were "magnetized" by d'Eslon over an extended time "fell into the convulsive movements that have been called Crises" – and noting that these "convulsive movements" (mouvemens convulsifs) were "viewed [by d'Eslon] as evidence of the particular agent to whom they are attributed" – the "Society" Commissioners' Report, in its discussion of the "Crises",[100] identified a number of common characteristics among the majority of those who displayed these "convulsive movements":[101]

(a) Only "the most sensitive subjects" – i.e., who were "sensitive" either as a consequence of "their constitution" or of "their illness"[102][103] – displayed these "convulsive movements".
(b) In the majority of cases, "convulsive movements" were only displayed after extended exposure to "magnetic procedures that involved direct physical contact" (procédés du Magnétisme animal, par contact immédiat) – there were, also, they noted, rare examples of "convulsive movements" due to the operator's action at a distance, where no direct physical contact had been involved.
(c) Even the "weakest" of patients very rarely displayed "convulsive movements" if they were "magnetized separately".
(d) Compared with individual treatments, group treatments – when given to the same subjects – always produced a greater number of "convulsive movements", of greater magnitude, in a greater number of patients, with less treatment, and in a shorter time.
(e) Female patients were far more likely to display "convulsive movements" than male patients.
(f) Rich female patients (de femmes riches) were far more likely to display "convulsive movements" than poor female patients (de femmes indigentes).
(g) The majority of those who displayed "convulsive movements" only did so after an extended exposure to group treatment at the one treatment location.
 
Yawning (due to behavioural contagion).

The Commissions' remarks on the perceived dangers of the "magnetic crises"

In the last section of its Report, the "Franklin" Commission, in addition to its remarks on the impact of the phenomena associated with a "crisis", made a number of significant observations on the perceived dangers of experiencing, or simply observing, a "crisis" in a number of domains, including:

(a) the immediate and long-term physiological and psychological consequences of experiencing a "crisis" upon the "animal economy"[104] of an already seriously ill person,
(b) the immediate and long-term physiological and psychological consequences of experiencing a "crisis" upon the "animal economy" of an otherwise completely healthy person,
(c) (given the considerable impact of the onlooker-consequences of issues such as behavioral contagion, Vicarious trauma, post-traumatic stress disorder. etc.), the immediate and long-term physiological and psychological consequences of observing another individual manifest a "crisis" upon the "animal economy" of an individual observer (regardless of whether the observer in question was healthy or not), and, on, a larger scale,
(d) the detrimental effects of the "crises" on society as a whole.

Observations of the frequency of "crises"

One interesting aspect of a number of the pro-d'Eslon and pro-Mesmer responses to the Commissions' Reports, collectively, was that they provided figures on the level to which the author in question had observed individual patients manifest full-blown "magnetic crises" as a consequence of their exposure to an extended sequence of standard "magnetic" treatments.

  • In his response to the Reports (d'Eslon, 1784b, pp. 21-22), d'Eslon complained that the Commissioners' emphasis on "convulsions" was not justified: among those who received group treatment during the Commission's investigations (i.e., involving "50 to 60 individuals"), he wrote, there were never more than six or seven who displayed "convulsions" to any degree – and, further, of the more than 500 patients he had treated over the preceding three years, only 20 of those had manifested "convulsions" (and almost all of those had been suffering from "convulsions" before presenting for any treatment from d'Eslon). He also rejected the suggestions of any connection between the "convulsions" of epilepsy and those of the "crises", citing the cases of two of his patients, who were epileptic and "frequently had seizures at home", who never had a single "attack" during their treatment at his clinic (p. 23).
  • Joseph Michel Antoine Servan, the one time Advocate-General to the Parlement of Grenoble, who reported (at Servan, 1784, p. 3) that, in "the Provinces" – where the various social classes were not kept apart around "the baquet", as they were in Paris – that, in relation to the concerns that the Commissioners expressed in relation to the "seizures" they had observed (and identified as one of the principal "dangers of magnetism"), he (Servan) had only observed "barely a few convulsions" ("not at all annoying in themselves") in only five or six individuals out of the fifty whose sequential treatments (and responses) he had observed in person.
  • Jean-Baptiste Bonnefoy (1756–1789), a member of the Royal College of Surgeons at Lyon, and an associate of Mesmer, rejected the notion that Animal Magnetism was "the art of arousing convulsions" (l'art d'exciter des convulsions) (Bonnefoy, 1784, pp. 87-88); and, although he chose not to comment on d'Eslon's treatments, he stated that, from his own direct observation of Mesmer's treatment of more than 200 patients, he had only seen eight of them display "crises" – and, further, that only six of the more than 120 patients treated in his own clinic had displayed a "crisis".[109]

"Mesmerism" vs. "Animal Magnetism"

In order to understand the significance of the two Commissions' concentration on their examination of d'Eslons' claims for the existence of "animal magnetism" (rather than, that is, conducting an examination of the clinical efficacy of Mesmer's actual therapeutic practices) – and, in order to clarify certain ambiguities, and correct particular errors that persist in the literature – a number of basic facts need to be addressed (see, for example, Yeates, 2018, pp. 48-52), it is useful to isolate what later, subsequent to the publication of Wolfart's Mesmerismus (1814), became known as "Mesmerism" from other "animal magnetism" practices in general.

Similarities and differences

The materialist "mesmerists" and the metaphysical "animal magnetists" each held that all animate beings (i.e., "living" beings: humans, animals, plants, etc.), in virtue of being alive, possessed an invisible, natural "magnetic" or "gravitational force" – thus magnetismus animalis, "animal magnetism", or gravitas animalis, "animal gravity"[110] – and the therapeutic interventions of each were directed at manipulating the ebb and flow of their subject's "energy field".

That constant flux and reflux of the vital principles and corporeal humours in man (without which both motion and life are stopped) produce those effects of sympathy and antipathy which become more natural and less miraculous; the atmospherical particle to each individual receives from the general fluid the proper attraction and repulsion. In the divers crossings of those individual atmospheres, some emanations are more attractive between two beings, and others more repulsive; so again, when one body possesses more fluid than another, it will repel; and that body which is less will make an effort to restore itself into equilibrium or sympathy with the other body. — Ebenezer Sibly (1820).[111]

Despite these fundamental similarities, there were many (even more fundamental) differences between the two.

 
J.P.F. Deleuze.

The "mesmerists"

In order to foster and promote orthopraxia,[112] the materialist "mesmerists" used qualitative (rather than quantitative) constructs – centred on Mesmer's abstract and metaphorical overarching analogies with gravity, terrestrial magnetism, and hydraulics – to explain the application of their techniques and to describe their therapeutic rationale.

“When we call this principle magnetic fluid, vital fluid, we are using a figurative expression. We know that something emanates from the magnetizer: this something is not a solid, and we call it a fluid.” – Joseph-Philippe-François Deleuze (1814), p. 233.

The "animal magnetists"

In contrast to the mesmerists, the metaphysical "magnetists" – who (mistakenly) reified (i.e., "substantivised") the magnetic/fluidic metaphors of Mesmer – firmly believed that they were channeling a substantial "fluidium" and were manipulating a particular, substantial "force".[113]

What Thomas Brown(e), writing in the seventeenth century,[114] deemed a vulgar error was the belief in sympathy as a unifying force working outside the human state, in this instance between two magnetically charged needles that of themselves are clearly incapable of having feelings, sensibilities, and affections. This alternative use of sympathy experienced a resurgence in the early 1780s, particularly in the field of animal magnetism, a practice that drew on the study of magnetism and electricity and fused these with the language of magic and the occult, blurring the boundaries between superstition and rational experimental philosophy.[115]

The "higher" and "lower" phenomena of the magnetists

By the time of James Braid's (1841) Manchester encounter with the "magnetic demonstrator" Charles Lafontaine,[116] those who were still committed to the existence of a substantial 'magnetic fluid", etc., maintained that the phenomena produced by their acts of "magnetization" were of two general classes – lower phenomena,[117] and higher phenomena[118] – the distinction being "that, while there might be natural explanations for 'lower' phenomena, 'higher' phenomena could only be explained in terms of a paranormal or metaphysical agency" (Yeates, 2018, p. 52).

The investigations

The substantial existence of "animal magnetism" and "magnetic fluid" were investigated

Rather than being concerned with the applications, utility, and clinical efficacy of d'Eslon's "animal magnetism", the primary concern of each Commission was the significant, crucial, and exclusive question of whether or not d'Eslon's (supposed) "animal magnetic fluid" actually existed in some substantial physical way – for the simple reason that, as the two sets of Commissioners each noted in their independent reports, "Animal magnetism may well exist without being useful but it cannot be useful if it does not exist."[119]

Mesmer's earlier refusal to have his "magnetic" interventions scrutinized

 
Joseph-Marie-François de Lassone, President of the Paris Faculty of Medicine.

Already, in his earlier (18 September 1780) interaction with the Paris Faculty of Medicine, Mesmer had refused to have his therapeutic interventions on a set of entirely "new" patients directly scrutinized, claiming that his already-achieved "cures" were an objective matter of record.[120] Mesmer justified his refusal as follows:

"Here is what I said to M. de Lassonne;[121] however bizarre [it may seem] at first sight it is nevertheless entirely serious and very much applicable to the question. When a thief is convicted of theft he is hanged: when a murderer is convicted of murder he is executed on the wheel. But to exact these terrible penalties the thief is not required to thieve again to prove that he is a thief, and the murderer is not required to murder a second time to prove that he is a murderer. One is content to establish by testimony and by material evidence that the theft or the murder was committed and then one hangs or executes on the wheel in good conscience.
Very well! It is the same with me. I ask, kindly, to be treated like a man to be executed on the wheel or hanged and that an effort should be made to establish that I have cured [patients] without asking me to perform new cures to prove that I am to be regarded as someone who cures."[122]

Mesmer's "cures" were never investigated

In relation to the question of the agency/cause of Mesmer's supposed "cures" – and in the process of constructing the protocols for their investigations into d'Eslon's "animal magnetism" – both Commissions were well aware that "an effect's objective reality does not substantiate [any of the] proffered explanations [for its existence]" (Yeates, 2018, p. 61).[123]

Notwithstanding Mesmer's earlier refusal to co-operate, and aside from the fact that the two Commissions were specifically charged with investigating d’Eslon's claims for the existence of "animal magnetism", there were two additional, significant reasons for not investigating the veracity of the "cures" attributed to Mesmer.

  • (1) They had no persuasive evidence to suggest that the reports of Mesmer's "cured patients" were false.
  • (2) The Commissioner's took the entirely reasonable and non-controversial step of accepting the existence of Mesmer's "cured patients" as a given.[124]

In support of this decision,[125] and noting that "observations over the centuries prove & Physicians themselves recognize, that Nature alone & without the help of medical treatment cures a great number of patients",[124] the Commissioners agreed with the previously-expressed observations of Mesmer – namely, that, even if significant improvements in his patients' presenting conditions had been objectively verified, the existence of those "cures", in and of themselves, would not have provided conclusive evidence of (metaphorical) "animal magnetism" – and, in support of their decision, the Commissioners cited Mesmer's own statements: viz., that “nothing conclusively proves that the Physician or Medicine heals the sick”, and because of that, it was (in Mesmer's own words), "a mistake to believe that this kind of proof is irrefutable".[126][127]

Further, as Kihlstrom (2002) observed, even though the "Franklin Commission" had accepted that "Mesmer's cures were genuine", and that "he was able to succeed where conventional approaches had failed",

"evidence of efficacy was not sufficient for academic approval. The scientific revolution had made physicians increasingly dissatisfied with purely empirical treatments, which were known to be effective but whose underlying mechanisms were unknown. In the emerging profession of scientific medicine, theories of treatment, like theories of disease, had to conform to what was known about anatomy and physiology. Then, as now, this scientific basis distinguished medicine from quackery and so was an important source of the physician's professional authority. While Mesmer wanted approval for his technique, the academy wanted verification of his theory." (p. 414)

The efficacy of "magnetic" treatments and the agency of (supposed) "magnetic" cures were not investigated

The two Reports also (separately, and in some detail) explained why the nature of the "effects" of (supposedly efficacious) treatments were not being examined, and why the agency of the (supposed verified) "cures" were not being investigated.

In noting that there were two different ways that "the action of magnetism on animate bodies" ("l’action du Magnétisme sur les corps animés") could be observed:

(a) from the long-term curative effects of "magnetic" treatments on disease, or
(b) from the changes produced by its temporary effects on the individual's "animal economy" (l’économie animale),

and, despite d'Eslon's insistence that its investigations principally (and, almost, exclusively) concentrate on the "prolonged" effects of his (d'Eslon's) treatments on disease, the "Franklin Commission" firmly stated that its investigations would exclusively concentrate on the "momentary" effects of d'Eslon's procedures on the "animal economy".[128]

Problems with objectively determining the precise agency of any supposed "cure"

The Commissioners (Bailly, 1784, p. 15) stressed that, because they had been specifically charged with determining whether (or not) d'Eslon's "magnetic fluid" actually existed in some substantial form, and because it was obvious that, in order to unequivocally settle the "uncertain" and "misleading" issue of whether there were real "cures" of "real" diseases from d'Eslon's therapeutic interventions, and whether any such "cures" were entirely the "effects" of d'Eslon's treatment, and nothing else – and even if the Commissioners were able "to strip from these therapeutic effects all of the illusions which might be involved with them"[129] – any such determination would require an "infinity of cures", supported by the "experience of several centuries". And, further, given the specified goal of the Commission, the significance of whatever its findings might be, and the obligation to produce its Report "promptly", the Commissioners considered that,

"it was [their] duty . . . to confine themselves to arguments purely physical, that is, to the momentaneous [sic] effects of the fluid upon the animal frame, excluding from these effects all the illusions which might mix with them, and assuring themselves that they could proceed from no other cause than the animal magnetism."[130]

Problems with objectively determining the precise therapeutic action of any supposed "efficacious remedy"

In support of its decision, the "Franklin Commission" produced a cogent, extended argument, consistent with the medical knowledge of the day, that is equally relevant to similar investigations in the present day:

The majority of diseases have their seat in the interior part of our frame. The collective experience of a great number of centuries has made us acquainted with the symptoms, which indicate and discriminate them; the same experience has taught the method in which they are to be treated.
What is the object of the efforts of the physician in this method? It is not to oppose and to subdue nature, it is to assist her in her operations. Nature, says the father of the medical science [viz., Hippocrates], cures the diseased; but sometimes she encounters obstacles, which constrain her in her course, and uselessly consume her strength.
The physician is the minister of nature; an attentive observer, he studies the method in which she proceeds. If that method be firm, strong, regular and well directed, the physician looks on in silence, and [is careful of not] disturbing it by remedies which would at least be useless; if the method be [hindered], he facilitates it; if it be too slow or too rapid, he accelerates or retards it.
Sometimes, to accomplish his object, he confines himself to the regulation of the diet: sometimes he employs medicines.
The action of a medicine, introduced into the human body, is a new force, combined with the principal force by which our life is maintained: if the remedy follow the same route, which this force has already opened for the expulsion of diseases, it is useful, it is salutary [viz., conducive to health]; if it tend to open different routes, and to turn aside this interior action, it is pernicious.
In the mean time it must be confessed that this salutary or pernicious influence, real as it is, may frequently escape common observation.
The natural history of man presents us in this respect with very singular phenomena.
It may be there seen that regimens the most opposite, have not prevented the attainment of an advanced old age. We may there see men, attacked according to all appearance with the same disease, recovering in the pursuit of opposite regimens, and in the use of remedies totally different from each other; nature is in these instances sufficiently powerful to maintain the vital principle in spite of the improper regimen, and to triumph at once over [both] the distemper and the remedy.[131]
If it [viz., "the vital principle"] have this power of resisting the action of medicine, by a still stronger reason it must have the power of operating without medicine.
The experience of the efficacy of remedies is always therefore attended with some uncertainty; in the case of the magnetism the uncertainty has this addition, the uncertainty of its existence.
How then can we decide upon the action of an agent, whose existence is contested, from the treatment of diseases; when the effect of medicines is doubtful, whose existence is not at all problematical? – Bailly (1784a, pp. 11-13).[132]

Other highly significant, but unassociated "causative" factors

In addition to reflecting the position of the "Franklin Commission" in these matters, the "Society Commission" also noted that there were other equally significant causative factors, concomitant with, but unassociated with, the treatment delivered, in relation to the circumstances of the patients themselves; namely,

"the hope [of being cured] that they conceived, the exercise that they took every day, [and especially, whilst under the "magnetic" treatment] the suspension of the remedies they were previously using – the quantity of which is often so harmful in such cases – these are, in themselves, multiple and sufficient causes for the results that have been said to have been observed in similar circumstances". – Poissonnier, et al. (1784, p. 36).

Common misrepresentation of fact

The preceding facts expose the error – a classic example of equivocation due to lexical ambiguity – in the commonly expressed (in modern literature) and extremely misleading misrepresentation of affairs; namely, the (historically incorrect, and mistaken) implication that, rather than simply having, for convenience, accepted Mesmer's assertions at face value (and left it at that), both Commissions had objectively verified that:

(a) prior to Mesmer's intervention, all of those who had been supposedly "cured" by Mesmer had, indeed, been suffering from a "real" medical disorder,
(b) subsequent to Mesmer's intervention, all of those who had been supposedly "cured" by Mesmer had been genuinely "cured" of their "real" pre-intervention disorders; and
(c) it was Mesmer himself that had "cured" those patients.

Consequently,

"Although it is entirely correct to assert that both sets of Commissioners accepted [in a manner of speaking] that Mesmer's "cures" were, indeed, "cures", it is completely wrong to suggest that any of the Commissioners accepted that any of those "cured" individuals had been "cured" by Mesmer.[133]

Procedures

 
Antoine Lavoisier.

The "Franklin" Commission's investigations were conducted at a number of different locations, including d’Eslon's clinic (which they visited once a week[134]), Lavoisier's home, and the gardens of Franklin's Passy residence. The intricate structure and detailed procedures of the investigations were designed by Lavoisier;[135][136] and great care was taken to eliminate what James Braid would later identify as "sources of fallacy".[137]

In the process of examining d'Eslon's claims, the "Franklin Commissioners" not only tested the influence of a wide range of situations, circumstances, variables, but also, from time-to-time, individually presented themselves as experimental subjects,[138] because, they reported, "they were very curious to experience through their own senses the reported effects of this agent".[139]

When they visited d’Eslon's establishment, the Commissioners discovered that, not only did d’Eslon's standard therapeutics involve (his version of) Mesmer's "baquet", but also a musical (and, from time to time, vocal) accompaniment as a standard part of his treatment:

"They saw in the centre of a large apartment a circular box, made of oak, and about a foot or a foot and an [sic] half deep, which is called the bucket [viz., the "baquet"];[140] the lid of this box is pierced with a number of holes, in which are inserted branches of iron, elbowed and moveable. The patients are arranged in ranks about this ["baquet"], and each has his branch of iron, which by means of the elbow may be applied immediately to the part affected; a cord passed round their bodies connects them one with the other: sometimes a second means of communication is introduced, by the insertion of the thumb of each patient between the forefinger and thumb of the patient next him; the thumb thus inserted is pressed by the person holding it; the impression received by the left hand of the patient, communicates through his right, and thus passes through the whole circle.
A piano forté is placed in one corner of the apartment, and different airs are played with various degrees of rapidity; vocal music is sometimes added to the instrumental.
The persons who superintend the process, have each of them an iron rod in his hand, from ten to twelve inches in length." – "Franklin" Report (pp. 3-4.)[141]

And, moreover, given that the overarching metaphorical "principle" of Mesmer had been (inappropriately) reified ("substantified") by d'Eslon – and, also, given that "the existence of [d'Eslon's] alleged magnetic fluid was only based on the effects on the patients: in other words, the existence of a [substantial] physical entity [was being] inferred not from instrumental measurements and/or quantitative considerations, but by the psychophysical reaction of a living body" (Bersani, 2011, p. 61) – it is significant that,

"the commissioners in the progress of their examination discovered, by means of an electrometer[142] and a needle of iron not touched with the loadstone, that the ["baquet"] contained no substance either electric or magnetical; and from the detail that M. Deslon [sic] has made to them respecting the interior construction of the ["baquet"], they cannot infer any physical agent, capable of contributing to the imputed effects of the magnetism." – "Franklin" Report (p. 5.)[143]

The conduct and rationale of the Commission's investigations is described in considerable detail in its Report.[144]

In the process of their investigations they discovered that many non-"magnetised" subjects – wrongly believing themselves to have been "magnetised" – displayed a wide range of "magnetic" phenomena; and, by contrast, supposedly "magnetised" subjects, believing themselves to be non-"magnetised", displayed no "magnetic" phenomena at all. For instance, during the investigations conducted at Franklin's residence, d'Eslon "magnetized" one of five trees in Franklin's garden and, when a "sensitive" subject was brought to the trees, he fainted at the foot of one of the other four; and, on another occasion, during the investigations undertaken at Lavoisier's house, a normal cup of water swallowed by a subject (who believed the water to be "magnetized") immediately produced "magnetic" phenomena.

 
Man wearing a blindfold.

The Commission's procedures were, obviously, "[specifically designed] to give unequivocal answers to clearly defined hypotheses" (Donaldson, 2017, p. 166):

(1) "they tested subjects from all classes of society in both group and one-to-one treatment settings";[145]
(2) "(given claims that "animal magnetism" affected 'the infirm' differently from 'the healthy'), they tested d’Eslon's procedures on genuine 'healthy', genuine 'infirm', and sham 'infirm' subjects";[145]
(3) "they observed and compared the responses of subjects when blindfolded and when not"[145] – and, as Jensen, et al. (2016, pp. 13) observe, the Commissioner's use of blindfolding very strongly suggests that, rather than "[being] interested in proving [something that] they believed to be true", their investigations concentrated on "disproving, rather than proving, the efficacy of [d'Eslon's] treatments"; and
(4) "they observed the responses of all varieties of subject to genuine and sham 'magnetisation'; and, as well, their responses to genuine and sham 'magnetised' locations, objects, apparatus, and equipment".[145]

The Report(s) of the "Franklin Commission"

L'imagination fait tout, le Magnétism est nul ('Imagination is everything, magnetism nothing') – "Franklin Commission" Report.[146]
"Rather than introducing a problem – the Franklin report . . . provided a language for addressing one that already existed, forcefully articulating the suspicion that mechanical imagination could plague natural philosophers and religious "fanatics" alike" (Ogden, 2012, p. 149).

The "Franklin Commission's" investigations produced three separate reports.

The issue of d'Eslon vs. Mesmer

At the head of their principal report, the Commissioners directly summarize Mesmer's 27 Propositions,[147] as expounded in Mesmer's 1779 Memoire (1779, pp. 74-83). They also quote Mesmer's own "characterization" of his principle[148] – namely, that "In the influence of the magnetism, Nature holds out to us a sovereign instrument for securing the health and lengthening the existence of mankind".[149]

They clearly state (p. 3) that, on the basis of a presentation given to the Commissioners, by d'Eslon (at his residence), on 9 May 1784 – at which d'Eslon had not only described his version of the "theories" of "animal magnetism", but also described and demonstrated his therapeutic procedures – the Commissioners were more than satisfied that d'Eslon's theories, principles, methods, and practices were consistent with those that Mesmer had made known through his publications; and, moreover, having acquired this thorough understanding of the "theory and practice of animal magnetism", the Commissioners then concentrated their efforts on determining the effects of its application – and, in order to do so, they visited d'Eslon's establishment on several occasions.

In an extended footnote to the last paragraph of their principal report, the Commissioners justified their investigative approach, and the appropriateness of their conclusions, in some detail.[151]

The Commission's report

 
Official Report of the "Franklin Commission"
(11 August 1784)

The first (66 page) report was presented to the King on 11 August 1784.[154]

"Knowing that their report would be published and that the task of convincing the public lay wholly in their hands, the authors produced an account that was both scientifically sound and accessible, making for compelling reading. Chronology was unimportant; few dates were specified. The rationale for every decision and the details of every experiment, however, were explained in terms that anyone could understand.[155]
 

Immediate publication and dissemination

The report was immediately published by the government printer; and at least 20,000 copies were rapidly and very widely circulated throughout France and neighbouring countries.[156] Within four months (16 December 1784), the London publishing house of Joseph Johnson was announcing the publication of a complete English version, translated by William Godwin (i.e., Godwin, 1785),[157][158] and, in between February and July 1785, four different "periodical abridgements of the Franklin report, each printed multiple times in the Atlantic coast publications" were published in the United States (Ogden, 2012, p. 167); and, in 1837, Godwin's complete translation was published, in Philadelphia, as part of a collected work.[159]

Touch, imagination, and imitation

Clearly "recogniz[ing] that publicly endorsing the curative effects of a technique that had no demonstrable basis in the science of the late 18th century could lead to a proliferation of medical quackery" (McConkey & Perry, 2002, p. 328) and, based on their own "experiments" and "observations", the Commissioners concluded that "the true causes of the effects attributed to this new agent known by the name of animal magnetism, [and] to this fluid which is said to circulate in the body and to communicate itself from one individual to another" were "touch, imagination, [and] imitation":[160][161]

... having demonstrated by decisive experiments, that the imagination without the magnetism produces convulsions, and that the magnetism, without the imagination produces nothing; [the Commissioners] concluded with an [sic] unanimous voice respecting the existence and the utility of the magnetism, that the existence of the fluid is absolutely destitude of proof, that the fluid having no existence can consequently have no use, that the violent symptoms observed in the public process are to be ascribed to the compression, to the imagination called into action, and to that propensity to mechanical imitation, which leads us in spite of ourselves to the repetition of what strikes our senses. – George Winter (1801).[162]

No evidence to support d'Eslon's claims

The Commission found no evidence of any kind to support d'Eslon's claim for the existence of a "magnetic fluid":

"The most reliable way to ascertain the existence of Animal-magnetism fluid ["l’existence du fluide magnétique animal'] would be to make its presence tangible; but it did not take long for the Commissioners to recognize that this fluid escapes detection by all the senses. Unlike electricity, it is neither luminescent nor visible. Its action does not manifest itself visibly as does the attraction of a magnet; it is without taste or smell; it spreads noiselessly & envelops or penetrates you without your sense of touch warning you of its presence. Therefore, if it exists in us & around us, it does so in an absolutely undetectable manner." – Bailly (1784a), p. 9.[163]

The Commission's secret report ("for the King's eyes only")

A second (brief) report – which had been presented privately to the King on 11 August 1784,[164] but not made public until 1800 (i.e., in the time of The Consulate period of French First Republic) – specifically addressed the perceived moral dangers occasioned by the physical practices of the animal magnetists:

 
Jean-Charles-Pierre Lenoir, Lieutenant-General of Paris Police.
"The uniformly critical tone of this private document was in stark contrast to the scrupulously evenhanded voice of the official report; . . . [and its] message was blunt: the practice of animal magnetism was a threat not only to health . . . but also to morality, especially in the case of weak, virtuous women. . . . [It] provided an explicit description of a certain kind of prolonged "convulsion" that resulted not from the alleged healing power of animal magnetism but rather from the close physical contact and mutual arousal of male magnetizers and female patients who did not fully understand what was being done to them. Deslon [sic] himself had admitted, under interrogation by [the Chief of Paris Police] Lenoir [who was present at a number of the Commission's investigations], how easy it would be to abuse a woman in such a state. Many women had been in treatment for years without being cured. Most of them were not ill to begin with, but had been drawn to the clinic for the amusement it provided, attending regularly as a relief from boredom. Around the tub, the ease with which symptoms spread from person to person was striking. The commissioners reiterated the health risks of inducing full-blown crises, a dangerous practice that any responsible physician would shun. They [also] implied [in this secret report] the possibility that magnetic seances were a deliberate fraud."[155]

In concluding their report, they stress that they had not observed any "real cures" (guérisons réelles) from d'Eslon's treatments – which were, they noted, both "very long" and "unfruitful" – and, also, stress that, among d'Eslon's patients, those who had been under his treatment for 18 months to 2 years, without any benefit, ceased to present for any further treatment, having exhausted their patience (p. 152).

Finally, they noted (pp. 153-155) that, although charged with investigating d'Eslon's claims and d'Eslon's methods alone, they were satisfied that – offering essentially the same explanation as that in their for-public-consumption report (see "The Report's final footnote" in the Gallery above) – although they had not examined any of Mesmer's methods, etc., their findings applied equally to Mesmer and his methods, especially in relation to the attribution of all observed phenomena to "contact", "imagination", and/or "imitation" (p. 154).

The Commission's brief "courtesy report" to the Royal Academy of Sciences

 
Brief Report to Royal Academy of Sciences
(4 September 1784)

On 4 September 1784, Bailly presented a third, brief (15 page) courtesy report to the Royal Academy of Sciences (Bailly, 1784b)[165] on behalf of himself, Franklin, Le Roy, de Bory, and Lavoisier (i.e., those Commissioners who were also Academy members), which provided their Academy colleagues with a brief account of the Commission's proceedings, the rationale behind its investigations, and the results. Noting that all of their investigations were jointly conducted with the four members of the Paris Faculty, and that all nine shared the same "interest in [discovering] the truth", they stressed that all the findings of their combined efforts were "unanimous" (p. 2).

The importance of "the Sciences"

Further (p. 4), given that the understanding of the Sciences – "which [collectively] are increased by [establishing] the truth" (qui s’accroissent par les vérités) – is increased by "the suppression of error": i.e., given that "error" is always "a bad leaven that ferments and, in the long run, corrupts the mass into which it has been introduced". By contrast, however, in those cases wherein the "error" has been generated by "The Empire of Science", and has spread to "the multitude" – not only to divide and agitate minds, but also, in deceptively presenting a means of curing the sick, prevent them from seeking their cures elsewhere – "good Government has an interest in destroying it".

Moreover, anticipating the later remarks of Louis Brandeis ("Publicity is justly commended as a remedy for social and industrial diseases. Sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants; electric light the best policeman": Brandeis, 1913, p. 10), the Commissioners (p. 4) remarked that, in terms of the "good Government" of an "Enlightened nation", "the distribution of light is a fine use of authority!" (C'est un bel emploi de l’autorité, que celui de distribuer la lumière!).

Not only did they endorse the Administration's decision to conduct an Inquiry, but they also "embraced the honour [implicit in] its choice" of their own appointment as Commissioners.

Physics

Noting that the "greater" and "more extraordinary" a discovery, the more difficult it was to settle on suitable proof, they reported that, as physicists, they were unable to detect the presence of d'Eslon's supposed (substantial) "fluid" (p. 6). From this absence of "physical evidence", they were forced, instead, to "examine the affections of the spirit and the ideas of those who had been exposed to the action of 'Magnetism'"; and, from this, ceased to be "physicists", and became nothing more than "philosophers" (p. 8).

Chemistry

However, having been unable to operate as physicists, they had decided to follow the standard procedures of "chemists" – who, having "decomposed substances" and thereby discovered their "principles", assured themselves of the "exactness" of their findings by "recomposing" the same substances from their "reunited" constituents (p. 9).

Imagination

Given their inability to detect any (substantial) 'magnetism' – and, from their observations that the "effects" (that were attributed by d'Eslon to the supposed 'magnetism' and the supposed 'fluid') were only manifested when the subjects believed they were 'magnetised' (and were not manifested when they were unaware that they had been 'magnetised') – the Commissioners concluded that the "principle" involved was the subject's "imagination"; and, therefore, as a consequence of their investigations, they were well satisfied that they had been "fully successful" in experimentally proving that the observed "effects" had been produced "by the power of the imagination alone" (p. 9).

More than a century later, and entirely consistent with the Commissioners' findings, both Jean-Martin Charcot (of the "Hysteria School" of hypnosis at the Salpêtrière hospital), and his rival, Hippolyte Bernheim (of the "Suggestion School" of hypnosis at Nancy in Alsace-Lorraine), were united in their views that all of the supposed “miracle cures” at Lourdes were due to "auto-suggestion".[166]

The Report(s) of the "Society Commission"

 
Official Report of the "Society Commission"
(16 August 1784)

The "Society Commission's" investigations produced two separate reports.

The report of four of the five Commissioners

The first of the two reports, made by four of the five Commissioners (of 39 pages) – namely, Charles-Louis-François Andry, Claude-Antoine Caille, Pierre Jean Claude Mauduyt de La Varenne, and Pierre-Isaac Poissonnier – was presented to the King on 16 August 1784.[167]

Given that the "Society" Commissioners' investigations were far less complex than those conducted by the "Franklin Commission"[168] – and, also, given that the (smaller number of) experiments that they described "duplicate[d] similar ones in the ["Franklin Commission's"] Report" (Pattie, ibid., p. 156) – the report itself is briefer (39 pages), far less complex, and, therefore, far less influential. The Report was divided into two sections:

  • Part One (pp. 2-21), discussing the theories of the practices known as "Animal Magnetism". It commences with d'Eslon's definition of "animal magnetism"; namely that it is "the action which one man exercises on another, either through immediate contact or at a certain distance by the mere pointing of a finger or any kind of conduct", and that "this action", according to d'Eslon, "is the effect of a fluid that is distributed throughout the universe"[169]
  • Part Two (pp. 22-37), discussing the procedures and practices of "Animal Magnetism", as well as addressing the issues of their therapeutic efficacy (or not), and those of whether (or not) the procedures/practices should be admitted to conventional medical practice ("doivent-ils être admis en Médecine!": p. 22).

The conclusions drawn (pp. 37-39) were, in brief, that they had found no evidence of d'Eslon's "magnetic fluid", that there were "no grounds for any belief in animal magnetism", that "the effects attributed to it are due to known causes", including not only the influence of "contact", "imagination", and/or "imitation", but also the influence of "the environment of the treatment room with its closed windows, fetid air, dim light, and the sight of other patients [and their responses to their treatments]"[170] – and, as Laurence notes, that "the [observed] results . . . were not due to animal magnetism but to the patients‘ rest, exercise, abstinence from medication, and hopes for a cure!" (2002, p,316) – and that, from this, there was no reason for "the procedures to which the name "animal magnetism" has been given [to be] introduced into the practice of medicine" (Pattie, 1994, p. 157).

The (later) representations of Burdin and Dubois

 
Frédéric Dubois (1849).

Although the "Society" Commission did not directly investigate the clinical efficacy of d'Eslon's therapeutic interventions, and did not examine the circumstances of any earlier (i.e., pre-Commission) "cures" claimed by d"Eslon, two members of the Royal Academy of Medicine, Charles Burdin (1778-1856) and Frédéric Dubois (1797-1873) [fr], writing in 1841,[171] drew attention to the fact that, in the process of their (1784) investigations, the "Society" Commissioners identified three categories of patient treated by d'Eslon[172] – (a) those with an "obvious ailment" with "a known cause", (b) those with "mild" and "vague" ailments with no known cause, and, finally, (c) the melancholics ("Les mélancoliques") – and, significantly, having followed the collective progress of d'Eslon's patients over a period of four months, the Commissioners found no evidence of any kind that any members of the '(a) group' (many of whom had been receiving d'Eslon's treatment "for more than a year") had been "cured" (guéris), or, even, "noticeably relieved" (notablement soulagés) of their ailment.[173]

de Jussieu's "dissenting" report

 
Antoine Laurent de Jussieu (1748-1836).

The second of the two reports, made by de Jussieu alone (of 51 pages) was independently published on 17 September 1784.[174]

In de Jussieu's dissenting view, "[and] despite d’Eslon's "magnetic fluid" claims having been debunked [he felt that] there were sufficient “effects” (such as, for instance, ‘post-magnetic amnesia’) unattributable to "imagination" that still required further investigation into their exact nature; and, therefore, he argued, the continued use of animal magnetism was justified" (Yeates, 2018, p. 50).

Noting that, in his view, "a longer use of this agent will make its real action and degree of usefulness to be better understood", de Jussieu concluded:

The theory of magnetism cannot be admitted so long as it will not be developed and supported by solid facts. The experiments instituted to ascertain the existence of the magnetic fluid prove only that man produces on his like a sensible action by friction, by contact, and more rarely by simple approximation at some distance. This action, attributed to a universal fluid not demonstrated, certainly appertains to animal heat [la chaleur animale] existing in bodies, which constantly emanates from them, is carried to a considerable distance, and is capable of passing from one body into another. Animal heat is developed, increased, or diminished in a body by moral as well as by physical causes. Judged by its effects, it participates in the property of tonic remedies, and like them produces salutary or injurious effects according to the quantity communicated, and according to the circumstances in which it is employed. – de Jussieu, 1784, pp. 50-51.[175]

Responses to the Commissions' conclusions

 
Jean-Jacques Paulet.
 
Michel-Augustin Thouret.
A measure of the influence of . . . the claims investigated, the methods employed, and the conclusions reached . . . [by] the Franklin Report is seen in the changing fortunes of Mesmer during the months of 1784. Prior to the submission of the Report, Mesmer had been the toast of Paris, dealing with many wealthy patrons . . . Following publication of the Report, Mesmer was a focus of public scorn and ridicule . . . – McConkey & Barnier (1991, pp. 77-78)

The release of the reports generated a proliferation of publications, many of which were simply addressing issues relating to either "mesmerism" or "animal magnetism" in general – such as, for instance, those of Jean-Jacques Paulet (1784), and Michel-Augustin Thouret [fr] (1784) – while others, such as those of Charles Joseph Devillers, himself a member of the Royal Academy of Sciences – who (at Devillers, 1784, pp. 165-166) compared the "cures" of Mesmer, with those supposed to have been effected at the tomb of François de Pâris in Saint-Médard, some forty years earlier – and Jacques Cambry (1784) – who provided details of beliefs similar to those of Mesmer previously held by the ancient Greeks, Persians, and Romans – strongly supported the findings of the Commissions.

Response of the Paris Faculty of Medicine

Immediately following the release of the reports of the two Commissions, the Paris Faculty of Medicine "pressure[d] its own members to renounce animal magnetism" (Crabtree, 1993, p. 32).

The Faculty identified some thirty of its docteurs-régent, including François Louis Thomas d'Onglée and Charles-Louis Varnier,[176] who "openly favored animal magnetism or were suspected of so doing".[177][178] According to the contemporary account of Thomas d'Onglée (1785, passim), the thirty "magnetic physicians" were subjected to "abuse"[179] and were presented with a declaration, of which it was demanded that they sign.[180] Both Thomas d'Onglée and Varnier, among others, refused to sign the declaration (and were, thereby, immediately expelled). The declaration in question read:

"No Doctor may declare himself a partisan of animal magnetism, through writings or through practice, under penalty of being removed from the role of docteurs-régents".[181]
 
Caullet de Veaumorel's Aphorismes of M. Mesmer.

d'Eslon's response

d'Eslon immediately published an attack on the Commission's reports,[182] in which he criticized their failure to investigate the longer-term effects of his treatments, and their refusal to accept his (alleged) "cures" as proof of the existence of "animal magnetism", as well as noting that, "the commissioners' recommendation that the practice of magnetism should be prohibited . . . would hardly be possible [to implement]", because, apart from those within the medical profession who had been trained by himself and by Mesmer, "a large number of other people had, as a result of their own study, begun to practice it" (Pattie, 1994, p. 171).[183]

In addition to his specific criticisms of the reports of the two Royal Commissions – and to emphasize the significance of the Royal Commissions' refusal to investigate either the alleged efficacy of his treatment procedures (i.e., investigate d'Eslon's actual practices, rather than just the veracity (or not) of his theoretical claims, and that alone), and the alleged curative effects of his standard, extended regimens of "magnetic" treatment – d'Eslon published an 80-page supplementary volume (i.e., d'Eslon, 1784c),[184] that provided the case histories of 115 individuals[185] (the majority of whom were identified by name),[186] that had been successfully treated by d'Eslon's procedures for a very wide range of diseases.

On 10 December 1784, and in support of d'Eslon, one of his associates (and a former student), Louis Caullet de Veaumorel, published a set of Mesmer's class notes[187] that he (Caullet de Veaumorel) had acquired from one of Mesmer's "disloyal" students.[188][189]

Caullet de Veaumorel's work, which made no mention of d'Eslon's theories, teachings, or clinical procedures, went into three editions.[190] Caullet de Veaumorel stressed that although, as a "disciple of d'Eslon", he was bound by his "word of honour" not to reveal any of d'Eslon's teachings,[191] he was entirely free to publish Mesmer's material – and, in doing so, he had not altered one word of Mesmer's "maxims"[192] – and, moreover, he was certain that, given Mesmer's dissemination of his ideas through his already published works, Mesmer would not be "offended" by the publication of his aphorisms.[193]

Although Mesmer protested to the Journal de Paris that Caullet de Veaumore's Aphorismes "were a distorted account of his lectures", according to Pattie (1994, p. 213), "they [were] accurate" and, moreover, "they agree[d] with later writings of Mesmer".[194]

Mesmer's response

 
Nicolas Bergasse.

In his own responses to the Commissions' Reports,[195] Mesmer stressed that – simply because he had not been involved in any of their investigations – the Commissioners' conclusions had nothing whatsoever to do with his (metaphorical) "animal magnetism"; and, because their conclusions only applied to d'Eslon's theories and practices, any responses to those conclusions were entirely the concern of d'Eslon alone.

Further, and immediately following the publication of the Reports of the two Commissions, both Nicolas Bergasse (1750-1832) (Bergasse, 1784) and Antoine Esmonin, Marquis de Dampierre (Esmonin, 1784) wrote strong criticisms of the Commissions' orientation, investigations, and findings; and, separately, a number of Mesmer's followers published a composite volume (i.e., Mesmer, et al., 1784) of 478 pages, which included a number of previously published items written by Mesmer, as well as a number of shorter and up-to-date contributions from a range of various authors describing their continued success with animal magnetism.[196]

The "Franklin" Commissions' investigations considered to be a "classic" example of a controlled trial

"[T]his is the first scientific investigation that we know of into what would today be considered a paranormal or pseudoscientific claim. . . . [And it is clear that] the control of intervening variables and the testing of specific claims, without resort to unnecessary hypothesizing about what is behind the "power", is the lesson modern skeptics should take from this historical masterpiece." – Michael Shermer (1996, emphasis added to original).[197]

The detailed studies of Stephen Jay Gould (1989) and John Kihlstrom (2002), drew disciplinary attention to nature and the form of the Commission's extended examination as a watershed moment in the history of science – subsequent to which things were never the same.

If the Commission was not the first, it was, at least, one of the very earliest examples of a controlled trial; and, in particular, one that included the use of physical (rather than metaphorical) blindfolds – which were used from time to time on both the experimenters and their experimental subjects – as well as testing both "sham" and "real" procedures on both "sham" and "real" patients.[198]

Inspired by these studies, a number of other scholars, in other scientific domains – such as, for example, Shermer (1996), Kaptchuk (1998), Green (2002), Best, Neuhauser, and Slavin (2003), Herr (2005), Lanska & Lanska (2007), Kaptchuk, Kerr & Zanger (2009), Davies Wilson (2014), Jensen, Janik & Waclawik (2016), Zabell (2016), Donaldson (2017), and Rosen et al. (2019) – have also identified the Commission's examination as a previously unrecognized "classic" example of a controlled trial.

 
John Haygarth

The "Franklin" Commissions' legacy

 
Modern facsimiles of a standard pair of Perkins' Patent Tractors (one made of steel, the other brass)

The "classic" structure of the investigations undertaken by the "Franklin" Commission[199] inspired – among many others over the ensuing years – the (1799) investigations of Chester physician John Haygarth (1740-1827) into the efficacy of Perkins' "tractors".[200][201][202]

In the process of discussing the experiments he had conducted (with medical colleagues as witnesses) with (dummy) "wooden tractors" on 7 January 1799, and with Perkins' "true metallick tractors" on 8 January 1799, Haygarth emphasized his considerable debt to the (earlier) "Franklin Commission" enterprise:

"It need not be remarked, how completely the trial illustrates the nature of this popular illusion, which has so wonderfully prevailed, and spread so rapidly; it resembles, in a striking manner, that of Animal Magnetism, which merited the attention of Dr. Franklin, when ambassador from America, and of other philosophers at Paris. If any person would repeat these experiments, they should be performed with due solemnity. During the process, the wonderful cures which this remedy is said to have performed ought to be particularly related. Without these indispensable aids, other trials will not prove as successful as those which are above reported. The whole effect undoubtedly depends upon the impression which can be made upon the patient's Imagination.
This method of discovering the truth, distinctly proves to what a surprising degree mere fancy deceives the patient himself; and if the experiment had been tried with the metallick Tractors only, they might and most probably would have deceived even medical observers. Yet this test of truth was perfectly candid. A fair opportunity was offered to discover whether the metallick Tractors possessed any efficacy superior to the ligneous Tractors, or wooden pegs." – John Haygarth (1801).[203]

Four vestiges of the magnetization-by-contact practice

In relation to the findings of both Commissions – viz., that there was no evidence for d'Eslon's claims, and that d'Eslon's magnetization-by-contact practices had no place within the "medical penumbra" – and despite the consequent, and widespread demedicalization of both d'Eslon's magnetization-by-contact and of animal magnetism in general, there remained a small number of historically significant vestigial remnants of d'Eslon's magnetization-by-contact, the boundary-work of which, for a short while, operated at the frontier of the "medical penumbra" (Brockliss and Jones, 1997) in the (vain) hope of producing an "expansion of the medicable" (such that they would be admitted to conventional medical practice), which were (later) abandoned by their original advocates.

Phreno-magnetism

 
A Phreno-Magnetist
"exciting the Organ of Veneration (1887)”.[204]

In 1843, Robert Hanham Collyer (1814-1891), an American physician and former pupil of John Elliotson, announced that he had discovered the existence of phreno-magnetism in November 1839;[205] and, prior to Collyer's later retraction, two others claimed to have independently confirmed the veracity of Collyer's "discovery": the architect, Henry George Atkinson (1812-1890), at London, in November 1841, and the chemist, Charles Blandford Mansfield (1819-1855), at Cambridge, in December 1841.[206]

Phreno-magnetism, as a practice, involved the physical activation (termed "excitation") of specific "phrenological organs", via the operator's 'magnetisation', directly through the particular cranial area supposedly corresponding to that specific phrenological "organ".[207] It was claimed that, in a suitable subject, whenever an operator "excited" a particular phrenological "organ" the subject would manifest whatever sentiments were considered appropriate to that "organ".[208]

Four years later, by mid-1843, further experiments that had been conducted by Collyer himself had conclusively proved to his own satisfaction that he was mistaken, and Collyer concluded that there was no such thing as phreno-magnetism at all.[209]

Unaware, at the time, of Collyer's retraction, James Braid made a careful examination of “phreno-hypnotism” in December 1842;[210] and continued his comprehensive experimentation until August 1844[211] – when he concluded, along with John Campbell Colquhoun (Colquhoun, 1843), that there was no foundation for phrenology, in general, and for phreno-magnetism, in particular.[212]

As a consequence of the debunking by Colquhoun, Braid, and others, phreno-magnetism – which, in yet another case of "prima facie plausiblity", had (initially) seemed to promise such a wide range of valuable therapeutic and moral applications[213] – "soon morphed into theatrical performances demonstrating the ‘reality’ of phrenology to credulous audiences, with lecturers pressing specific locations on the cranium of their [magnetised] subjects, and their subjects immediately displaying responses appropriate to the characteristics of each phrenological zone" (Yeates, 2018, p. 56) [see, for example, figure at right].

The "zones" of Albert Pitres

 
Pitres' diagram of the 'hypnogenetic zones' (subject's left side) and 'hypno-arresting zones' (subject's right side).[214]

Around 1885, the neurologist Albert Pitres – the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Bordeaux, and an associate of Charcot at the Salpêtrière hospital – claimed that he had discovered a system of "zones" on the surface of the body, the stimulation of which induced (or terminated) the hypnotic state; namely:[215]

  • zones hypnogènes, or "hypnogenetic zones" which, he said, when stimulated, threw[216] people into the hypnotic state,[217] and
  • zones hypno-frénatrices,[218] or "hypno-arresting zones", which, he said, when stimulated, abruptly threw people out of that same hypnotic state.[219]

Pitres further claimed that, despite the location of the specific "zones" differing from individual to individual,[220] the location of the relevant "zones" remained constant for each individual: viz., they had a "position habituelle" (Pitres (1891), p. 497).

There is no evidence that there was ever any independent verification of Pitres' claims.

The psychoanalytic couch of Sigmund Freud

 
Freud's Couch, with his own chair in its standard position at its head.

The noted neurologist and psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud not only studied and wrote about "hypnosis" (e.g., Freud, 1891, and 1966), but he also actively used "hypnosis" in his clinical practice for some time.

However the (à la Salpêtrière) "hypnosis" that Freud employed – quite unlike the conventional "hypnotism" of James Braid (that was induced by Braid's standard "upwards and inwards squint") – relied upon an induction process that often involved rubbing the top of a patient's head.[221] This requirement, of course, demanded that Freud sat at the end of the therapeutic couch – in order to gain easy access to his subject's head – a practice that Freud continued to follow for his entire (post-"hypnosis") professional career.

Another vestige of phreno-magnetism that demanded that Freud position himself at the patient's head was Freud's application of the "head pressure" technique that he had, in person, observed Hippolyte Bernheim use,[222] on one of his visits to Bernheim's clinic, at Nancy, in 1899.[223]

Freud had discontinued this "head pressure" practice by, at least, 1904 – and, possibly, by 1900.[224]

Mistaken identification of Esdaile's Jhar-Phoonk with d’Eslon's magnetization-by-contact

Due, to a large extent, to the (mistaken) enthusiastic promotion of Esdaile's (otherwise) valuable work in India as "mesmerism" by John Elliotson (1791-1868), and William Collins Engledue (1813-1858) – especially by Elliotson[225] – in their influential journal, The Zoist, over its fifteen years of existence (i.e., March 1843 to January 1856),[226] the entirely mistaken, generally held, and (at the time) widely published view that (the otherwise highly significant) James Esdaile used "mesmerism" to produce the condition under which he conducted completely pain-free surgery is still being repeated in many of the modern accounts of the history of mesmerism, anaesthesia, and hypnotism.

It is clear, however, that – having noticed a vague, and superficial similarity between Esdaile's (Islamic/exorcism derived) Jhar-Phoonk procedures and the (secular/healing derived) "magnetization-by-contact" procedures of d’Eslon – in Esdaile's Jhar-Phoonk, Elliotson and his associates had, to use a biological analogy, (mis)identified in "mesmerism à la d'Eslon" what was a clear case of "homoplasy" (i.e., similar entities descended from an entirely separate lineage) as if it were, instead, a case of "homology" (i.e., similar entities descended from a common ancestor).[227]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ According to Devereaux, et al. (2002, p. 4):
    "Blinding (or masking) in [randomised controlled trials] is the process of withholding information about treatment allocation from those who could potentially be influenced by this information. Blinding has long been considered an important safeguard against bias. Benjamin Franklin, in 1784, was probably the first to use blinding in scientific experimentation. Louis XVI commissioned Franklin to evaluate mesmerism, the most popular unconventional "healing fluid" of the eighteenth century. By applying [an actual] blindfold to participants, Franklin removed their knowledge of when mesmerism was and was not being applied. Blinding eliminated the intervention's effects and established mesmerism as a sham. From this work, the scientific community recognised the power of blinding to enhance objectivity and it quickly became, and remains, a commonly used strategy in scientific research."
  2. ^ Jensen, et al. (2016), pp. 2–5.
  3. ^ Zabell (2016), p. 32.
  4. ^ Gould (1989), p. 16.
  5. ^ The term "Mesmerism" was introduced by Karl Christian Wolfart (1778-1832) [de] in his Mesmerismus (1814), which he wrote after a month-long visit with Mesmer, in Meersburg, in September 1812. According to Buranelli (1975, p. 201), Wolfart's work included "some of the best eye-witness notes we have on Mesmer"; and, also Buranelli (ibid.) notes that Wolfart "took the final Mesmer manuscript away with him to be [subsequently] published under the title Mesmerismus". For more on Wolfart's Mesmerismus and its contents, see, for instance, Gauld (1992), pp. 86–94; Crabtree (1993), pp. 114–116; and Pattie (1994), pp. 248–270.
  6. ^ Duveen & Klickstein (1955), p. 287.
  7. ^ Pattie, 1994, p. 145.
  8. ^ Note that the contemporary English translation (Godwin, 1785, passim), consistently rendered the "Franklin Commission's" technical term "attouchement" as "compression" -- which, given that the (contemporary) translator(s), most likely, had some direct understanding of d'Eslon's techniques, strongly suggests that d'Eslon's degree of "contact" was of a far greater intensity than just a superficial stroking.
  9. ^ In his summary of the "Society Commission's" report (i.e., Poissonnier, et al., 1784), Pattie (1994, pp. 156–158) notes that the report's references to the issue of d'Eslon's "contact", and its mention of "a lengthy application of the hands, the heat produced by this application, and the irritation excited by friction" (i.e., "sont une longue application des mains, la chaleur produite par cette application, l’irritation excitée par le frottement", Poissonnier, et al. p. 15) seems to indicate that "d'Eslon used actual contact and pressure of the hands more than Mesmer did" (Pattie, 1994, p. 156).
  10. ^ That is, the "response expectancy" of Kirsch (1997), and certain aspects of the "role enactment theory of "hypnotism"" postulated by Theodore Sarbin and William Coe in the mid-1960s (i.e., Coe & Sarbin, 1966).
  11. ^ That is, the "imitation" that is universally observed in the circumstances of "behavioral contagion" such as, for example, "the "contagious" yawning reflex of individuals exposed to the yawning of others".
  12. ^ Mackay (1841), p. 323.
  13. ^ There is also another modern distortion through the consistent prochronistic misrepresentation of the Commissioners' use of "blinding" and "sham" procedures, due to the ("cherry picking") in support of the modern understandings of "placebo", rather than, that is, in examining the historical significance of one of the first-ever "controlled trials".
  14. ^ Namely (ibid., pp. 6–7), the direct connections "between Mesmer and Freud" (e.g., see Ellenberger, 1970; Chertok & de Saussure, 1979; and Crabtree, 1993) and, in contrast, "the distance between [them]" (e.g., see Gauld, 1992).
  15. ^ Mesmer's brother, Joseph, had been "writing-master to Marie Antoinette, then about thirteen years old", and "the personal physician to [her mother] the empress Maria Theresa had stood as a witness at Mesmer's [1768] wedding in St. Stephen's Cathedral" (Walmsley, 1967, p. 264).
  16. ^ "He had signed, he declared, the proposals of two weeks ago through weakness and respect for the opinions of others, but he should never have allowed himself to do so" (Pattie, 1994, p. 111).
  17. ^ Gillespie (2009) p. 276.
  18. ^ Bailly (1784b, p. 2); translation taken from Donaldson (2014), p. 78 (emphasis added).
  19. ^ Castronovo, 1999.
  20. ^ See: Fuller, 1982; Darnton, 1968, esp. pp. 106–125; Armando, 2018; Armando & Belhoste, 2018; Belhoste, 2018; Rance, 2018; and Zanetti, 2018.
  21. ^ According to Belhoste (2018, p. 29), in the final section (viz., Moral, 'Morality') of his final published work, Mesmerismus (Wolfart, 1814, pp. 225–341), "we find texts on the organization of society, legislation and government, education, justice and worship, as well as a draft constitution, which indisputably show that Mesmer had fixed political ideas, closely linked to his theory of animal magnetism and his moral philosophy."
  22. ^ According to Gray (2018, p. 54), "Mesmer was an outsider, both as a foreigner and as someone who was found to be unacceptable to the scientific community; doubts about his credibility had circulated and Mesmer reinforced these by making it clear that he had privilege to a technique that was above needing proof through experimentation, resorting to the endorsement of public approval when he could not receive that of the Establishment."
  23. ^ For more on Mesmer, the "foreigner, see Pick (2000), pp. 44–67.
  24. ^ Seeing persons/events distant in time or place: see Melton, 2001a., pp. 297–301.
  25. ^ Directing their readers to Pace's on "Spiritism" at pp. 221–224 in Volume 14 of The Catholic Encyclopedia, Spanos and Gottlieb (1979, p. 538) noted that, "The church was particularly concerned by reports of clairvoyant phenomena occurring within mesmerism. Clairvoyance, it will be recalled, had traditionally been one of the church's most rigorous tests of demonic possession. Its occurrence allowed for only two interpretations: The clairvoyant was either divinely inspired or demonically possessed. Because there was nothing about mesmerism that the church would consider divine, satanic influence remained as the only possible explanation for transcendent mesmeric phenomena."
  26. ^ See also: Gregory (2015).
  27. ^ Poissonnier, et al., (1784), p. 1.
  28. ^ Godwwin's commentary, at p.xv of the Introduction to his translation of the Report of the "Franklin" Commission.
  29. ^ Despite the widespread (erroneous) statements to the effect that he was executed by "his own invention" -- namely, the guillotine (which, in fact, although its use had been promoted by Guillotin, had been invented by others -- Guillotin survived the Revolution, and died of natural causes (from the effects of a carbuncle), on 26 March 1814; however, both Lavoisier (executed on 8 May 1794) and Bailly (executed on 12 November 1793) were guillotined during the Reign of Terror.
  30. ^ Majault was not one of the original group of Commissioners. The original commissioner was Professor Jean-François de Borie -- a medical practitioner and advocate of hydrotherapy (e.g., de Borie, 1714) -- of the Paris Faculty, who died on 21 May 1784. Majault, also a member of the Paris Faculty, was appointed to replace him (Bailly, 1784a, p. 1).
  31. ^ Pattie (1994), p. 142.
  32. ^ At Lavoisier (1865, pp. 508-510) "Remarques de Lavoisier", at p. 510: translation taken from Donaldson (2014), p. 27. Although the item is undated, it was obviously (from its content) compiled following the Commission's investigations and prior to the publication of its Report.
  33. ^ And, as Lavoisier later warned his readers in his Elementary Treatise on Chemistry (1789, p. 7), the "imagination" was also a problem for the researchers as well:
    "It is in these things which we neither see nor feel, that it is especially necessary to guard against the extravagancy of our imagination, which forever inclines to step beyond the bounds of truth, and is very difficultly restrained within the narrow line of facts" (translation taken from Kerr, 1790, pp. 6-7).
  34. ^ "Benjamin Franklin, the American minister to France living at Passy, received the signal honor due his international eminence of being named to head the [Academy of Science's] commission. His age (seventy-eight) made his appointment nominal [and] his duties devolved upon his colleagues..." (Buranelli, 1975, p. 161).
  35. ^ As Franklin (2021) records, Benjamin Franklin was a long-term (intermittent) sufferer from the extremely painful conditions of gout and bladder stone.
  36. ^ Mulford, 2018.
  37. ^ See, for example, Bailly (1784a), at p. 22: translated, at Godwin, (1785), p. 48, as:
    "Dr. Franklin, though the weakness of his health hindered him from coming to Paris, and assisting at the experiments which were there made, was magnetised by M. [d'Eslon] at his own house at Passy."
  38. ^ According to McConkey & Perry (1985, p. 124; 2002, p. 323), Franklin's first encounter with Mesmer was not long after Mesmer's arrival in Paris -- when Franklin accompanied the accomplished composer and celebrated clavichord player, Madame Anne Louise Brillon de Jouy (1774-1824) [fr], "one of the most beautiful women in France who was very close to Franklin during his time in Paris and whom Franklin was pursuing strongly" (p. 323), on a visit to Mesmer's establishment specifically to observe Mesmer's use of Franklin's glass armonica. It is also significant that the glass armonica now held in the collection of the Baken Museum was specifically manufactured by Franklin for Mme Brillon de Jouy (see: Glass armonica, Instrument: before 1785; case probably early 19th century, The Phillips Museum of Art).
  39. ^ Franklin -- awarded the Royal Society's Copley Medal in 1753, and elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 1756 for his ground-breaking work on the nature of electricity, and his invention of the lightning rod -- had made a presentation to the Royal Society on 12 January 1758, on "the Effects of Electricity in Paralytic Cases" (Franklin, 1758); see also Finger (2006).
  40. ^ For more on electricity and mesmerism, see Schneck (1959); Ludwig (1964); and Sutton (1981).
  41. ^ See Sutton (1981).
  42. ^ Duveen & Klickstein (1955), p. 287, note that "[he] was opposed to all new discoveries in science and to political revolution. It was said of him in the latter connexion that he could utter anything he wanted without danger because nobody listened to him."
  43. ^ The inaccurate comments by Harte reflect the typical misrepresentation of the Committee's investigations into D'Eslon as being concerned with Mesmer:
    "[The "Franklin" Report] was taken to be a refutation of the claims of Animal Magnetism, and is still believed generally to be so; but, if examined, it is found to have avoided the main issue -- whether Mesmer had discovered a new means for curing disease -- and to have confined itself to the theoretical question, whether or not there exists a universal medium such as Mesmer described, and whether the curious effects which no one denied that the process of Mesmer produced, were caused by it" (Harte (1902), p. 66).
  44. ^ That is, Dissertatio Physico-Medica de Planetarum Influxu. Note, however, that elsewhere (such as Mesmer, 1779, p. 6) Mesmer identifies the same dissertation as "de l'infuence des planètes sur le corps humain" ('The Influence of the Planets on the Human Body') -- i.e., using the title appended to his original manuscript, De Planetarum Influxu in Corpus Humanum.
  45. ^ It is important to note that, despite the dissertation providing a series of "brief case histories" wherein "the symptoms waxed and waned with the gravitational influences of the sun and the moon, which produced tides in the ocean and atmosphere and also . . . in the human body", "the dissertation had nothing to do with astrology, [a practice] which Mesmer repudiated" (Pattie, 1994, p. 1); and, as Gauld (1992) remarks, rather than it being a treatise on astrology, "it is, however, essentially an essay in popular Newtonian physics" (p. 1).
  46. ^ The dissertation's title page identifies Mesmer as "Antonii Mesmer, Marisbergensis Acron. Suev., A.A.L.L. & Phil. Doct." ('a Swabian from Meersburg on the Lake of Constance, Doctor of Liberal Arts and Philosophy'). Having been unable to find any other reference in any of Mesmer's extensive works (or anywhere else) to the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, Pattie (1994) concluded that 'it is reasonable to suspect that this degree was self-conferred" (p. 15).
  47. ^ Gauld (1992), p. 3; Peter (2005), p. 8.
  48. ^ According to Pattie (1994, p. 116), this work, despite being "the chief source for the history [of "animal magnetism"] between 1779 and 1781", and providing "a recital of Mesmer's difficulties in propagating his theories and having them investigated by learned societies", "contains little about theories and little about cures".
  49. ^ According to Michel-Augustin Thouret (1749-1810) [fr] -- "an energetic and leading member of the Royal Society of Medicine, and a vigourous opponent of animal magnetism" (Gauld, 1992, p. 19) -- Mesmer's "principles" did not "belong" to him; and, rather than his theories representing some "piquant novelty" (nouveauté piquante), they belonged, in fact, to "an ancient system that has been abandoned for more than a century" (un ancien systême abandonné depuis près d’un siecle) (Thouret, 1784, p.xxv).
  50. ^ Similarly useful qualitative metaphorical/abstract overarching constructs of later creation are those such as: Georg Ernst Stahl's "vis conservatrix naturæ", 'the sustaining force of nature', and "vis medicatrix naturæ", 'the healing force of nature'; Arthur Schopenhauer's "Wille zum Leben", 'the will to live'; Friedrich Nietzsche's "Wille zur Gesundheit", 'the will to health'; Henri Bergson's "Élan vital", 'the vital impetus', etc.
  51. ^ Rosen (1959, p. 8) also notes that, "in fact, this whole sequence of events [viz., intentionally refusing to investigating the effects of imagination as an agent of "cure"], set a kind of pattern which was to be repeated at intervals during the succeeding decades".
  52. ^ von Haller's "irritability" referred to the condition within which the contractive capacity of "irritable" organs, muscles, nerves, etc. (i.e., physiological aspects capable of being excited into action by external "irritation") were excited by the application of an external "irritating" stimulus".
  53. ^ For more on Von Haller's theories, see: von Haller (1753a, 1753b); von Haller (1755), and English translation of von Haller (1753a, 1753b); Temkin (1936); and Steinke (2005).
  54. ^ In his post-Commission Memoire (1799, pp. 29-42; translated at Bloch, 1980, pp. 101-106), Mesmer makes numerous references to both "irritablilité" and to "irritation" in his expositions on his views on the influence of "muscle fibres" upon "movement".
  55. ^ See, for example, Tsouyopoulos (1988).
  56. ^ "For Mesmer . . . animal magnetism was a logically sound system fitting well within, and contradicting none of, the empirical natural philosophical discourses that prevailed at this time" (Davies Wilson, 2014, p. 1).
  57. ^ Translation at Bloch (1980), pp. 96-97.
  58. ^ In a similar vein, two centuries later, Michael Yapko warned therapists against reifying their "inner child" construct: "There is no inner child – it is simply a metaphor!" (1994, p. 34, emphasis in original).
  59. ^ He also refers to it (1799, p. 12) as "a "new method for preserving and re-establishing health" (un moyen nouveau de conserver et de rétablir la santé).
  60. ^ "Mesmer rejected the idea that psychological factors were involved, since he could treat infants and comatose patients with apparent success, and he scornfully rejected the notion that he was 'healing through the mind', calling it 'a miserable objection'." (Pattie, 1994, p. 2).
  61. ^ See, for instance, Peter (2005), especially, pp.3-5.
  62. ^ Hilgard (1980), p.xvi.
  63. ^ Gassner's (supposedly) supernatural therapeutic interventions had been debunked by Mesmer, himself, in 1775, when he visited Gassner, and observed him in action, at the behest of Maximilian III Joseph, Elector of Bavaria (see "Mesmer and Gassner" at Crabtree, 1993, pp. 8-10). And it is to this activity of Mesmer's that Gauld (1992, p. 3) attributes the decision to admit Mesmer to the Bavarian Academy of Sciences.
  64. ^ Lafontain remained a committed "magnetist", publishing the journal Le Magnétiseur: Journal du Magnétisme Animal in Geneva, continuously, from 1859 to 1872.
  65. ^ Namely: "We can see from the facts that this principle, in accordance with the practical rules I shall set forth, can cure nervous ailments directly and other ailments indirectly" -- Buranelli's (1975, p. 102) translation of "On reconnoîtra par les faits, d'après les règles pratiques que j'établirai, que ce principe peut guérir immédiatement les maladies des nerfs, & médiatement les autres" (Mesmer, 1779, p. 81).
  66. ^ Crabtree (1993), p. 16.
  67. ^ Crabtree (1993, p. 16) notes that, having seen Mesmer at work, d'Eslon was convinced . . . of the reality of animal magnetism" and that d'Eslon, "constantly in search of ways to benefit his patients, . . . placed himself under Mesmer's tutorship".
    Crabtree (loc. cit.) also notes that, as "a disciple of the surgeon J.L. Petit and a highly respected member of the powerful [Paris] Faculty of Medicine, d'Eslon gave a prima facie legitimacy to the practice of animal magnetism"; and, further, that "[d'Eslon's] high standing with the faculty held out the hope that that august body might be persuaded to put its stamp of approval on Mesmer's discovery".
  68. ^ Pattie (1994) remarks that, as a consequence of this relationship, Mesmer had "permitted [d'Eslon] to observe his work for four years".
  69. ^ d'Eslon (1780), pp. 40-89; see Pattie (1994), pp. 115-116 for brief summary of the disorders which d'Eslon reported that Mesmer had treated.
  70. ^ For an historical account of changes in the understanding of "the imagination" over the centuries, see Fischer-Homberger (1979).
  71. ^ Translation taken from Goldsmith (1934), p. 155.
  72. ^ Duveen & Klickstein (1955), p. 285: it would seem that application of the term misdemeanour (viz. wrong behaviour) in this case -- as distinct from misfeasance or malpractice -- is intended to denote something similar to the military notion of "conduct unbecoming".
  73. ^ d'Eslon (1782)
  74. ^ The reason that similar professional ostracism was not taken against Mesmer was that Mesmer was not, and had never been, either a docteur-régent or a member of the Paris Faculty of Medicine.
  75. ^ See d'Eslon (1784a).
  76. ^ Pattie (1994, p. 131) estimated that there were something like 60 of these patients who left Mesmer and went with d'Eslon.
  77. ^ See, for example, Brown (1933); Gauld (1992), pp. 6-7; Crabtree (1993), pp. 16-18; and Pattie (1994), pp. 86, 94-116.
  78. ^ "Ceux qui savent le secret en doutent plus que ceux qui l'ignorent", (Deleuze, 1813, p. 24).
  79. ^ "[The Royal Commissions] had not been requested by Mesmer or any of his followers. It is possible that some noblemen, who were patients of d'Eslon, used their influence to have [the commissions] set up; it is also possible that the King and his advisors were annoyed by the strife [between Mesmer and d'Eslon] and were determined either to accept animal magnetism or to get rid of it" (Pattie, 1994, p. 142).
  80. ^ According to Darnton (1968, p. 50), d'Eslon "[died] while being mesmerized in August 1786".
  81. ^ Grimm (1880), p. 446.
  82. ^ See "Encounter with Maximillian Hell" at Pattie (1994), pp. 33-41.
  83. ^ In other words, the initial, apparent, "from a first impression" plausibility -- in contrast to so-called "pro tanto ("to that extent") plausibity", a state of affairs in which later empirical experience shows that the "plausibility" involved is far deeper than simply superficial. For more on "prima facie plausiblity" see "2.3 Plausibility" in Bartha (2019).
  84. ^ See Mesmer (1779), p. 35.
  85. ^ On 5 January 1775, Mesmer had sent an open letter to a number of eminent scientists and, also, to a number of German and foreign scientific associations (see Mesmer, 1784, pp. 21-22), in which he presented the details of his over-arching theoretical "principle", describing its "nature", "action", and "properties" through direct analogies to both electricity and magnetism, and inviting their views and comments. He received only one reply: that from the Berlin Academy: "The Academy's reply was negative and, in Mesmer's view, showed a complete misunderstanding of animal as distinguished from mineral magnetism" (Pattie, 1994, p. 42). For details of the Academy's reply see Mesmer, 1784, pp. 21-22 (translated at Pattie, 1994, pp. 45-46).
  86. ^ See, for instance, Gallo & Finger (2000), Hadlock (2000), Finger & Gallo (2004), and Kennaway (2010, 2012).
  87. ^ "Mesmer regarded animal magnetism as a matter of "sympathetic vibration" just as much as music, and argued that it could be communicated, propagated and reinforced by sounds" (Kennaway, 2012, p. 273) -- Mesmer's assertion is in his Proposition 19 (at Mesmer, 1779, p. 79).
  88. ^ See, for instance, Hyatt King (1945), and Meyer & Allen (1988).
  89. ^ Franklin was most emphatic that his device was an Armonica (and not, as many modern writers suppose, a Harmonica), having named it "in honour of ["armonia",] the Italian word for "Harmony"." (Meyer & Allen, 1988, p. 185.
  90. ^ Turner, Christopher (2006), "Mesmeromania, or, The Tale of the Tub: The Therapeutic Powers of Animal Magnetism", Cabinet, No. 21, (Spring 2006).
  91. ^ See, also, Landefield (1976).
  92. ^ Paulet, 1784, pp. 117-118: English translation taken from Bloch, 1980, p. 83.
  93. ^ For instance, see his Catechism, at Paulet, p. 117.
  94. ^ Namely, at Mesmer, 1781, p. 189.
  95. ^ This statement by Mesmer is directly supported by the observation of Binet and Féré (1888, p. 9) that "the patients were ranged in several rows round the baquet, connected with each other by cords passed round their bodies, and by a second chain, formed by joining hands" (emphasis added to original).
  96. ^ For instance, "as water is to the mill" (Mesmer, 1799, p. 24.), "as wind or water are to a mill" (p. 100), etc.
  97. ^ Anon (1911/1912), p. 79; translation of Bailly (1784a), pp. 5-6.
  98. ^ Anon (1911/1912), p. 80; translation of Bailly (1784a), pp. 6-7.
  99. ^ Anon (1911/1912), p. 80; translation of Bailly (1784a), pp. 7-8.
  100. ^ At Poissonnier, et al. (1784), pp. 9-19.
  101. ^ Ibid., p. 10.
  102. ^ In 1877, James Braid's colleague, William Carpenter observed that, "the nervous paroxysm termed the "crisis" . . . [that was manifested] in the hysterical subjects who constituted the great bulk of [Mesmer's] patients . . . was at once recognized by medical men as only a modified form of what is commonly known as an "hysteric fit"; the influence of the imitative tendency being manifested as it is in cases where such fits run through a school, nunnery, factory, or revivalist-meeting, in which a number of suitable subjects are collected together" (Carpenter, 1877, p. 17).
  103. ^ In 1972, Ronald Shor concluded (1972, p. 20) that, overall, the patients' "agitated reactions" were probably due to three factors:
    (i) "expectations deriving from medieval demonic exorcism rites, the dancing manias (St. Vitus's Dance, for example), and possibly epilepsy";
    (ii) "a probable aftereffect of anxiety release after direct symptom suppression" (Shor drew particular attention to the case of Maria Theresia von Paradis); and
    (iii) "a derivation of the ‘’vapeurs’’, the hysterical fainting and nervous fits fashionable among society women at that time".
  104. ^ The (standard at the time) term "animal economy" is derived from the original meaning of economy, "the management of a household", and is best understood by the definition supplied by Jean-Joseph Menuret in his article, Œconomie Animale (Médecine)", in Denis Diderot's Encyclopédie of 1765 (at Vol XI, pp. 360-366):
    "This term, taken in the most exact and common sense, refers only to the order, mechanism, and overall set of the functions and movements which sustain life in animals, the perfect, universal and constant exercise of which, performed with ease and alacrity, is the flourishing state of health, the least disturbance of which is itself illness, and the full ceasing of which is the extreme, diametrical opposite of life, that is, death. (translation taken from Huneman (2008, p. 618, emphasis in originsl).
  105. ^ Anon (1911/1912), p. 137; translation of Bailly (1784a), p. 61.
  106. ^ Anon (1911/1912), p. 137; translation of Bailly (1784a), pp. 61-62.
  107. ^ Anon (1911/1912), p. 137; translation of Bailly (1784a), pp. 62-63.
  108. ^ Anon (1911/1912), p. 137; translation of Bailly (1784a), pp. 63-64.
  109. ^ He also notes that, in their "magnetic" treatment of 37 patients, the Commissioners were unable to produce a single "crisis" (loc.cit.).
  110. ^ According to Dingwall (1967, p. 6), Mesmer's earlier conceptualization of "animal gravity" was, later, replaced by his more sophisticated concept of "animal magnetism".
  111. ^ p. 276 in "Arguments to prove that Animal Magnetism is the cause of sympathy in Man and other animals, and in plants, &c.", Sibly (1820), pp. 276-277.
  112. ^ Namely, "correctness of behaviour", as distinct from its counterpart, orthodoxia, "correctness of theory".
  113. ^ For more on "action at a distance" see Hesse, (1961); and, especially, Kovach (1979), pp. 161–171.
  114. ^ Specifically referring to Browne (1658), pp. 83-84.
  115. ^ Pollitt (2019), p. 70.
  116. ^ "Magnetic demonstrator" – Alan Gauld's term (Gauld, 1992 p. 204) – accurately describes Lafontaine. Whilst in the U.K. Lafontaine only demonstrated "magnetic" phenomena; he did not demonstrate its applications to the treatment of patients at any time (in public or private).
  117. ^ Yeates (2018), p. 52: "'lower' phenomena included: displays of amnesia, state dependent memory, loss of sense of identity, suggestibility, heightened memory, deadening of the senses, insensibility to pain, rapport with the operator, and Schlafwachen ("sleep-waking": see Elliotson, 1835, pp. 627-630; Herfner, 1844, pp. 81-83, etc.)." -- Yeates also notes that "[al]though the defining "somnolence" of the sleep-waking state — a subset of sleepwalking — was often combined with "somniloquism" ("sleeptalking"), it was never combined with "ambulism" ("walking") of any sort (Barth, 1851, p. 24).".
  118. ^ Yeates (2018), p. 52: "'higher' phenomena included: displays of transposition of the senses (hearing with fingers, sensing colours with the soles of the feet, etc.: see Melton, 2001a, 533-534; 2001b, pp. 1027, 1359-1360, 1499, 1585, etc.), physical rapport or "community of sensation" (subjects experiencing the operator's physical sensations of taste, smell, etc.: see Townshend, 1840, p. 65; Melton, 2001a, p. 319, 2001b, pp. 989-990, etc.), clairvoyance (seeing persons/events distant in time or place: see Melton, 2001a, pp. 297-301), psychical rapport (able to read operator's thoughts, and be mesmerised from a distance: see Crabtree, 2008, p. 569), and ecstasy ("immersed in an elevated state of consciousness with an awareness of spiritual things": see Crabtree, 1988, p.xxiv; 2008, p. 569)."
  119. ^ Salas & Salas (1996), p. 70; Franklin, et al., 2002, p. 335; emphasis added.
  120. ^ See Donaldson (2006).
  121. ^ Joseph-Marie-François de Lassone (1717–1788) [fr], personal physician to the King Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, and President of the Paris Faculty of Medicine.
  122. ^ Mesmer (1781), p. 198; translation at Donaldson (2005), p. 575 -- note that (a) the passages in square brackets come from Donaldson, and (b) Donaldson cites the passage as coming from page 196, rather than 198, of Mesmer's work
  123. ^ As Yeates (2018, p. 61) observes, "[the presence of] gifts in a child's Xmas stocking does not support claims for the supposed existence of Santa Claus".
  124. ^ a b Salas & Salas (1996), p. 71; Franklin, et al. (2002), p. 338.
  125. ^ "One cannot avoid the suspicion that the Commissioners were relieved that they were able to extricate themselves from a full investigation of the remarkable phenomena they had observed at the baquet, an investigation for which at the time there was no precedent and no methodology..." (Forrest, p. 67).
  126. ^ Salas & Salas (1996), p. 71; Franklin, et al., 2002, p. 338; the Commissioners were quoting statements from Mesmer (1781), pp. 35, 37.
  127. ^ Godwin (1785), pp. 37-38, translates the relevant passage as follows (citing Mesmer (1781), pp. 35, 37):
    Upon this head the commissioners are of the opinion of M. Mesmer. He rejected the cure of diseases, when this method of proving the magnetism was proposed to him by a member of the academy of sciences: "It is a mistake", replied he, "to imagine that this kind of proof is unanswerable; it cannot be demonstrated that either the physician or the medicine causes the recovery of the patient."
  128. ^ And, according to Pattie (1994, p. 147), it was "in their quest of [an experience of these] momentary effects [that] the commissioners decided to submit themselves to magnetization."
  129. ^ "en dépouillant ces effets de toutes les illusions qui peuvent s’y mêler",
  130. ^ Translation taken from Godwin (1785), p. 38; other translations at: Anon (1911/1912), p. 81; Salas & Salas (1996), p. 71; Franklin, et al. (2002), pp. 338-339; and Donaldson (2014), p. 47.
  131. ^ Stengers (2003, p. 14):
    "We see men succumb, it seems, to the same sickness, cured by taking contradictory treatments, and in taking entirely different treatments; Nature is thus powerful enough to support life in spite of poor treatment, and able to triumph over both illness and its remedy. If she has this power to resist remedies, then she has all the more reason to have the power to work without them."
  132. ^ The translation is taken from Godwin (1785), pp. 33-35; for other translations see Anon (1911/1912), pp. 80-81; Salas & Salas (1996), pp. 70-71; Franklin, et al. (2002), p. 337); and Donaldson (2014), p. 45.
  133. ^ Yeates (2018), p. 52; emphasis added.
  134. ^ Pattie (1994), p. 147.
  135. ^ For Lavoisier's involvement with the investigations in general, see Lavoisier (1865), passim, and Donaldson (2017), passim.
  136. ^ For a specific example of Lavoisier's experimental design, see Lavoisier's "Plan d'Experiemces" at Lavoisier (1865, pp. 511-513); also, see the English translation ("Lavoisier's Plan of Experiments") at Donaldson (2017, pp. 167).
  137. ^ Braid spoke of these at a conversazione he conducted in Manchester on 22 April 1844; see: Anon (1844); Bramwell (1903), pp. 144-149; and Yeates (2013), pp. 741-743.
  138. ^ "After defining the issues to be investigated, the commissioners conducted their investigation in a very systematic manner. They employed public observation, self study, case study, and hypothesis testing." (McConkey & Barnier, 1991, p. 78)
  139. ^ Salas & Salas (1996), p. 71; Franklin, et al., 2002, p. 339.
  140. ^ Godwin, the translator, in a footnote (p. 23) notes that, "the diameter of this box is usually large enough to admit of fifty persons landing round its circumference."
  141. ^ Translation taken from Godwin (1785), p. 23: other translations at Anon (1911/1912), p. 79; at Salas & Salas (1996), p. 69; at Franklin, 2002, p. 333; and Donaldson (2014), p. 41.
  142. ^ It is significant that not only was physicist Le Roy an expert on all things electrical, but also that, in 1749 with Patrick d'Arcy, he had constructed of one of the first-ever electroscopes (often described as a "floating repulsion electrometer": Hackmann (1998), p. 220).
  143. ^ Translation taken from Godwin (1785), pp. 24-25: other translations at: Anon (1911/1912), p. 79; Salas & Salas (1996), p. 69, and at Franklin, 2002, p. 334; and Donaldson (2014), p. 42.
  144. ^ See Bailly (1784a); translated at Godwin (1785), Anon (1911/1912), pp. 79-84, 133-137, Salas & Salas (1996), Franklin, et al. (2002), and (Donaldson (2014), pp. 39-67.
  145. ^ a b c d Yeates (2018), p. 51.
  146. ^ Bailly (1784a), p. 48.
  147. ^ At Bailly, 1784a, pp. 1-3.
  148. ^ Bailly, 1784a, p. 3.
  149. ^ This is Godwin's (1785, p. 21) translation of Bailly (1784a, p. 3), which is directly quoting Mesmer's (1779, p.vi), "la Nature offer un moyen universel de guérir et le préserver les Hommes".
  150. ^ a b Anon (1911/1912), p. 79; translation of Bailly (1784a), pp. 1-3.
  151. ^ See Bailly, 1784a, pp. 64-66: translated at Godwin (1785), pp. 106-108; and also at Anon (1911/1912), p. 137; Salas & Salas (1996), p. 83; Franklin, et al. (2002), p. 363; and Donaldson (2014), pp. 75-76.
  152. ^ Anon (1911/1912), p. 137; translation of Bailly (1784a), pp. 64-65.
  153. ^ Anon (1911/1912), p. 137; translation of Bailly (1784a), pp. 65-66.
  154. ^ Bailly (1784a).
  155. ^ a b Founders Online (n.d.).
  156. ^ Note that both Anon (1911/1912, p. 249) and Lanska & Lanska (2007, p. 313) refer to "more than 20,000 copies", while Eden (1974, p. 15) speaks of 60,000 copies. Regardless of which source is correct, it was certainly a considerable number.
  157. ^ Ogden (2012), p. 143.
  158. ^ More recent translations at Anon (1911/1912), pp. 79-84, 133-137; Salas & Salas (1996); Franklin, et al. (2002); and Donaldson (2014), pp. 39-67.
  159. ^ Anon (1837).
  160. ^ Bailly (1784a), pp. 57-58; translation taken from Anon (1911/1912), p. 136.
  161. ^ These conclusions are consistent with the declaration made on 1 May 1784 by the eminent French chemist, Claude Louis Berthollet -- both a member of the Paris Faculty of Medicine and the Royal Academy of Sciences -- when leaving Mesmer's training in 1784 (halfway through the course of instruction that he had undertaken at the specific request of his patient, the Duke of Orléans, in the hope of learning Mesmer's "secret"), that everything that he had observed could be attributed to "the imagination", "touch", and "imitation" (declaration reprinted at Figuier, 1860, pp. 177–178; translations at Podmore, 1908, p. 55, and at Pattie, 1994, p. 133).
  162. ^ Winter (1801), pp. 11-12: The "lectures" in question were delivered by Jean-Bonnoit de Mainauduc (1750–1797), a former student of Charles d'Eslon.
  163. ^ The translation is from Salas & Salas (1996), p. 70 (and Franklin, et al. 2002, p. 336); other translations at Godwin (1785), pp. 30-31, Anon (1911/1912), p. 80, and Donaldson (2014), p. 44.
  164. ^ Bailly (1800): translations at Bailly and Others (1963); at Bailly, et al. (2002); and at Donaldson (2014), pp. 68-76. See also, Crabtree (1993), pp. 92-94, Pattie (1994), pp. 154-155.
  165. ^ : English translation at Bailly and Others (1963), Bailly, et al. (2002), and Donaldson (2014), pp. 77-83.
  166. ^ See: Charcot, 1893, 1897; and Bernheim, 1888, pp. 285-286; 1889, p. 202.
  167. ^ Poissonnier, Caille, Mauduyt de La Varenne & Andry (1784): summary at Crabtree (1993), p. 28, and at Pattie (1994), pp. 156-158.
  168. ^ Although they, too, used blindfolded subjects (Pattie, 1994), p. 156.
  169. ^ Poissonnier (1784), p. 2; the translation is from Pattie (1994) p. 156.
  170. ^ Pattie (1994), pp. 156-157, paraphrasing Poissonnier (1784), p. 12.
  171. ^ Burdin & Dubois (1841, pp. 136-137.
  172. ^ Citing Poissonnier (1784), p. 35.
  173. ^ Citing Poissonnier (1784), loc. cit.
  174. ^ de Jussieu (1784): summary at Crabtree (1993), pp. 28-29, and at Pattie (1994), pp. 152-153.
  175. ^ The translation is taken from Teste (1843), p. 10.
  176. ^ Thomas d'Onglée (1785), p. 4.
  177. ^ Pattie (1994), pp. 155-156.
  178. ^ d'Eslon had already been expelled, for essentially the same reasons, a year earlier.
  179. ^ Thomas d'Onglée (1785), pp. 4-6.
  180. ^ See Crabtree (1993), pp. 31-32; and Pattie (1994), pp. 155-156.
  181. ^ Crabtree's translation (1993, at p. 32), of Thomas d'Onglée (1785), p. 8: "Aucun Docteur ne se déclarera partisan du Magnétisme animal, ni par ses écrits, ni par sa pratique, sous peine d’être rayé du Tableau des Docteurs-Régens." (emphasis in original).
  182. ^ d'Eslon (1784b): abridged translation at d'Eslon (1963); also, see discussion at Pattie (1994), pp. 167–172.
  183. ^ Paraphrasing d'Eslon, (1784b), p. 25.
  184. ^ Note that it was published in The Hague, rather than in Paris, thereby avoiding the need for approval by the Royal censor.
  185. ^ That is, 5 girls, 6 boys, 47 women, and 56 men.
  186. ^ "The book . . . was compiled under great pressure; there are many mistakes in proper names, and the compiler has omitted to take notice that some of the reports deal with more than one patient" (Podmore, 1909, p. 9).
  187. ^ Most likely these particular class notes were based upon the notes prepared by Mesmer's close associate, Nicolas Bergasse for Mesmer's students -- who were "dissatisfied with Mesmer's teaching" and "resorted to Bergasse, asking him to give them a more coherent account" (Pattie, 1994, p. 131). Pattie (1994, p. 132) also notes that, in consequence of "Mesmer's poor command of French", Bergasse "frequently interrupted Mesmer when he attempted to address the assembly [of his students]".
  188. ^ Pattie (1994), p. 212.
  189. ^ All who Mesmer taught were required to sign a contract declaring that they would not reveal any of Mesmer's doctrines, teach mesmerism to others, or open a mesmeric clinic without Mesmer's express permission: see Forrest (1999, pp. 37-38) for a translation of a (typical) contract -- in this case, the contract signed by the Marquis de Lafayette on 5 April 1784.
  190. ^ For the third edition see Caullet de Veaumorel (1785b); and for an English translation of that version, see Caullet de Veaumorel (1785c). Also, see Pattie (1994), pp. 212-215.
  191. ^ Note that, although this appears in the "original's" Introduction (i.e., 1785b, pp. 14-15), it is absent from the English version (i.e., 1785c).
  192. ^ "I have changed absolutely nothing to these words, so as not to be accused of having wanted to introduce something foreign to his Doctrine" ("Je n’ai absolument rien changé à ces dictées, asin de ne pas être accusé d’y avoir voulu introduire quelque chose d’étranger à sa Doctrine": 1785b, p. 14).
  193. ^ See (1785c, p.viii), which is an abridgement of the original text, at (1785, pp. 14-15).
  194. ^ For Mesmer's letter see Mesmer (1785); and for Caullet de Veaumorel's rejoinder, see Caullet de Veaumorel (1785a).
  195. ^ Mesmer, 1784a; 1784b.
  196. ^ The contributors included aristocrats, both Roman Catholic and Protestant clerics, medical practitioners, and both the Marquis de Puységur and his brother the Comte de Chastenet de Puységur [fr].
  197. ^ Shermer (1996), pp. 66, 67.
  198. ^ However, as Lanska (2019, p. 168) observes,
    "[It was only] with rare (and methodologically limited) exceptions, [that] comparative prospective clinical trials were . . . employed [before] the twentieth century, thus allowing many ineffective and harmful traditional therapies to remain in routine use by orthodox physicians (e.g., bleeding, blistering, purging, and administration of highly toxic heavy metals), a point repeatedly made by quacks and their supporters." (p. 169).
  199. ^ In 2002, McConkey and Perry (p. 329) observed that "the Franklin Commission's scientific findings on the nature of animal magnetism remain intact and unchallenged".
  200. ^ They were called "tractors" -- from the Latin tractum, 'to draw' -- because they were drawn (or rubbed) across the skin.
  201. ^ See Haygarth (1801), Booth (2005), and Lanska (2019).
  202. ^ A set of Perkins' patent tractors are on display at the Wellcome Galleries, at London's Science Museum (see: [1]).
  203. ^ Haygarth (1801), p. 4.
  204. ^ Younger (1887), p. 69.
  205. ^ See Collyer (1843), p. 10; and (1871), pp. 49-50.
  206. ^ Footnote at Atkinson (1843), p. 294.
  207. ^ The additional, welcome significance of this discovery was that, to the supporters of animal magnetism, and to the supporters of phrenology, "the ['legitimacy' of the] theoretical position of each ‘science’ had now been confirmed by the other" (Yeates, 2018, p. 54).
  208. ^ For a description of two exemplar cases, see Anon (1843), pp. 205-206.
  209. ^ See Collyer (1843), pp. 8-20.
  210. ^ See Braid, 1842a, pp. 105-149.
  211. ^ See Braid (1843b).
  212. ^ From his extensive experiments, Braid concluded that all of the observed 'phreno-magnetic’ phenomena were entirely due to “[excitement] by auricular suggestion, [or] by muscular suggestion, or [by] manipulating either the head, trunk, or extremities” (Braid, 1844, p. 181).
  213. ^ See, for instance, the views of Newnham (1845).
  214. ^ Pitres (1891), p. 499.
  215. ^ see Pitres (1891), pp. 97-116.
  216. ^ Note that, in contrast to the being-led-into implications of the term "induction", the references to the subject being-thrown-into strongly suggests a sudden, uninhibited, knee-jerk kind of (entirely involuntary) bio-physiological reflex on the part of the subject.
  217. ^ Pitres (1891), p. 98.
  218. ^ Note that many modern English texts repeat the typographical error that occurs in the mistaken rendering of Moll's "zones hypno-frénatrices" (Moll, 1890, p. 26) as "zones hypno-férnatrices" in Moll (1890b), p. 36.
  219. ^ Pitres (1891), p. 101.
  220. ^ See, for example, Pitres (1891), pp. 103, 107, 109, 499, etc.
  221. ^ In noting that "the degree of hypnosis attainable does not depend on the physician's procedure but on the chance reaction of the patient", Freud also speaks of the "strikingly soothing and lulling effect . . . [of] stroking the patient's face and body with both hands continuously for from five to ten minutes" in those cases where he was "not satisfied with the [degree of] hypnosis attained".
  222. ^ See Freud, 1957/1895, pp. 107-112; especially the footnote at pp. 110-111.
  223. ^ Freud's visits were driven by his desire to investigate the claims and methods of the "Nancy School" (or "Suggestion School"), and compare them with those of the "Paris School" (or "Hysteria School") with which he was already familiar in great detail, from his own extended studies at the Salpêtrière with Charcot.
  224. ^ Freud (1957/1895), p. 110.
  225. ^ See, for instance, Rosen (1946); James (1975); and Ridgway (1993, and 1994).
  226. ^ See: Elliotson (1845); (1847a); (1847b); (1847c); (1848); and (1852); and Esdaile (1846); (1849); (1850); and (1853).
  227. ^ This issue is, for example, central to the "contentious" question of whether (or not) the cephalopod's eye and the vertebrate's eye evolved independently.

References

Note that "many pamphlets on magnetism bear false imprints; they purport to have been printed in London, The Hague, Philadelphia, Peking, etc. In this way they evaded French censorship" (Pattie, 1994, p. 179).

  • Anon (1837), Animal Magnetism: Report of Dr. Franklin and other Commissioners, charged by the King of France with the Examination of the Animal Magnetism as practised at Paris: Translated from the French, with an Historical Outline of the "Science", an Abstract of the report on Magnetic Experiments made by a committee of the Royal Academy of Medicine in 1831, and remarks on Col. Stone's pamphlet, Philadelphia: H. Perkins: includes (at pp. 1-44), a reprint of Godwin (1785), pp. 1-108.
  • Anon (1843), "Recent Demonstrations of Animal Magnetism", Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, Vol. 12, No. 598, (Saturday, 15 July 1843), pp. 205-207.
  • Anon (1844), "Conversazione on "Hypnotism" -- At the Royal Manchester Institution", The Medical Times, Vol. 10, No. 243, (18 May 1844), pp. 137-139.
  • Anon (1911/1912), "Nova et Vetera ('New and Old '): Modern Faith Healing: F. Anton Mesmer]", The British Medical Journal, Vol. 2, No. 2658, (9 December 1911), pp. 1555-1559; Vol. 1, No. 2663, (13 January 1912), pp. 79-84; Vol. 1, No. 2664, (20 January 1912), pp. 133-137; Vol. 1, No. 2665, (27 January 1912), pp. 199-201; and Vol. 1, No. 2666, (3 February, 1912), pp. 249-252: includes (at pp. 79-84, 133-137) a translation of Bailly (1784a), and (at pp. 199-201) a translation of Bailly (1800).
  • Armando, D. (trans. J. Johnson) (2018), " Magnetic Crises, Political Convulsions: The Mesmerists in the Constituent Assembly", Annales Historiques de la Révolution Française, Vol. 391, No. 1, (January-March 2018), pp. 129-152.
  • Armando, D. & Belhoste, B. (trans. J. Johnson) (2018), "Mesmerism Between the End of the Old Regime and the Revolution: Social Dynamics and Political Issues", Annales Historiques de la Révolution Française, Vol. 391, No. 1, (January-March 2018), pp. 3-26.
  • Atkinson, H.G. [1843], "On Mesmero-Phrenology, and the Function of the Cerebellum: Being a Paper Read at the Second Meeting of the Phrenological Association, July the 4th, 1843; Dr. Elliotson in the Chair", The Medical Times, Vol. 8, No. 202, (5 August 1843), pp. 294-296; No. 203, (12 August 1843), pp. 308-311.
  • Bailly, J.S. (ed.) (1784a), Rapport des Commissaires chargés par le Roi, de l’examen du magnétisme animal, Imprimé par ordre du Roi. Paris: Imprimerie Royale.
  • Bailly, J.S. (ed.) (1784b), Exposé des experiences qui ont éte faites pour l'examen du magnetisme animal: lu à l'Académie des Sciences . . . le 4 Septembre 1784 ('Exposition of the experiments that were carried out to examine Animal Magenetism: Read at the Academy of Sciences . . . on the 4th September 1784'), Paris: Chez Moutard.
  • Bailly, J.S. (1800). Rapport secret sur le mesmérisme. Le Conservateur, Vol. 1, pp. 146–155. 
  • Bailly, J.-S., and Others (1963), "Secret Report on Mesmerism, or Animal Magnetism", pp. 3-7, in The Nature Of Hypnosis: Selected Basic Writings, ed. Ronald E. Shor and Martin T. Orne, New York, NY: Holt Rinehart and Winston, Inc.: a translation of Bailly (1800).
  • Bailly, J.-S., Franklin, B., de Bory, G., Lavoisier, A., Majault, M.J., Sallin, C.L., d’Arcet, J., Guillotin, J.-I., & Le Roy, J.B., "Secret Report on Mesmerism or Animal Magnetism", International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, vol. 50, No. 4, (October 2002), pp. 364-368: a translation of Bailly (1800) -- a reprint of Bailly and Others (1963). doi:10.1080/00207140208410110
  • Barth, G. (1851), The Mesmerist's Manual of Phenomena and Practice: With Directions for Applying Mesmerism to the Cure of Diseases, and the Methods of Producing Mesmeric Phenomena: Intended for Domestic Use and the Instruction of Beginners (Second Edition), London: H. Baillière.
  • Bartha, Paul (2019), "Analogy and Analogical Reasoning", in Edward N. Zalta (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2019 Edition)'.
  • Belhoste, B. (trans. J. Johnson) (2018), "Franz Anton Mesmer: Magnetiser, Moralist, and Republican", Annales Historiques de la Révolution Française, Vol. 391, No. 1, (January-March 2018), pp. 27-56.
  • Bergasse, N. (1784), Considérations sur le Magnétisme Animal, ou, sur la Théorie du Monde et des êtres organisés, d'après les principes de M. Mesmer ('Considerations on Animal Magnetism, or, on the Theory of the World and Organized Beings, according to the principles of M. Mesmer'), The Hague: n.p.
  • Bernheim, H. (1888), De la Suggestion et de son Application à la Thérapeutique, Paris: Octave Doin.
  • Bernheim, H. (trans. Herter, C.A.) (1889), Suggestive Therapeutics: A Treatise on the Nature and Uses of Hypnotism, New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons: an English translation of Bernheim (1888).
  • Bersani, F. (2011), "Mesmerism: From an Ambiguous Physical and Medical Canon to Psychology", pp. 59-72 in A. Calanchi, G. Castellani, G. Morisco, and G. Turchetti (eds.), Interfacing Science, Literature, and the Humanities: ACUME 2, Volume 7: The Case and the Canon: Anomalies, Discontinuities, Metaphors between Science and Literature, Göttingen: V&R unipress. ISBN 978-3-89971-681-8
  • Best, M., Neuhauser, D., and Slavin, L. (2003), "Evaluating Mesmerism, Paris, 1784: The Controversy over the Blinded Placebo Controlled Trials has not Stopped", BMJ Quality & Safety, 12(3) (June 2003), pp. 232-233.
  • Binet, Alfred & Féré, Charles (1888), Animal Magnetism, New York: D Appleton and Company.
  • Bloch, George (1980), Mesmerism: A Translation of the Original Scientific and Medical writings of F.A. Mesmer, Los Altos, CA: William Kaufman. ISBN 0-913232-88-2
  • Bonnefoy, J.B. (1784), Analyse raisonnée des Rapports des Commissaires chargés par le Roi de l'examen du Magnétisme Animal ('A Reasoned Analysis of the Reports of the Commissioners appointed by the King to examine Animal Magnetism'), Lyon and Paris: Prault.
  • Booth, C., "The Rod of Aesculapios: John Haygarth (1740–1827) and Perkins’ Metallic Tractors", Journal of Medical Biography, Vol. 13, No. 3, (August 2005), pp. 155-161.
  • Braid, J. (1843a), Neurypnology or the Rationale of Nervous Sleep Considered in Relation with Animal Magnetism Illustrated by Numerous Cases of its Successful Application in the Relief and Cure of Disease, London: John Churchill.
    • N.B. Braid's Errata, detailing a number of important corrections that need to be made to the foregoing text, is on the un-numbered page following p. 265.
  • Braid, J. (1843b), "Observations on the Phenomena of Phreno-Mesmerism", The Medical Times, Vol. 9, No. 216, (11 November 1843), pp. 74-75.
  • Braid, J. (1844), "Experimental Inquiry, to Determine whether Hypnotic and Mesmeric Manifestations can be Adduced in Proof of Phrenology", The Medical Times, Vol. 11, No.  271, (30 November 1844), pp. 181-182.
  • Bramwell, J.M. (1903), Hypnotism: Its History, Practice and Theory, London: Grant Richards.
  • Brandeis, L.D. (1913), "What Publicity Can Do", Harper's Weekly, Vol. 58, No. 2974, (20 December 1913), pp. 10-13.
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External links

  • Museum of the History of Medicine and Pharmacy, at Lyon.
  • Museum of the History of Medicine and Pharmacy, at Lyon: Mesmer's Baquet.
  • Glass Armonica by Benjamin Franklin, The Bakken Museum Artifact Collection, (catalog no. 81.064): The Bakken. . Archived from the original on 2021-09-08. Retrieved 2021-09-08.

royal, commission, animal, magnetism, involved, entirely, separate, independent, french, royal, commissions, each, appointed, louis, 1784, that, were, conducted, simultaneously, committee, composed, four, physicians, from, paris, faculty, medicine, faculté, mé. The Royal Commission on Animal Magnetism involved two entirely separate and independent French Royal Commissions each appointed by Louis XVI in 1784 that were conducted simultaneously by a committee composed of four physicians from the Paris Faculty of Medicine Faculte de medecine de Paris and five scientists from the Royal Academy of Sciences Academie des sciences i e the Franklin Commission named for Benjamin Franklin and a second committee composed of five physicians from the Royal Society of Medicine Societe Royale de Medecine i e the Society Commission Each Commission took five months to complete its investigations The Franklin Report was presented to the King on 11 August 1784 and was immediately published and very widely circulated throughout France and neighbouring countries and the Society Report was presented to the King five days later on 16 August 1784 The Franklin Commission s investigations are notable as a very early classic example of a systematic controlled trial which not only applied sham and genuine procedures to patients with sham and genuine disorders but significantly was the first to use the blindfolding of both the investigators and their subjects 1 2 3 The report of the Franklin Royal Commission of 1784 is a masterpiece of its genre and enduring testimony to the power and beauty of reason Never in history has such an extraordinary and luminous group as the Franklin Commission been gathered together in the service of rational inquiry by the methods of experimental science For this reason alone the Report of the Franklin Commission is a key document in the history of human reason It should be rescued from obscurity translated into all languages and reprinted by organizations dedicated to the unmasking of quackery and the defense of rational thought Stephen Jay Gould 1989 4 dd Both sets of Commissioners were specifically charged with investigating the claims made by Charles d Eslon for the existence of a substantial rather than metaphorical animal magnetism le magnetisme animal and of a similarly non metaphorical physical magnetic fluid le fluide magnetique Further having completed their investigations into the claims of d Eslon that is they did not examine Franz Mesmer Mesmer s theories Mesmer s principles Mesmer s practices Mesmer s techniques Mesmer s apparatus Mesmer s claims Mesmer s cures or even mesmerism 5 itself they were each required to make a separate and distinct report 6 Before the Franklin Commission s investigations began Antoine Lavoisier had studied the writings of d Eslon and had drawn up a plan for the conduct of the inquiry He decided that the commissioners should not study any of the alleged cures but that they should determine whether animal magnetism existed by trying to magnetize a person without his knowledge or making him think that he had been magnetized when in fact he had not This plan was adopted by the commissioners and the results came out as Lavoisier had predicted Frank A Pattie 1994 7 dd From their investigations both Commissions concluded a that there was no evidence of any kind to support d Eslon s claim for the substantial physical existence of either his supposed animal magnetism or his supposed magnetic fluid and b that all of the effects that they had observed could be attributed to a physiological rather than metaphysical agency Whilst each Commission implicitly accepted that there was no collusion pretence or extensive subject training involved on the part of d Eslon they both independently concluded that all of the phenomena they had observed during each of their investigations could be directly attributed to contact 8 9 imagination 10 and or imitation 11 For clearness of reasoning and strict impartiality the Franklin Commissioners report has never been surpassed After detailing the various experiments made and their results they came to the conclusion that the only proof advanced in support of Animal Magnetism was the effects it produced on the human body that those effects could be produced without passes or other magnetic manipulations that all these manipulations and passes and ceremonies never produce any effect at all if employed without the patient s knowledge and that therefore imagination did and animal magnetism did not account for the phenomena Charles Mackay 1841 emphasis added to original 12 dd Contents 1 Reasons for the investigation 1 1 Tensions within the Royal family 1 2 Social impact 1 3 Festering political issues 1 4 Professional tensions 1 5 Scientific issues 1 6 Medical issues 1 7 Religious issues 2 The two Commissions 2 1 Franklin Commission 2 2 Society Commission 3 Franz Mesmer 3 1 Positioner of a concept 3 2 Mesmer s protoscience rather than pseudoscience 3 3 A concept that must not be reified 3 4 Based on natural principles 4 Charles d Eslon 4 1 Association with Mesmer 4 2 Ostracism 4 3 Post Mesmer 4 4 Last days 5 Aspects of Mesmer s evolving practices 5 1 Mesmer s early experiments with magnets 5 2 The glass armonica 5 3 The baquet 6 The magnetic crisis 6 1 The Commissions observations and description of d Eslon s magnetic crises 6 2 The Commissions remarks on d Eslon s magnetic crises 6 3 The Commissions remarks on the perceived dangers of the magnetic crises 6 4 Observations of the frequency of crises 7 Mesmerism vs Animal Magnetism 7 1 Similarities and differences 7 1 1 The mesmerists 7 1 2 The animal magnetists 7 1 3 The higher and lower phenomena of the magnetists 8 The investigations 8 1 The substantial existence of animal magnetism and magnetic fluid were investigated 8 2 Mesmer s earlier refusal to have his magnetic interventions scrutinized 8 3 Mesmer s cures were never investigated 8 4 The efficacy of magnetic treatments and the agency of supposed magnetic cures were not investigated 8 5 Problems with objectively determining the precise agency of any supposed cure 8 6 Problems with objectively determining the precise therapeutic action of any supposed efficacious remedy 8 7 Other highly significant but unassociated causative factors 8 8 Common misrepresentation of fact 9 Procedures 10 The Report s of the Franklin Commission 10 1 The issue of d Eslon vs Mesmer 10 2 The Commission s report 10 2 1 Immediate publication and dissemination 10 2 2 Touch imagination and imitation 10 2 3 No evidence to support d Eslon s claims 10 3 The Commission s secret report for the King s eyes only 10 4 The Commission s brief courtesy report to the Royal Academy of Sciences 10 4 1 The importance of the Sciences 10 4 2 Physics 10 4 3 Chemistry 10 4 4 Imagination 11 The Report s of the Society Commission 11 1 The report of four of the five Commissioners 11 1 1 The later representations of Burdin and Dubois 11 2 de Jussieu s dissenting report 12 Responses to the Commissions conclusions 12 1 Response of the Paris Faculty of Medicine 12 2 d Eslon s response 12 3 Mesmer s response 13 The Franklin Commissions investigations considered to be a classic example of a controlled trial 13 1 The Franklin Commissions legacy 14 Four vestiges of the magnetization by contact practice 14 1 Phreno magnetism 14 2 The zones of Albert Pitres 14 3 The psychoanalytic couch of Sigmund Freud 14 4 Mistaken identification of Esdaile s Jhar Phoonk with d Eslon s magnetization by contact 15 See also 16 Footnotes 17 References 18 External linksReasons for the investigation Edit King Louis XVI 1776 Marie Antoinette Chancellor von Kaunitz Princess of Lamballe Jean Frederic Phelypeaux the French Minister of State The execution of King Louis XVI The execution of Marie Antoinette The rise of mesmerism was symptomatic of several philosophical and psychological conflicts spirit mind vs body science and philosophy vs psychology and the imagination rationalism and empiricism vs the irrational and unknown and consciousness vs the unconscious Faflack 2009 p 53 dd According to Armando amp Belhoste 2018 pp 6 8 the true history of Mesmer of Mesmer s version of animal magnetism and of the rationale conduct investigations experimentation and findings of the 1784 Royal Commissions has been seriously distorted by the modern cherry picking concentration upon the transformations of animal magnetism after 1820 in relation to hypnotism 13 and especially upon the elements of continuity and analogy between mesmerism sic and the various versions of psychoanalysis 14 Consequently to accurately understand the contemporary significance of the Commissions work and the matters that they severally and collectively examined and as well those which they did not it is important to identify the wide range of significant tensions disputes and circumstances prevailing at the time which prompted the need for an official investigation of the particular nature and type that was undertaken and the sort of implicit issues in addition to the more specific questions of medicine and of science that their inquiries would hopefully address Moreover in order to gain a balanced understanding of the contemporary significance of the Commissions as stand alone historical events appointed at a specific time in specific circumstances with specific goals and further in order to apprehend the nature of their investigations their findings and the immediate consequences of their reports a complex of different factors need to be examined as has been suggested by Craver amp Darnden 2013 From the perspective of a given phenomenon one can look down to the entities and activities composing it One can look up to the higher level mechanisms of which it is a component One can look back to the mechanisms that come before it or by which it developed One can look forward to what comes after it And finally one can look around to see the wider context with which it operates p 163 dd Tensions within the Royal family Edit Prior to his arrival in Paris in 1777 with a letter of recommendation from Chancellor von Kaunitz of the Habsburg monarchy to the Austrian Ambassador to France the Comte de Mercy Argenteau who in turn introduced Mesmer to Jean Baptiste Le Roy 1720 1800 the Director of the Academy of Sciences Mesmer was already known to Marie Antoinette 15 At the urging of her two closest friends Marie Paule Angelique d Albert de Luynes 1744 1781 the Duchesse de Chaulnes and Marie Therese Louise de Savoie Carignan 1749 1792 the Princess of Lambelle both of whom had benefited from Mesmer s treatment Marie Antoinette had been able to arrange for both Mesmer and d Eslon to be officially interviewed by an otherwise unidentified representative of the King on 14 March 1781 Walmsley 1967 p 267 At the conclusion of the interview Mesmer reluctantly agreed to the proposed conditions that a number of his previous and current patients be examined by a team of commissioners it was also stipulated that as a requirement of the King Mesmer was to remain in France until his doctrines and his principles had been thereby established and that he was not to leave except by permission of the King and that if the commissioners reports were favourable the government would issue a ministerial letter to that effect Pattie 1994 p 110 Within two weeks Mesmer had rescinded his agreement on the grounds that it had been made under duress 16 and a new interview was conducted involving Mesmer d Eslon the unidentified bureaucrat and the Minister of State Jean Frederic Phelypeaux 1701 1781 fr The Minister began by saying that the King informed of Mesmer s dislike of being investigated by commissioners wished to excuse him from that formality and would grant him a life annuity of 20 000 French livres and pay 10 000 livres a year for the instruction of students of whom three were to be selected by the government The rest of the benefits would be granted when the government s students recognize the utility of the discovery Pattie 1994 p 111 Once again Mesmer rejected the offer made on behalf of the King and having been told that the King s decision was final and given that the impetus for the first interview had come from the Queen Mesmer wrote an extraordinary letter translated at Pattie 1994 pp 112 115 the nature of which would have meant imprisonment in the Bastille if it had been written 20 years earlier Meditating on the Minister s use of the word final Mesmer returned to his clinic and put his name to what would surely be one of the most extraordinary letters ever written to a queen of France who also shared his native land even if he had sent it privately Instead he had it printed be rating her in public about the offer that had been made in her name and giving her an ultimatum 17 So there were many reasons for the 1784 Commission to satisfy the French interests of the King rather than the Austrian interests of his queen Social impact Edit It is already more than six years since Animal Magnetism was announced to Europe particularly in France and in this Capital But it is only over about the last two years that it has been of particular interested to a considerable number of citizens and that it has become the object of public discussion Never had a more extraordinary question divided the opinions of an enlightened nation The Franklin Commission s Report to the Royal Academy of Sciences September 1784 emphasis added 18 dd Mesmer s overall stress on the quest for harmony as a therapeutic outcome and especially given the demonstrated fact that the effects of his animal magnetism predicated upon the presence of a force analogous to gravity were equally demonstrated by all regardless of age gender class race intellect etc 19 was an important influence on many of the moves and movers within French society towards democracy and greater equality 20 21 Festering political issues Edit The increasingly unpopular Ancien Regime was under considerable pressure from many quarters and within five years of the Commissions Reports the French Revolution had broken out The storming of the Bastille took place on 14 July 1789 and four years later King Louis XVI was executed on 21 January 1793 and his Queen Marie Antoinette the daughter of Empress Maria Theresa and the sister of Emperor Joseph II was executed on 16 October 1793 Professional tensions Edit Apart from the wider issue of having to evaluate and decide how to deal with those within the medical profession who saw animal magnetism as an interesting therapeutic resource Armando amp Belmonte 2018 p 13 namely the boundary disputes between the conventional therapeutic practices of the sorts that Brockliss and Jones 1997 usefully identify as lying within the established medical penumbra pp 230 283 and the novel and innovative practices at the frontier that were potentially responsible for the expansion of the medicable pp 441 459 there were also significant tensions differences and boundary disputes between the more theory and principle centred Paris Faculty of Medicine formed some five centuries earlier and the more practitioner centred Royal Society of Medicine formed just 5 years earlier the primary function of which was to evaluate patent medicines and by extension new forms of therapy Forrest 1999 pp 18 19 Scientific issues Edit In a prevailing atmosphere of an overall redefinition of frontiers in the legitimacy of knowledge and in relation to Mesmer s claims a redefinition which did not necessarily match the public popularity that they attracted Zanetti 2018 p 59 the issue of the existence or not of a substantial magnetic fluid and or animal magnetism required resolution Medical issues Edit At a time when in relation to healers and healing the conglomerate of physicians empirics surgeons apothecaries folk healers and religious personalities all vied with each other as well as worked together for medical legitimacy and patients Broomhall 2004 p 5 Mesmer was not only a foreign national 22 23 but also one that had no affiliation of any kind with any known professional medical association within France or elsewhere in Europe and as a consequence his professional conduct his medical practice his medico commercial enterprises and his therapeutic endeavours were not regulated in any way Moreover the efficacy of Mesmer s interventions had never been objectively tested neither the agency nor the pre and post intervention veracity of his supposed cures had ever been objectively verified and finally in relation to the presenting conditions of those with supposedly real ailments the question of whether the pre intervention conditions of each case were of organic or psychogenic origins had never been objectively determined Religious issues Edit As discussed at considerable length by Spanos and Gottlieb 1979 there were not only a wide range of controversial secular and religious issues relating to the similarities and differences between the induction manifestations and immediate and long term consequences of the crises that were sporadically produced by the magnetic interventions and the exorcisms of the Roman Catholic Church but also of greater significance to the occasional apparently veridical reports of post magnetic clairvoyance 24 a condition that was one of the classic indications for an exorcism whenever it was considered to be demonically inspired as distinct from those cases in which it was considered to be divinely inspired Spanos and Gottlieb 1979 p 538 25 26 The two Commissions Edit Baron de Breteuil c 1787 The Commissions were appointed in early 1784 by the Baron de Breteuil Secretary of State for the King s Household and Minister of the Department of Paris at the command of King Louis XVI 27 At length the matter of Animal Magnetism was thought to deserve the attention of government and a committee partly physicians and partly members of the royal academy of Sciences with doctor Benjamin Franklin at their head were appointed to examine it M Mesmer refused to have any communication with these gentlemen but M Deslon the most considerable of his pupils consented to disclose to them his principles and assist them in their enquiries William Godwin 1785 28 dd Franklin Commission Edit Benjamin Franklin 1778 The first of the two Royal Commissions usually referred to as the Franklin Commission was appointed on 12 March 1784 It was composed of four physicians from the Paris Faculty of Medicine the physician and chemist Jean d Arcet the physician and close friend of Franklin Joseph Ignace Guillotin 1738 1814 29 the Hotel Dieu physician Michel Joseph Majault 1714 1790 30 and the Professor of physiology and pathology Charles Louis Sallin and at the request of those four physicians 31 five scientists from the Royal Academy of Sciences the astronomer and first mayor of Paris Jean Sylvain Bailly 1736 1793 the geographer cartographer and former governor of St Domingue Gabriel de Bory de Saint Vincent 1720 1801 fr Benjamin Franklin 1706 1790 the chemist and biologist Antoine Lavoisier 1743 1794 and the physicist and expert on things electrical Jean Baptiste Le Roy the Director of the Academy of Sciences If the effects of magnetism can be as well explained by the effects of an excited or exalted imagination all the efforts of the Commissioners must be directed to distinguishing in magnetism per medium of a single conclusive experiment viz une seule experience concluante those things that are related to physical causes viz causes physiques from those that are related to psychological causes viz causes morales that is the effects of a real agent viz les effets d un agent reel from those due to the imagination By magnetising people without their knowledge and by persuading them that they are being magnetised when they are not one will obtain separately the effects of magnetism and those of the imagination and from this one will be able to conclude what should be attributed to the one and what to the other Antoine Lavoisier 1784 32 33 dd It is important to note that despite the contemporary and modern salience given to Benjamin Franklin who as the most eminent of the Commission s eleven members was recognized as its titular head 34 it is a matter of record that Franklin now aged 78 and otherwise engaged in his duties as the U S Ambassador to France had little involvement in any of the Commission s investigations In particular this was because his own ill health prevented him from leaving his residence in Passy and participating in the Paris centred investigations 35 36 although the Commission s Report does note that several experiments were conducted at Franklin s Passy residence in Franklin s presence 37 In addition to his general scientific interests in electricity and terrestrial magnetism Franklin had known Mesmer for some years prior to the investigation and was familiar with the practice of animal magnetism 38 and on occasion he and Mesmer had even dined together and also there was no doubt that Franklin s curiosity was aroused by the mere connotation of the term animal magnetism for it implied something in connexion with electricity and Franklin himself had already made 25 years earlier a number of experiments on the effect of electric discharges on paralytics epileptics etc Duveen amp Klickstein 1955 p 287 39 40 Society Commission Edit Charles Louis Francois Andry 1741 1829 The second of the two Royal Commissions usually referred to as the Society Commission was appointed on 5 April 1784 It was composed of five eminent physicians from the Royal Society of Medicine the physician and one of the first members of the Royal Society Charles Louis Francois Andry 1741 1829 fr the physician Claude Antoine Caille 1743 the botanist Antoine Laurent de Jussieu 1748 1836 the physician College de France professor one of the original directors of the Royal Society and committed advocate of the therapeutic applications of electricity Pierre Jean Claude Mauduyt de La Varenne 1732 1792 fr 41 42 and the physician and Professor of chemistry in the College de France Pierre Isaac Poissonnier 1720 1798 fr and as Pattie remarks 1994 p 156 the impression given by their report is that the commissioners were busy practitioners who wanted to devote no more time to the project than was necessary Although the investigations of the Society Commission were less thorough and less detailed than those of the Franklin Commission they were essentially of the same nature and it is a matter of fact that neither Commission examined Mesmer s practices they only examined the practices of d Eslon 43 Franz Mesmer Edit Franz Mesmer c 1800 Title page of Mesmer s 1766 dissertation Mesmer s Precis Historique 1781 Mesmer s Memoire 1799 Franz Anton Mesmer 1734 1815 born in Swabia having first studied law at Dillingen and Ingolstadt universities transferred to the University of Vienna and began a study of medicine graduating Medicinae Doctor M D at the age of 32 in 1766 his doctoral dissertation Mesmer 1766 had the official title A Physico Medical Dissertation on the Influence of the Planets 44 45 46 Although he was made a member of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities in 1775 47 and despite his M D qualification there is no record of Mesmer ever having been accepted as a member of any medical learned society anywhere in Europe at any time Mesmer left Austria in 1777 in controversial circumstances following his treatment of the young Austrian Pianist Maria Theresia von Paradis for her blindness and established himself in Paris in February 1778 He spent several years in Paris itself during which time he published his Precis Historique i e Mesmer 1781 48 interspersed with time spent in various parts of France a complete absence from France 1792 1798 a return to France in 1798 and his final departure from France in 1802 While in France it was his habit to travel to the town of Spa in Belgium to take the waters and he was enjoying an extended stay at Spa when the reports of the two Royal Commissions were released Mesmer lived for another 31 years after the Royal Commissions He died at the age of 80 in Meersburg in the Grand Duchy of Baden on 5 March 1815 Positioner of a concept Edit Rather than being the inventor of a technique as some mis represent the circumstances it is clear that Mesmer s significance was in his positioning of an overarching concept or construct through his creation and development using analogies with gravity terrestrial magnetism and hydraulics as they were understood at the time of an explanatory model to represent the way that healers had been healing people for thousands of years Yeates 2018 p 48 49 50 The oft forgotten value and long term significance of Mesmer s positioning according to Rosen 1959 pp 7 8 is that Mesmer s theory in itself diverted attention from the phenomena produced by animal magnetism to the agent alleged to produce them yet both 1784 Commissions side stepped this issue and simply ascribed the magnetic cures to imagination but never bothered to ask how imagination can produce a cure 51 Mesmer s protoscience rather than pseudoscience Edit According to Tatar 1990 p 49 rather than Mesmer s proposal being some sort of occult theory Mesmer actually remained well within the bounds of eighteenth century thought when he formulated his theories and the theories that Mesmer invoked to explain the agency of animal magnetism fit squarely into the frame of eighteenth century cosmology and moreover to consider animal magnetism independently of the tradition out of which it emerged is to magnify its distinctively occult characteristics and to diminish in importance those features that mirror the scientific and philosophical temper of the age in which it flourished Rosen 1959 pp 4 5 noted that it was clear that Mesmer s theory of animal magnetism within which he employed the term magnetism to characterize a reciprocal relationship between the forces of nature and the human body and which conceived of nature as the harmony of these relations in action contains a number of themes and theoretical concepts common to the medical world of the eighteenth century which is evident for example in his interpretation of disease as a disharmony attributable to a functional disturbance of the nervous fluid which is a concept derived from the ancient humoral pathology with its doctrines of dyscrasia and critical days from the irritability theory of Albrecht von Haller 1708 1777 52 53 54 and from the excitation theory of John Brown 1735 1788 55 dd In other words as a product of its time 56 Mesmer s enterprise was one of protoscience rather than being one of pseudoscience or even one of fringe science A concept that must not be reified Edit It is clear from his Memoire 1799 that Mesmer was very aware of the human propensity in the normal conventional use of language la langue de convention to speak of properties or qualities i e these metaphysical abstractions illusions de la methaphysique as if they were substances in Mesmer s words substantivise the properties substantisia les proprieties Mesmer 1799 pp 15 17 57 in other words reification in the manner of Whitehead s fallacy of misplaced concreteness 58 Mesmer was also well aware of the extent to which through the distortion caused by these substantive words mot substantif which inappropriately personified personnifia these metaphysical abstractions p 16 one is induced to believe in the actual physical existence of the substance itself Given these observations Mesmer was most emphatic in his continuous warnings that his abstract principles should not be substantivised It is significant that Mesmer 1799 describes how once he had formulated the abstract overarching metaphorical construct concept of animal magnetism as the therapeutic agent a quarter of a century earlier and with his hope that this newly described principle of action principe de action when considered as an agent could become a means of healing and even one of preserving defending oneself against disease p 7 Mesmer s emphasis 59 the primary focus of his enterprise had become the threefold quest for the acquisition of an understanding of a how to rouse and maintain this agent by every possible means and acquire the knowledge of how so roused it might be therapeutically harnessed in the most efficacious fashion Mesmer 1799 p 48 b given that the agent s therapeutic effects were observed to be gradual rather than instantaneous the obstacles that typically divert disturb or impede the agent s capacity to attain the optimal treatment outcomes and once these obstacles had been identified determine appropriate ways to clear them away de connoitre et lever les obstacles qui peuvent troubler ou empecher son action p 48 and c the natural pathway along which the agent s therapeutic effects are realized so that in its application these outcomes can be systematically anticipated meaning that with this knowledge the otherwise random clinical applications can be controlled regulated and incrementally applied in a systematic way until the target goal of a cure is attained p 49 Based on natural principles Edit Gassner the exorcist in action Mesmer held the materialist position that his therapies which involved easily understood systematic natural principles were physiological rather than psychological interventions 60 in contrast to the supernatural positions of say the exorcist Johann Joseph Gassner 1727 1779 61 By contrast with many faith healers Gassner had a quasi scientific method of diagnosis according to which he separated diseases that should be treated by a physician from those that he should treat He first admonished the patient that faith in the name of Jesus was essential He then obtained consent to use the method of trial exorcism He entreated the Devil to defy Jesus by producing the patient s symptoms If the convulsions or other symptoms appeared Gassner believed they were the work of the Devil he proceeded to exorcise the responsible demon If symptoms failed to appear he could not attribute them to a demon and sent the patient to a physician Ernest Hilgard 1980 62 63 dd the mystic Jose Custodio de Faria a k a Abbe Faria 1756 1819 and the magnetists such as d Eslon and later Charles Lafontaine 1803 1892 64 whose demonstrations of animal magnetism were attended by James Braid in November 1841 Mesmer s approach to healing and his healing theory were physically oriented His explanation of the phenomena of animal magnetism was consistently formulated in terms of matter and motion and he believed that every aspect of animal magnetism could sooner or later be verified through physical experimentation and research Crabtree 1993 p 51 When Mesmer took a patient his first concern was to determine whether the ailment was organic or functional If it was organic the result of physical damage to the tissue he considered it following his Proposition 23 65 beyond the aid of animal magnetism If it was functional a physiological disorder affected by the nerves it fell within the class of diseases he felt uniquely qualified to handle with his therapeutic technique Buranelli 1975 pp 107 108 dd Charles d Eslon EditCharles Nicholas d Eslon 1750 1786 fr a disciple of the eminent French surgeon J L Petit 66 was a docteur regent of the Paris Faculty of Medicine and the one time personal physician to the King s brother Charles Philippe Comte d Artoir who later following the Bourbon Restoration in France became King Charles X Association with Mesmer Edit d Eslon s Observations 1780 d Eslon a one time patient pupil and associate of Mesmer 67 published a work on Mesmer s version of animal magnetism while still associated with Mesmer Observations sur le Magnetisme Animal 1780 68 which presented details of 18 cases 10 male 8 female treated by Mesmer 69 In stressing the efficacy of Mesmer s animal magnetism interventions d Eslon defended at p 124 the absence of clear explanations from Mesmer of the mechanism through which animal magnetism effects its cures with an observation that although the purgative actions of rhubarb and Shir Khesht manna a k a purgative manna are well known to the medical profession the mechanisms involved are not and so in these cases facts and experience are our only guides and in a similar fashion asserts d Eslon in relation to Animal Magnetism it is the same I don t know how it works but I do know that it does work d Eslon also directly addressed the charge that Mesmer had discovered nothing and that the extraordinary things des choses extraordinaires that Mesmer had demonstrably effected were due to his captivation of the imagination en seduisant l imagination 70 with the comment that If it were to be true that Mesmer had no other secret than that he has been able to make the imagination exert an influence upon health would he not still be a wonderful doctor If treatment by the use of the imagination is the best treatment why do we not make use of it 1780 pp 46 47 71 dd Ostracism Edit On 7 October 1780 still associated with Mesmer and still a member of the Paris Faculty of Medicine d Eslon made an official request that an investigation of the authenticity and efficacy of Mesmer s claims and cures be made The Faculte rejected his plea and in refusing accused d Eslon personally of misdemeanour 72 d Eslon s Lettre 1782 On 15 May 1782 d Eslon presented the Faculty with his arguments in the form of a 144 page pamphlet 73 and then on 26 October 1782 d Eslon was finally struck from the Faculty s roster and forbidden to attend any meeting for a period of two years Duveen amp Klickstein 1955 p 286 74 Post Mesmer Edit In late 1782 and eighteen months before the Royal Commission d Eslon had acrimoniously parted ways with Mesmer and despite a brief reconciliation the relationship was terminated in late 1783 On 28 December 1783 d Eslon wrote a letter to the Journal de Paris which not only described the difficulties he had experienced with Mesmer but also announced that he was opening his own entirely independent clinic 75 Following his break with Mesmer d Eslon not only launched his own clinical operation on his break with Mesmer d Eslon took all of the patients he had brought to Mesmer with him 76 but also began teaching his own theories and practices i e rather than those of Mesmer 77 According to d Eslon s own account d Eslon 1784b pp 25 26 Mesmer had taught 300 students 160 of whom were medical men Medecins and d Eslon himself had taught 160 medical men this group included 21 members of the Paris Faculty of Medicine Given that many of those who had privately paid Mesmer for details of the secret were greatly dissatisfied and justifiably accused Mesmer of having enunciated a theory which was merely a collection of obscure principles Binet amp Fere 1888 p 13 it seems that d Eslon s version was little better Greatly confused by d Eslon s version of the secret d Eslon s student and associate Francois Amedee Doppet is said to have remarked that those to whom d Eslon had revealed the secret doubted it even more than those to whom it had not been revealed 78 It was under these circumstances that a decision was made to investigate the work of d Eslon although he was already ostracized from the Paris Faculty of Medicine when d Eslon through influential friends and tact and other favourable circumstances procured the commissions establishment specifically to investigate animal magnetism as practised in his own clinic Gauld 1992 p 7 emphasis added 79 Last days Edit Once d Eslon had been expelled from the rank of docteur regent his membership of the Faculty of Medicine was never reinstated and unlike Mesmer he remained in Paris following the publication of the reports of the two Commissions Although apparently in good health in the preceding months he died somewhat suddenly in Paris on 21 August 1786 at the age of 47 80 from a complex of disorders including pneumonia a malignant fever une fievre maligne and renal colic 81 Aspects of Mesmer s evolving practices EditMesmer s early experiments with magnets Edit Maximillian Hell It is significant that Mesmer initially impressed by the therapeutic enterprises of the Jesuit astronomer explorer and healer Maximilian Hell 1720 1792 which involved the application of steel magnets that had been specifically shaped either to fit particular body contours or to match the actual dimensions of a specific organ e g the liver 82 and immediately recognizing the prima facie plausiblity 83 of Hell s approach purchased a number of steel magnets from Hell in 1774 and began applying them to his patients however as Pattie reports 1994 p 2 Mesmer had entirely abandoned the use of magnets by 1776 84 because his own clinical experimentation had proved them to be utterly useless By 1779 Mesmer 1779 pp 34 35 was expressing his concern that many had confused such as the Berlin Academy in 1775 85 and were continuing to confuse the properties of his abstract theoretical Magnetisime animal with those of an actual physical magnet l aimant objects of which he stressed he had only ever spoken of as possible conductors of animal magnetism Benjamin Franklin s glass Armonica c 1776 The Fixed Stars the Frontier to the Beyond from the album Music of the Spheres William Zeitler 2003 source source A sample of glass Armonica music Problems playing this file See media help And he argued from this confusion of his animal magnetism with mineral magnetism his use of magnets which although useful were always imperfect unless they had been applied according to la theorie du Magnetisime animal was being consistently misrepresented and misunderstood The glass armonica Edit Mesmer developed particular theatrical therapeutic rituals often accompanied by the sounds of the Glass Armonica 86 87 an instrument invented by Benjamin Franklin himself 88 89 that were associated with a wide range of figurative magnetic connotations such as the use of magnetic wands and the treatment tub known as the baquet which in the view of Yeates 2018 p 48 were obviously designed to amplify each subject s response expectancy Kirsch 1997 etc via impressive metonymical acts Topley 1976 p 254 The baquet Edit The sole remaining example of Mesmer s baquet at the Museum of the History of Medicine and Pharmacy at Lyon 90 Three of Mesmer s subjects with linked hands at the baquet The baquet lit a tub was a device of Mesmer s design that he had constructed by analogy with the newly invented Leyden Bottle i e the first electric condenser viz capacitor in history Morabito 2019 p 90 which was supposed by analogy to store animal magnetism Forrest 1999 p 20 91 In its initial conception Mesmer s baquet was a vat containing bottles of magnetized water from which steel bars escaped through which the magnetization took place in the subjects or patients who were arranged around the tub holding their hands Morabito loc cit According to Mesmer s own description in the undated Catechism that he had delivered exclusively to his followers The baquet is a vat about six to seven feet more or less in diameter by eighteen inches in height There is a double bottom in the interior of this vat in which fragments of broken bottles gravel stones and sticks of pounded sulfur and iron filings are placed All of this is filled with water and covered up with a floor nailed into the vat On the surface of the lid six inches in from the rim one makes various holes in order to allow the passage of iron rods which are arranged so that one end penetrates the bottom of the vat and the other is directed by means of a curve over the pit of the stomach of the patient or other affected parts of the body 92 dd Mesmer specifically stressed the primary importance of the patients hand holding as a factor in the augmentation of the force quality of the power of the animal magnetism 93 Moreover and significantly Mesmer separately 94 acknowledged that if it was ever to come to pass that he had a suitable establishment i e one with sufficient space available for all the assembled patients to hold hands 95 he would abolish the use of baquets je supprimerois les baquets and as well also significantly remarking loc cit that In general I only use these little devices sc baquets when I am forced to do so En general je n use des petits moyes que lorsque j y suis force The magnetic crisis Edit One feature of Mesmer s methods was the mesmeric crisis Some patients especially those suffering from more serious symptoms experienced nervous trembling nausea occasionally delirium or convulsions Mesmer regarded these as an inevitable accompaniment of the process of normalization of the flow of animal magnetism and had special padded crisis rooms salle de crises in which patients could throw themselves about without hurting themselves while Mesmer or his assistants gave them individual attention The depth of the crisis naturally varied from case to case but Mesmer insisted that some degree of crisis no matter how slight or transient would always be found if it was looked for carefully enough Anthony Campbell 1988 p 36 dd Given Mesmer s regular analogical references throughout his works to the efficient grinding activities of smoothly functioning mills speaking of how the windmills are driven by the wind and watermills by the flow of water 96 he usefully extended those analogies to explain the circumstances in which crises occur especially in relation to the magnitude of the crises i e the dramatic circumstances of the sudden restoration of the lost function of a watermill installation a direct consequence of the magnitude of the force of the flow of water that has been applied through the currently stationary waterwheel to the milling mechanism which is in and of itself directly related to the extent to which the now operative milling mechanism was formerly stationary out of order or even jammed Mesmer states that magnetism is to the bodily organs as the wind is to the windmill If the wind ceases to blow the milling process comes to a halt and should the cessation continue for long enough the windmill may fall into disrepair or even ruin The salvation of the miller comes when the wind begins to blow again making the machinery of the windmill work again A greater effort is required to start a windmill after it has stopped than to keep it going especially if disrepair has set in In a similar fashion when animal magnetism ceases to course freely through the nervous system the organs begin to malfunction and the whole physiology slows down Fluids become stagnant and viscous and begin to block the blood vessels and other canals of the body The symptoms become worse because the organs grow weaker as the obstructions grow larger and larger and vice versa Mesmer thought the organs then must be galvanized into a greater effort than ever before to push the fluids through the natural channels and it is animal magnetism that galvinizes them Buranelli 1975 p 108 The Commissions observations and description of d Eslon s magnetic crises Edit Description of the Crises produced by d Eslon s procedures Franklin Commission s Report first part 97 second part 98 third part 99 The Commissions remarks on d Eslon s magnetic crises Edit Noting that some of those who were magnetized by d Eslon over an extended time fell into the convulsive movements that have been called Crises and noting that these convulsive movements mouvemens convulsifs were viewed by d Eslon as evidence of the particular agent to whom they are attributed the Society Commissioners Report in its discussion of the Crises 100 identified a number of common characteristics among the majority of those who displayed these convulsive movements 101 a Only the most sensitive subjects i e who were sensitive either as a consequence of their constitution or of their illness 102 103 displayed these convulsive movements b In the majority of cases convulsive movements were only displayed after extended exposure to magnetic procedures that involved direct physical contact procedes du Magnetisme animal par contact immediat there were also they noted rare examples of convulsive movements due to the operator s action at a distance where no direct physical contact had been involved c Even the weakest of patients very rarely displayed convulsive movements if they were magnetized separately d Compared with individual treatments group treatments when given to the same subjects always produced a greater number of convulsive movements of greater magnitude in a greater number of patients with less treatment and in a shorter time e Female patients were far more likely to display convulsive movements than male patients f Rich female patients de femmes riches were far more likely to display convulsive movements than poor female patients de femmes indigentes g The majority of those who displayed convulsive movements only did so after an extended exposure to group treatment at the one treatment location Yawning due to behavioural contagion The Commissions remarks on the perceived dangers of the magnetic crises Edit In the last section of its Report the Franklin Commission in addition to its remarks on the impact of the phenomena associated with a crisis made a number of significant observations on the perceived dangers of experiencing or simply observing a crisis in a number of domains including a the immediate and long term physiological and psychological consequences of experiencing a crisis upon the animal economy 104 of an already seriously ill person b the immediate and long term physiological and psychological consequences of experiencing a crisis upon the animal economy of an otherwise completely healthy person c given the considerable impact of the onlooker consequences of issues such as behavioral contagion Vicarious trauma post traumatic stress disorder etc the immediate and long term physiological and psychological consequences of observing another individual manifest a crisis upon the animal economy of an individual observer regardless of whether the observer in question was healthy or not and on a larger scale d the detrimental effects of the crises on society as a whole Remarks on the dangers of Crises in the final section of the Franklin Commission Report first part 105 second part 106 third part 107 fourth part 108 Observations of the frequency of crises Edit One interesting aspect of a number of the pro d Eslon and pro Mesmer responses to the Commissions Reports collectively was that they provided figures on the level to which the author in question had observed individual patients manifest full blown magnetic crises as a consequence of their exposure to an extended sequence of standard magnetic treatments In his response to the Reports d Eslon 1784b pp 21 22 d Eslon complained that the Commissioners emphasis on convulsions was not justified among those who received group treatment during the Commission s investigations i e involving 50 to 60 individuals he wrote there were never more than six or seven who displayed convulsions to any degree and further of the more than 500 patients he had treated over the preceding three years only 20 of those had manifested convulsions and almost all of those had been suffering from convulsions before presenting for any treatment from d Eslon He also rejected the suggestions of any connection between the convulsions of epilepsy and those of the crises citing the cases of two of his patients who were epileptic and frequently had seizures at home who never had a single attack during their treatment at his clinic p 23 Joseph Michel Antoine Servan the one time Advocate General to the Parlement of Grenoble who reported at Servan 1784 p 3 that in the Provinces where the various social classes were not kept apart around the baquet as they were in Paris that in relation to the concerns that the Commissioners expressed in relation to the seizures they had observed and identified as one of the principal dangers of magnetism he Servan had only observed barely a few convulsions not at all annoying in themselves in only five or six individuals out of the fifty whose sequential treatments and responses he had observed in person Jean Baptiste Bonnefoy 1756 1789 a member of the Royal College of Surgeons at Lyon and an associate of Mesmer rejected the notion that Animal Magnetism was the art of arousing convulsions l art d exciter des convulsions Bonnefoy 1784 pp 87 88 and although he chose not to comment on d Eslon s treatments he stated that from his own direct observation of Mesmer s treatment of more than 200 patients he had only seen eight of them display crises and further that only six of the more than 120 patients treated in his own clinic had displayed a crisis 109 Mesmerism vs Animal Magnetism EditIn order to understand the significance of the two Commissions concentration on their examination of d Eslons claims for the existence of animal magnetism rather than that is conducting an examination of the clinical efficacy of Mesmer s actual therapeutic practices and in order to clarify certain ambiguities and correct particular errors that persist in the literature a number of basic facts need to be addressed see for example Yeates 2018 pp 48 52 it is useful to isolate what later subsequent to the publication of Wolfart s Mesmerismus 1814 became known as Mesmerism from other animal magnetism practices in general Ebenezer Sibly 1751 c 1799 Similarities and differences Edit The materialist mesmerists and the metaphysical animal magnetists each held that all animate beings i e living beings humans animals plants etc in virtue of being alive possessed an invisible natural magnetic or gravitational force thus magnetismus animalis animal magnetism or gravitas animalis animal gravity 110 and the therapeutic interventions of each were directed at manipulating the ebb and flow of their subject s energy field That constant flux and reflux of the vital principles and corporeal humours in man without which both motion and life are stopped produce those effects of sympathy and antipathy which become more natural and less miraculous the atmospherical particle to each individual receives from the general fluid the proper attraction and repulsion In the divers crossings of those individual atmospheres some emanations are more attractive between two beings and others more repulsive so again when one body possesses more fluid than another it will repel and that body which is less will make an effort to restore itself into equilibrium or sympathy with the other body Ebenezer Sibly 1820 111 dd Despite these fundamental similarities there were many even more fundamental differences between the two J P F Deleuze The mesmerists Edit In order to foster and promote orthopraxia 112 the materialist mesmerists used qualitative rather than quantitative constructs centred on Mesmer s abstract and metaphorical overarching analogies with gravity terrestrial magnetism and hydraulics to explain the application of their techniques and to describe their therapeutic rationale When we call this principle magnetic fluid vital fluid we are using a figurative expression We know that something emanates from the magnetizer this something is not a solid and we call it a fluid Joseph Philippe Francois Deleuze 1814 p 233 dd The animal magnetists Edit In contrast to the mesmerists the metaphysical magnetists who mistakenly reified i e substantivised the magnetic fluidic metaphors of Mesmer firmly believed that they were channeling a substantial fluidium and were manipulating a particular substantial force 113 What Thomas Brown e writing in the seventeenth century 114 deemed a vulgar error was the belief in sympathy as a unifying force working outside the human state in this instance between two magnetically charged needles that of themselves are clearly incapable of having feelings sensibilities and affections This alternative use of sympathy experienced a resurgence in the early 1780s particularly in the field of animal magnetism a practice that drew on the study of magnetism and electricity and fused these with the language of magic and the occult blurring the boundaries between superstition and rational experimental philosophy 115 dd James Braid 1854 The higher and lower phenomena of the magnetists Edit By the time of James Braid s 1841 Manchester encounter with the magnetic demonstrator Charles Lafontaine 116 those who were still committed to the existence of a substantial magnetic fluid etc maintained that the phenomena produced by their acts of magnetization were of two general classes lower phenomena 117 and higher phenomena 118 the distinction being that while there might be natural explanations for lower phenomena higher phenomena could only be explained in terms of a paranormal or metaphysical agency Yeates 2018 p 52 The investigations EditThe substantial existence of animal magnetism and magnetic fluid were investigated Edit Rather than being concerned with the applications utility and clinical efficacy of d Eslon s animal magnetism the primary concern of each Commission was the significant crucial and exclusive question of whether or not d Eslon s supposed animal magnetic fluid actually existed in some substantial physical way for the simple reason that as the two sets of Commissioners each noted in their independent reports Animal magnetism may well exist without being useful but it cannot be useful if it does not exist 119 Mesmer s earlier refusal to have his magnetic interventions scrutinized Edit Joseph Marie Francois de Lassone President of the Paris Faculty of Medicine Already in his earlier 18 September 1780 interaction with the Paris Faculty of Medicine Mesmer had refused to have his therapeutic interventions on a set of entirely new patients directly scrutinized claiming that his already achieved cures were an objective matter of record 120 Mesmer justified his refusal as follows Here is what I said to M de Lassonne 121 however bizarre it may seem at first sight it is nevertheless entirely serious and very much applicable to the question When a thief is convicted of theft he is hanged when a murderer is convicted of murder he is executed on the wheel But to exact these terrible penalties the thief is not required to thieve again to prove that he is a thief and the murderer is not required to murder a second time to prove that he is a murderer One is content to establish by testimony and by material evidence that the theft or the murder was committed and then one hangs or executes on the wheel in good conscience Very well It is the same with me I ask kindly to be treated like a man to be executed on the wheel or hanged and that an effort should be made to establish that I have cured patients without asking me to perform new cures to prove that I am to be regarded as someone who cures 122 Mesmer s cures were never investigated Edit In relation to the question of the agency cause of Mesmer s supposed cures and in the process of constructing the protocols for their investigations into d Eslon s animal magnetism both Commissions were well aware that an effect s objective reality does not substantiate any of the proffered explanations for its existence Yeates 2018 p 61 123 Notwithstanding Mesmer s earlier refusal to co operate and aside from the fact that the two Commissions were specifically charged with investigating d Eslon s claims for the existence of animal magnetism there were two additional significant reasons for not investigating the veracity of the cures attributed to Mesmer 1 They had no persuasive evidence to suggest that the reports of Mesmer s cured patients were false 2 The Commissioner s took the entirely reasonable and non controversial step of accepting the existence of Mesmer s cured patients as a given 124 In support of this decision 125 and noting that observations over the centuries prove amp Physicians themselves recognize that Nature alone amp without the help of medical treatment cures a great number of patients 124 the Commissioners agreed with the previously expressed observations of Mesmer namely that even if significant improvements in his patients presenting conditions had been objectively verified the existence of those cures in and of themselves would not have provided conclusive evidence of metaphorical animal magnetism and in support of their decision the Commissioners cited Mesmer s own statements viz that nothing conclusively proves that the Physician or Medicine heals the sick and because of that it was in Mesmer s own words a mistake to believe that this kind of proof is irrefutable 126 127 Further as Kihlstrom 2002 observed even though the Franklin Commission had accepted that Mesmer s cures were genuine and that he was able to succeed where conventional approaches had failed evidence of efficacy was not sufficient for academic approval The scientific revolution had made physicians increasingly dissatisfied with purely empirical treatments which were known to be effective but whose underlying mechanisms were unknown In the emerging profession of scientific medicine theories of treatment like theories of disease had to conform to what was known about anatomy and physiology Then as now this scientific basis distinguished medicine from quackery and so was an important source of the physician s professional authority While Mesmer wanted approval for his technique the academy wanted verification of his theory p 414 dd The efficacy of magnetic treatments and the agency of supposed magnetic cures were not investigated Edit The two Reports also separately and in some detail explained why the nature of the effects of supposedly efficacious treatments were not being examined and why the agency of the supposed verified cures were not being investigated In noting that there were two different ways that the action of magnetism on animate bodies l action du Magnetisme sur les corps animes could be observed a from the long term curative effects of magnetic treatments on disease or b from the changes produced by its temporary effects on the individual s animal economy l economie animale dd and despite d Eslon s insistence that its investigations principally and almost exclusively concentrate on the prolonged effects of his d Eslon s treatments on disease the Franklin Commission firmly stated that its investigations would exclusively concentrate on the momentary effects of d Eslon s procedures on the animal economy 128 Jean Sylvain Bailly 1789 Problems with objectively determining the precise agency of any supposed cure Edit The Commissioners Bailly 1784 p 15 stressed that because they had been specifically charged with determining whether or not d Eslon s magnetic fluid actually existed in some substantial form and because it was obvious that in order to unequivocally settle the uncertain and misleading issue of whether there were real cures of real diseases from d Eslon s therapeutic interventions and whether any such cures were entirely the effects of d Eslon s treatment and nothing else and even if the Commissioners were able to strip from these therapeutic effects all of the illusions which might be involved with them 129 any such determination would require an infinity of cures supported by the experience of several centuries And further given the specified goal of the Commission the significance of whatever its findings might be and the obligation to produce its Report promptly the Commissioners considered that it was their duty to confine themselves to arguments purely physical that is to the momentaneous sic effects of the fluid upon the animal frame excluding from these effects all the illusions which might mix with them and assuring themselves that they could proceed from no other cause than the animal magnetism 130 dd Problems with objectively determining the precise therapeutic action of any supposed efficacious remedy Edit In support of its decision the Franklin Commission produced a cogent extended argument consistent with the medical knowledge of the day that is equally relevant to similar investigations in the present day The majority of diseases have their seat in the interior part of our frame The collective experience of a great number of centuries has made us acquainted with the symptoms which indicate and discriminate them the same experience has taught the method in which they are to be treated What is the object of the efforts of the physician in this method It is not to oppose and to subdue nature it is to assist her in her operations Nature says the father of the medical science viz Hippocrates cures the diseased but sometimes she encounters obstacles which constrain her in her course and uselessly consume her strength The physician is the minister of nature an attentive observer he studies the method in which she proceeds If that method be firm strong regular and well directed the physician looks on in silence and is careful of not disturbing it by remedies which would at least be useless if the method be hindered he facilitates it if it be too slow or too rapid he accelerates or retards it Sometimes to accomplish his object he confines himself to the regulation of the diet sometimes he employs medicines The action of a medicine introduced into the human body is a new force combined with the principal force by which our life is maintained if the remedy follow the same route which this force has already opened for the expulsion of diseases it is useful it is salutary viz conducive to health if it tend to open different routes and to turn aside this interior action it is pernicious In the mean time it must be confessed that this salutary or pernicious influence real as it is may frequently escape common observation The natural history of man presents us in this respect with very singular phenomena It may be there seen that regimens the most opposite have not prevented the attainment of an advanced old age We may there see men attacked according to all appearance with the same disease recovering in the pursuit of opposite regimens and in the use of remedies totally different from each other nature is in these instances sufficiently powerful to maintain the vital principle in spite of the improper regimen and to triumph at once over both the distemper and the remedy 131 If it viz the vital principle have this power of resisting the action of medicine by a still stronger reason it must have the power of operating without medicine The experience of the efficacy of remedies is always therefore attended with some uncertainty in the case of the magnetism the uncertainty has this addition the uncertainty of its existence How then can we decide upon the action of an agent whose existence is contested from the treatment of diseases when the effect of medicines is doubtful whose existence is not at all problematical Bailly 1784a pp 11 13 132 dd Other highly significant but unassociated causative factors Edit In addition to reflecting the position of the Franklin Commission in these matters the Society Commission also noted that there were other equally significant causative factors concomitant with but unassociated with the treatment delivered in relation to the circumstances of the patients themselves namely the hope of being cured that they conceived the exercise that they took every day and especially whilst under the magnetic treatment the suspension of the remedies they were previously using the quantity of which is often so harmful in such cases these are in themselves multiple and sufficient causes for the results that have been said to have been observed in similar circumstances Poissonnier et al 1784 p 36 dd Common misrepresentation of fact Edit The preceding facts expose the error a classic example of equivocation due to lexical ambiguity in the commonly expressed in modern literature and extremely misleading misrepresentation of affairs namely the historically incorrect and mistaken implication that rather than simply having for convenience accepted Mesmer s assertions at face value and left it at that both Commissions had objectively verified that a prior to Mesmer s intervention all of those who had been supposedly cured by Mesmer had indeed been suffering from a real medical disorder b subsequent to Mesmer s intervention all of those who had been supposedly cured by Mesmer had been genuinely cured of their real pre intervention disorders and c it was Mesmer himself that had cured those patients Consequently Although it is entirely correct to assert that both sets of Commissioners accepted in a manner of speaking that Mesmer s cures were indeed cures it is completely wrong to suggest that any of the Commissioners accepted that any of those cured individuals had been cured by Mesmer 133 dd Procedures Edit Antoine Lavoisier The Franklin Commission s investigations were conducted at a number of different locations including d Eslon s clinic which they visited once a week 134 Lavoisier s home and the gardens of Franklin s Passy residence The intricate structure and detailed procedures of the investigations were designed by Lavoisier 135 136 and great care was taken to eliminate what James Braid would later identify as sources of fallacy 137 In the process of examining d Eslon s claims the Franklin Commissioners not only tested the influence of a wide range of situations circumstances variables but also from time to time individually presented themselves as experimental subjects 138 because they reported they were very curious to experience through their own senses the reported effects of this agent 139 When they visited d Eslon s establishment the Commissioners discovered that not only did d Eslon s standard therapeutics involve his version of Mesmer s baquet but also a musical and from time to time vocal accompaniment as a standard part of his treatment They saw in the centre of a large apartment a circular box made of oak and about a foot or a foot and an sic half deep which is called the bucket viz the baquet 140 the lid of this box is pierced with a number of holes in which are inserted branches of iron elbowed and moveable The patients are arranged in ranks about this baquet and each has his branch of iron which by means of the elbow may be applied immediately to the part affected a cord passed round their bodies connects them one with the other sometimes a second means of communication is introduced by the insertion of the thumb of each patient between the forefinger and thumb of the patient next him the thumb thus inserted is pressed by the person holding it the impression received by the left hand of the patient communicates through his right and thus passes through the whole circle A piano forte is placed in one corner of the apartment and different airs are played with various degrees of rapidity vocal music is sometimes added to the instrumental The persons who superintend the process have each of them an iron rod in his hand from ten to twelve inches in length Franklin Report pp 3 4 141 dd And moreover given that the overarching metaphorical principle of Mesmer had been inappropriately reified substantified by d Eslon and also given that the existence of d Eslon s alleged magnetic fluid was only based on the effects on the patients in other words the existence of a substantial physical entity was being inferred not from instrumental measurements and or quantitative considerations but by the psychophysical reaction of a living body Bersani 2011 p 61 it is significant that the commissioners in the progress of their examination discovered by means of an electrometer 142 and a needle of iron not touched with the loadstone that the baquet contained no substance either electric or magnetical and from the detail that M Deslon sic has made to them respecting the interior construction of the baquet they cannot infer any physical agent capable of contributing to the imputed effects of the magnetism Franklin Report p 5 143 dd The conduct and rationale of the Commission s investigations is described in considerable detail in its Report 144 In the process of their investigations they discovered that many non magnetised subjects wrongly believing themselves to have been magnetised displayed a wide range of magnetic phenomena and by contrast supposedly magnetised subjects believing themselves to be non magnetised displayed no magnetic phenomena at all For instance during the investigations conducted at Franklin s residence d Eslon magnetized one of five trees in Franklin s garden and when a sensitive subject was brought to the trees he fainted at the foot of one of the other four and on another occasion during the investigations undertaken at Lavoisier s house a normal cup of water swallowed by a subject who believed the water to be magnetized immediately produced magnetic phenomena Man wearing a blindfold The Commission s procedures were obviously specifically designed to give unequivocal answers to clearly defined hypotheses Donaldson 2017 p 166 1 they tested subjects from all classes of society in both group and one to one treatment settings 145 2 given claims that animal magnetism affected the infirm differently from the healthy they tested d Eslon s procedures on genuine healthy genuine infirm and sham infirm subjects 145 3 they observed and compared the responses of subjects when blindfolded and when not 145 and as Jensen et al 2016 pp 13 observe the Commissioner s use of blindfolding very strongly suggests that rather than being interested in proving something that they believed to be true their investigations concentrated on disproving rather than proving the efficacy of d Eslon s treatments and 4 they observed the responses of all varieties of subject to genuine and sham magnetisation and as well their responses to genuine and sham magnetised locations objects apparatus and equipment 145 dd The Report s of the Franklin Commission EditL imagination fait tout le Magnetism est nul Imagination is everything magnetism nothing Franklin Commission Report 146 Rather than introducing a problem the Franklin report provided a language for addressing one that already existed forcefully articulating the suspicion that mechanical imagination could plague natural philosophers and religious fanatics alike Ogden 2012 p 149 dd The Franklin Commission s investigations produced three separate reports The issue of d Eslon vs Mesmer Edit At the head of their principal report the Commissioners directly summarize Mesmer s 27 Propositions 147 as expounded in Mesmer s 1779 Memoire 1779 pp 74 83 They also quote Mesmer s own characterization of his principle 148 namely that In the influence of the magnetism Nature holds out to us a sovereign instrument for securing the health and lengthening the existence of mankind 149 The Report s citation of Mesmer s characterization of his principle first part 150 second part 150 They clearly state p 3 that on the basis of a presentation given to the Commissioners by d Eslon at his residence on 9 May 1784 at which d Eslon had not only described his version of the theories of animal magnetism but also described and demonstrated his therapeutic procedures the Commissioners were more than satisfied that d Eslon s theories principles methods and practices were consistent with those that Mesmer had made known through his publications and moreover having acquired this thorough understanding of the theory and practice of animal magnetism the Commissioners then concentrated their efforts on determining the effects of its application and in order to do so they visited d Eslon s establishment on several occasions In an extended footnote to the last paragraph of their principal report the Commissioners justified their investigative approach and the appropriateness of their conclusions in some detail 151 The Report s final footnote first part 152 second part 153 The Commission s report Edit Official Report of the Franklin Commission 11 August 1784 The first 66 page report was presented to the King on 11 August 1784 154 Knowing that their report would be published and that the task of convincing the public lay wholly in their hands the authors produced an account that was both scientifically sound and accessible making for compelling reading Chronology was unimportant few dates were specified The rationale for every decision and the details of every experiment however were explained in terms that anyone could understand 155 dd William Godwin 1802 Immediate publication and dissemination Edit The report was immediately published by the government printer and at least 20 000 copies were rapidly and very widely circulated throughout France and neighbouring countries 156 Within four months 16 December 1784 the London publishing house of Joseph Johnson was announcing the publication of a complete English version translated by William Godwin i e Godwin 1785 157 158 and in between February and July 1785 four different periodical abridgements of the Franklin report each printed multiple times in the Atlantic coast publications were published in the United States Ogden 2012 p 167 and in 1837 Godwin s complete translation was published in Philadelphia as part of a collected work 159 Touch imagination and imitation Edit Clearly recogniz ing that publicly endorsing the curative effects of a technique that had no demonstrable basis in the science of the late 18th century could lead to a proliferation of medical quackery McConkey amp Perry 2002 p 328 and based on their own experiments and observations the Commissioners concluded that the true causes of the effects attributed to this new agent known by the name of animal magnetism and to this fluid which is said to circulate in the body and to communicate itself from one individual to another were touch imagination and imitation 160 161 having demonstrated by decisive experiments that the imagination without the magnetism produces convulsions and that the magnetism without the imagination produces nothing the Commissioners concluded with an sic unanimous voice respecting the existence and the utility of the magnetism that the existence of the fluid is absolutely destitude of proof that the fluid having no existence can consequently have no use that the violent symptoms observed in the public process are to be ascribed to the compression to the imagination called into action and to that propensity to mechanical imitation which leads us in spite of ourselves to the repetition of what strikes our senses George Winter 1801 162 dd No evidence to support d Eslon s claims Edit The Commission found no evidence of any kind to support d Eslon s claim for the existence of a magnetic fluid The most reliable way to ascertain the existence of Animal magnetism fluid l existence du fluide magnetique animal would be to make its presence tangible but it did not take long for the Commissioners to recognize that this fluid escapes detection by all the senses Unlike electricity it is neither luminescent nor visible Its action does not manifest itself visibly as does the attraction of a magnet it is without taste or smell it spreads noiselessly amp envelops or penetrates you without your sense of touch warning you of its presence Therefore if it exists in us amp around us it does so in an absolutely undetectable manner Bailly 1784a p 9 163 dd The Commission s secret report for the King s eyes only Edit A second brief report which had been presented privately to the King on 11 August 1784 164 but not made public until 1800 i e in the time of The Consulate period of French First Republic specifically addressed the perceived moral dangers occasioned by the physical practices of the animal magnetists Jean Charles Pierre Lenoir Lieutenant General of Paris Police The uniformly critical tone of this private document was in stark contrast to the scrupulously evenhanded voice of the official report and its message was blunt the practice of animal magnetism was a threat not only to health but also to morality especially in the case of weak virtuous women It provided an explicit description of a certain kind of prolonged convulsion that resulted not from the alleged healing power of animal magnetism but rather from the close physical contact and mutual arousal of male magnetizers and female patients who did not fully understand what was being done to them Deslon sic himself had admitted under interrogation by the Chief of Paris Police Lenoir who was present at a number of the Commission s investigations how easy it would be to abuse a woman in such a state Many women had been in treatment for years without being cured Most of them were not ill to begin with but had been drawn to the clinic for the amusement it provided attending regularly as a relief from boredom Around the tub the ease with which symptoms spread from person to person was striking The commissioners reiterated the health risks of inducing full blown crises a dangerous practice that any responsible physician would shun They also implied in this secret report the possibility that magnetic seances were a deliberate fraud 155 dd In concluding their report they stress that they had not observed any real cures guerisons reelles from d Eslon s treatments which were they noted both very long and unfruitful and also stress that among d Eslon s patients those who had been under his treatment for 18 months to 2 years without any benefit ceased to present for any further treatment having exhausted their patience p 152 Finally they noted pp 153 155 that although charged with investigating d Eslon s claims and d Eslon s methods alone they were satisfied that offering essentially the same explanation as that in their for public consumption report see The Report s final footnote in the Gallery above although they had not examined any of Mesmer s methods etc their findings applied equally to Mesmer and his methods especially in relation to the attribution of all observed phenomena to contact imagination and or imitation p 154 The Commission s brief courtesy report to the Royal Academy of Sciences Edit Brief Report to Royal Academy of Sciences 4 September 1784 On 4 September 1784 Bailly presented a third brief 15 page courtesy report to the Royal Academy of Sciences Bailly 1784b 165 on behalf of himself Franklin Le Roy de Bory and Lavoisier i e those Commissioners who were also Academy members which provided their Academy colleagues with a brief account of the Commission s proceedings the rationale behind its investigations and the results Noting that all of their investigations were jointly conducted with the four members of the Paris Faculty and that all nine shared the same interest in discovering the truth they stressed that all the findings of their combined efforts were unanimous p 2 The importance of the Sciences Edit Further p 4 given that the understanding of the Sciences which collectively are increased by establishing the truth qui s accroissent par les verites is increased by the suppression of error i e given that error is always a bad leaven that ferments and in the long run corrupts the mass into which it has been introduced By contrast however in those cases wherein the error has been generated by The Empire of Science and has spread to the multitude not only to divide and agitate minds but also in deceptively presenting a means of curing the sick prevent them from seeking their cures elsewhere good Government has an interest in destroying it Moreover anticipating the later remarks of Louis Brandeis Publicity is justly commended as a remedy for social and industrial diseases Sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants electric light the best policeman Brandeis 1913 p 10 the Commissioners p 4 remarked that in terms of the good Government of an Enlightened nation the distribution of light is a fine use of authority C est un bel emploi de l autorite que celui de distribuer la lumiere Not only did they endorse the Administration s decision to conduct an Inquiry but they also embraced the honour implicit in its choice of their own appointment as Commissioners Physics Edit Noting that the greater and more extraordinary a discovery the more difficult it was to settle on suitable proof they reported that as physicists they were unable to detect the presence of d Eslon s supposed substantial fluid p 6 From this absence of physical evidence they were forced instead to examine the affections of the spirit and the ideas of those who had been exposed to the action of Magnetism and from this ceased to be physicists and became nothing more than philosophers p 8 Chemistry Edit However having been unable to operate as physicists they had decided to follow the standard procedures of chemists who having decomposed substances and thereby discovered their principles assured themselves of the exactness of their findings by recomposing the same substances from their reunited constituents p 9 Imagination Edit Given their inability to detect any substantial magnetism and from their observations that the effects that were attributed by d Eslon to the supposed magnetism and the supposed fluid were only manifested when the subjects believed they were magnetised and were not manifested when they were unaware that they had been magnetised the Commissioners concluded that the principle involved was the subject s imagination and therefore as a consequence of their investigations they were well satisfied that they had been fully successful in experimentally proving that the observed effects had been produced by the power of the imagination alone p 9 More than a century later and entirely consistent with the Commissioners findings both Jean Martin Charcot of the Hysteria School of hypnosis at the Salpetriere hospital and his rival Hippolyte Bernheim of the Suggestion School of hypnosis at Nancy in Alsace Lorraine were united in their views that all of the supposed miracle cures at Lourdes were due to auto suggestion 166 The Report s of the Society Commission Edit Official Report of the Society Commission 16 August 1784 The Society Commission s investigations produced two separate reports The report of four of the five Commissioners Edit The first of the two reports made by four of the five Commissioners of 39 pages namely Charles Louis Francois Andry Claude Antoine Caille Pierre Jean Claude Mauduyt de La Varenne and Pierre Isaac Poissonnier was presented to the King on 16 August 1784 167 Given that the Society Commissioners investigations were far less complex than those conducted by the Franklin Commission 168 and also given that the smaller number of experiments that they described duplicate d similar ones in the Franklin Commission s Report Pattie ibid p 156 the report itself is briefer 39 pages far less complex and therefore far less influential The Report was divided into two sections Part One pp 2 21 discussing the theories of the practices known as Animal Magnetism It commences with d Eslon s definition of animal magnetism namely that it is the action which one man exercises on another either through immediate contact or at a certain distance by the mere pointing of a finger or any kind of conduct and that this action according to d Eslon is the effect of a fluid that is distributed throughout the universe 169 Part Two pp 22 37 discussing the procedures and practices of Animal Magnetism as well as addressing the issues of their therapeutic efficacy or not and those of whether or not the procedures practices should be admitted to conventional medical practice doivent ils etre admis en Medecine p 22 The conclusions drawn pp 37 39 were in brief that they had found no evidence of d Eslon s magnetic fluid that there were no grounds for any belief in animal magnetism that the effects attributed to it are due to known causes including not only the influence of contact imagination and or imitation but also the influence of the environment of the treatment room with its closed windows fetid air dim light and the sight of other patients and their responses to their treatments 170 and as Laurence notes that the observed results were not due to animal magnetism but to the patients rest exercise abstinence from medication and hopes for a cure 2002 p 316 and that from this there was no reason for the procedures to which the name animal magnetism has been given to be introduced into the practice of medicine Pattie 1994 p 157 The later representations of Burdin and Dubois Edit Frederic Dubois 1849 Although the Society Commission did not directly investigate the clinical efficacy of d Eslon s therapeutic interventions and did not examine the circumstances of any earlier i e pre Commission cures claimed by d Eslon two members of the Royal Academy of Medicine Charles Burdin 1778 1856 and Frederic Dubois 1797 1873 fr writing in 1841 171 drew attention to the fact that in the process of their 1784 investigations the Society Commissioners identified three categories of patient treated by d Eslon 172 a those with an obvious ailment with a known cause b those with mild and vague ailments with no known cause and finally c the melancholics Les melancoliques and significantly having followed the collective progress of d Eslon s patients over a period of four months the Commissioners found no evidence of any kind that any members of the a group many of whom had been receiving d Eslon s treatment for more than a year had been cured gueris or even noticeably relieved notablement soulages of their ailment 173 de Jussieu s dissenting report Edit Antoine Laurent de Jussieu 1748 1836 The second of the two reports made by de Jussieu alone of 51 pages was independently published on 17 September 1784 174 In de Jussieu s dissenting view and despite d Eslon s magnetic fluid claims having been debunked he felt that there were sufficient effects such as for instance post magnetic amnesia unattributable to imagination that still required further investigation into their exact nature and therefore he argued the continued use of animal magnetism was justified Yeates 2018 p 50 Noting that in his view a longer use of this agent will make its real action and degree of usefulness to be better understood de Jussieu concluded The theory of magnetism cannot be admitted so long as it will not be developed and supported by solid facts The experiments instituted to ascertain the existence of the magnetic fluid prove only that man produces on his like a sensible action by friction by contact and more rarely by simple approximation at some distance This action attributed to a universal fluid not demonstrated certainly appertains to animal heat la chaleur animale existing in bodies which constantly emanates from them is carried to a considerable distance and is capable of passing from one body into another Animal heat is developed increased or diminished in a body by moral as well as by physical causes Judged by its effects it participates in the property of tonic remedies and like them produces salutary or injurious effects according to the quantity communicated and according to the circumstances in which it is employed de Jussieu 1784 pp 50 51 175 dd Responses to the Commissions conclusions Edit Jean Jacques Paulet Michel Augustin Thouret A measure of the influence of the claims investigated the methods employed and the conclusions reached by the Franklin Report is seen in the changing fortunes of Mesmer during the months of 1784 Prior to the submission of the Report Mesmer had been the toast of Paris dealing with many wealthy patrons Following publication of the Report Mesmer was a focus of public scorn and ridicule McConkey amp Barnier 1991 pp 77 78 dd The release of the reports generated a proliferation of publications many of which were simply addressing issues relating to either mesmerism or animal magnetism in general such as for instance those of Jean Jacques Paulet 1784 and Michel Augustin Thouret fr 1784 while others such as those of Charles Joseph Devillers himself a member of the Royal Academy of Sciences who at Devillers 1784 pp 165 166 compared the cures of Mesmer with those supposed to have been effected at the tomb of Francois de Paris in Saint Medard some forty years earlier and Jacques Cambry 1784 who provided details of beliefs similar to those of Mesmer previously held by the ancient Greeks Persians and Romans strongly supported the findings of the Commissions Response of the Paris Faculty of Medicine Edit Immediately following the release of the reports of the two Commissions the Paris Faculty of Medicine pressure d its own members to renounce animal magnetism Crabtree 1993 p 32 The Faculty identified some thirty of its docteurs regent including Francois Louis Thomas d Onglee and Charles Louis Varnier 176 who openly favored animal magnetism or were suspected of so doing 177 178 According to the contemporary account of Thomas d Onglee 1785 passim the thirty magnetic physicians were subjected to abuse 179 and were presented with a declaration of which it was demanded that they sign 180 Both Thomas d Onglee and Varnier among others refused to sign the declaration and were thereby immediately expelled The declaration in question read No Doctor may declare himself a partisan of animal magnetism through writings or through practice under penalty of being removed from the role of docteurs regents 181 dd Caullet de Veaumorel s Aphorismes of M Mesmer d Eslon s response Edit d Eslon immediately published an attack on the Commission s reports 182 in which he criticized their failure to investigate the longer term effects of his treatments and their refusal to accept his alleged cures as proof of the existence of animal magnetism as well as noting that the commissioners recommendation that the practice of magnetism should be prohibited would hardly be possible to implement because apart from those within the medical profession who had been trained by himself and by Mesmer a large number of other people had as a result of their own study begun to practice it Pattie 1994 p 171 183 In addition to his specific criticisms of the reports of the two Royal Commissions and to emphasize the significance of the Royal Commissions refusal to investigate either the alleged efficacy of his treatment procedures i e investigate d Eslon s actual practices rather than just the veracity or not of his theoretical claims and that alone and the alleged curative effects of his standard extended regimens of magnetic treatment d Eslon published an 80 page supplementary volume i e d Eslon 1784c 184 that provided the case histories of 115 individuals 185 the majority of whom were identified by name 186 that had been successfully treated by d Eslon s procedures for a very wide range of diseases On 10 December 1784 and in support of d Eslon one of his associates and a former student Louis Caullet de Veaumorel published a set of Mesmer s class notes 187 that he Caullet de Veaumorel had acquired from one of Mesmer s disloyal students 188 189 Caullet de Veaumorel s work which made no mention of d Eslon s theories teachings or clinical procedures went into three editions 190 Caullet de Veaumorel stressed that although as a disciple of d Eslon he was bound by his word of honour not to reveal any of d Eslon s teachings 191 he was entirely free to publish Mesmer s material and in doing so he had not altered one word of Mesmer s maxims 192 and moreover he was certain that given Mesmer s dissemination of his ideas through his already published works Mesmer would not be offended by the publication of his aphorisms 193 Although Mesmer protested to the Journal de Paris that Caullet de Veaumore s Aphorismes were a distorted account of his lectures according to Pattie 1994 p 213 they were accurate and moreover they agree d with later writings of Mesmer 194 Mesmer s response Edit Nicolas Bergasse In his own responses to the Commissions Reports 195 Mesmer stressed that simply because he had not been involved in any of their investigations the Commissioners conclusions had nothing whatsoever to do with his metaphorical animal magnetism and because their conclusions only applied to d Eslon s theories and practices any responses to those conclusions were entirely the concern of d Eslon alone Further and immediately following the publication of the Reports of the two Commissions both Nicolas Bergasse 1750 1832 Bergasse 1784 and Antoine Esmonin Marquis de Dampierre Esmonin 1784 wrote strong criticisms of the Commissions orientation investigations and findings and separately a number of Mesmer s followers published a composite volume i e Mesmer et al 1784 of 478 pages which included a number of previously published items written by Mesmer as well as a number of shorter and up to date contributions from a range of various authors describing their continued success with animal magnetism 196 The Franklin Commissions investigations considered to be a classic example of a controlled trial Edit T his is the first scientific investigation that we know of into what would today be considered a paranormal or pseudoscientific claim And it is clear that the control of intervening variables and the testing of specific claims without resort to unnecessary hypothesizing about what is behind the power is the lesson modern skeptics should take from this historical masterpiece Michael Shermer 1996 emphasis added to original 197 dd The detailed studies of Stephen Jay Gould 1989 and John Kihlstrom 2002 drew disciplinary attention to nature and the form of the Commission s extended examination as a watershed moment in the history of science subsequent to which things were never the same If the Commission was not the first it was at least one of the very earliest examples of a controlled trial and in particular one that included the use of physical rather than metaphorical blindfolds which were used from time to time on both the experimenters and their experimental subjects as well as testing both sham and real procedures on both sham and real patients 198 Inspired by these studies a number of other scholars in other scientific domains such as for example Shermer 1996 Kaptchuk 1998 Green 2002 Best Neuhauser and Slavin 2003 Herr 2005 Lanska amp Lanska 2007 Kaptchuk Kerr amp Zanger 2009 Davies Wilson 2014 Jensen Janik amp Waclawik 2016 Zabell 2016 Donaldson 2017 and Rosen et al 2019 have also identified the Commission s examination as a previously unrecognized classic example of a controlled trial John Haygarth The Franklin Commissions legacy Edit Modern facsimiles of a standard pair of Perkins Patent Tractors one made of steel the other brass The classic structure of the investigations undertaken by the Franklin Commission 199 inspired among many others over the ensuing years the 1799 investigations of Chester physician John Haygarth 1740 1827 into the efficacy of Perkins tractors 200 201 202 In the process of discussing the experiments he had conducted with medical colleagues as witnesses with dummy wooden tractors on 7 January 1799 and with Perkins true metallick tractors on 8 January 1799 Haygarth emphasized his considerable debt to the earlier Franklin Commission enterprise It need not be remarked how completely the trial illustrates the nature of this popular illusion which has so wonderfully prevailed and spread so rapidly it resembles in a striking manner that of Animal Magnetism which merited the attention of Dr Franklin when ambassador from America and of other philosophers at Paris If any person would repeat these experiments they should be performed with due solemnity During the process the wonderful cures which this remedy is said to have performed ought to be particularly related Without these indispensable aids other trials will not prove as successful as those which are above reported The whole effect undoubtedly depends upon the impression which can be made upon the patient s Imagination This method of discovering the truth distinctly proves to what a surprising degree mere fancy deceives the patient himself and if the experiment had been tried with the metallick Tractors only they might and most probably would have deceived even medical observers Yet this test of truth was perfectly candid A fair opportunity was offered to discover whether the metallick Tractors possessed any efficacy superior to the ligneous Tractors or wooden pegs John Haygarth 1801 203 dd Four vestiges of the magnetization by contact practice EditIn relation to the findings of both Commissions viz that there was no evidence for d Eslon s claims and that d Eslon s magnetization by contact practices had no place within the medical penumbra and despite the consequent and widespread demedicalization of both d Eslon s magnetization by contact and of animal magnetism in general there remained a small number of historically significant vestigial remnants of d Eslon s magnetization by contact the boundary work of which for a short while operated at the frontier of the medical penumbra Brockliss and Jones 1997 in the vain hope of producing an expansion of the medicable such that they would be admitted to conventional medical practice which were later abandoned by their original advocates Phreno magnetism Edit A Phreno Magnetist exciting the Organ of Veneration 1887 204 In 1843 Robert Hanham Collyer 1814 1891 an American physician and former pupil of John Elliotson announced that he had discovered the existence of phreno magnetism in November 1839 205 and prior to Collyer s later retraction two others claimed to have independently confirmed the veracity of Collyer s discovery the architect Henry George Atkinson 1812 1890 at London in November 1841 and the chemist Charles Blandford Mansfield 1819 1855 at Cambridge in December 1841 206 Phreno magnetism as a practice involved the physical activation termed excitation of specific phrenological organs via the operator s magnetisation directly through the particular cranial area supposedly corresponding to that specific phrenological organ 207 It was claimed that in a suitable subject whenever an operator excited a particular phrenological organ the subject would manifest whatever sentiments were considered appropriate to that organ 208 Four years later by mid 1843 further experiments that had been conducted by Collyer himself had conclusively proved to his own satisfaction that he was mistaken and Collyer concluded that there was no such thing as phreno magnetism at all 209 Unaware at the time of Collyer s retraction James Braid made a careful examination of phreno hypnotism in December 1842 210 and continued his comprehensive experimentation until August 1844 211 when he concluded along with John Campbell Colquhoun Colquhoun 1843 that there was no foundation for phrenology in general and for phreno magnetism in particular 212 As a consequence of the debunking by Colquhoun Braid and others phreno magnetism which in yet another case of prima facie plausiblity had initially seemed to promise such a wide range of valuable therapeutic and moral applications 213 soon morphed into theatrical performances demonstrating the reality of phrenology to credulous audiences with lecturers pressing specific locations on the cranium of their magnetised subjects and their subjects immediately displaying responses appropriate to the characteristics of each phrenological zone Yeates 2018 p 56 see for example figure at right The zones of Albert Pitres Edit Pitres diagram of the hypnogenetic zones subject s left side and hypno arresting zones subject s right side 214 Around 1885 the neurologist Albert Pitres the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Bordeaux and an associate of Charcot at the Salpetriere hospital claimed that he had discovered a system of zones on the surface of the body the stimulation of which induced or terminated the hypnotic state namely 215 zones hypnogenes or hypnogenetic zones which he said when stimulated threw 216 people into the hypnotic state 217 and zones hypno frenatrices 218 or hypno arresting zones which he said when stimulated abruptly threw people out of that same hypnotic state 219 Pitres further claimed that despite the location of the specific zones differing from individual to individual 220 the location of the relevant zones remained constant for each individual viz they had a position habituelle Pitres 1891 p 497 There is no evidence that there was ever any independent verification of Pitres claims The psychoanalytic couch of Sigmund Freud Edit Freud s Couch with his own chair in its standard position at its head The noted neurologist and psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud not only studied and wrote about hypnosis e g Freud 1891 and 1966 but he also actively used hypnosis in his clinical practice for some time However the a la Salpetriere hypnosis that Freud employed quite unlike the conventional hypnotism of James Braid that was induced by Braid s standard upwards and inwards squint relied upon an induction process that often involved rubbing the top of a patient s head 221 This requirement of course demanded that Freud sat at the end of the therapeutic couch in order to gain easy access to his subject s head a practice that Freud continued to follow for his entire post hypnosis professional career Another vestige of phreno magnetism that demanded that Freud position himself at the patient s head was Freud s application of the head pressure technique that he had in person observed Hippolyte Bernheim use 222 on one of his visits to Bernheim s clinic at Nancy in 1899 223 Freud had discontinued this head pressure practice by at least 1904 and possibly by 1900 224 Mistaken identification of Esdaile s Jhar Phoonk with d Eslon s magnetization by contact Edit Main article James Esdaile Due to a large extent to the mistaken enthusiastic promotion of Esdaile s otherwise valuable work in India as mesmerism by John Elliotson 1791 1868 and William Collins Engledue 1813 1858 especially by Elliotson 225 in their influential journal The Zoist over its fifteen years of existence i e March 1843 to January 1856 226 the entirely mistaken generally held and at the time widely published view that the otherwise highly significant James Esdaile used mesmerism to produce the condition under which he conducted completely pain free surgery is still being repeated in many of the modern accounts of the history of mesmerism anaesthesia and hypnotism It is clear however that having noticed a vague and superficial similarity between Esdaile s Islamic exorcism derived Jhar Phoonk procedures and the secular healing derived magnetization by contact procedures of d Eslon in Esdaile s Jhar Phoonk Elliotson and his associates had to use a biological analogy mis identified in mesmerism a la d Eslon what was a clear case of homoplasy i e similar entities descended from an entirely separate lineage as if it were instead a case of homology i e similar entities descended from a common ancestor 227 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Royal Commission on Animal Magnetism Abstract and concrete Animal magnetism Blinded experiment Causality Clinical study design Construct philosophy Convulsionnaires of Saint Medard Correlation does not imply causation Design of experiments Elan vital Emotional contagion Exorcism Experimentum crucis Fallacy of misplaced concreteness Iatrophysics Mill s Methods Natural history of disease Necessity and sufficiency Placebo controlled study Protocol science Protoscience Randomized controlled trial Research design Scientific control Scientific method Sham surgery Signs and symptoms Spurious relationship The Zoist A Journal of Cerebral Physiology amp Mesmerism and Their Applications to Human Welfare Therapeutic effect Vis medicatrix naturae VitalismFootnotes Edit According to Devereaux et al 2002 p 4 Blinding or masking in randomised controlled trials is the process of withholding information about treatment allocation from those who could potentially be influenced by this information Blinding has long been considered an important safeguard against bias Benjamin Franklin in 1784 was probably the first to use blinding in scientific experimentation Louis XVI commissioned Franklin to evaluate mesmerism the most popular unconventional healing fluid of the eighteenth century By applying an actual blindfold to participants Franklin removed their knowledge of when mesmerism was and was not being applied Blinding eliminated the intervention s effects and established mesmerism as a sham From this work the scientific community recognised the power of blinding to enhance objectivity and it quickly became and remains a commonly used strategy in scientific research Jensen et al 2016 pp 2 5 Zabell 2016 p 32 Gould 1989 p 16 The term Mesmerism was introduced by Karl Christian Wolfart 1778 1832 de in his Mesmerismus 1814 which he wrote after a month long visit with Mesmer in Meersburg in September 1812 According to Buranelli 1975 p 201 Wolfart s work included some of the best eye witness notes we have on Mesmer and also Buranelli ibid notes that Wolfart took the final Mesmer manuscript away with him to be subsequently published under the title Mesmerismus For more on Wolfart s Mesmerismus and its contents see for instance Gauld 1992 pp 86 94 Crabtree 1993 pp 114 116 and Pattie 1994 pp 248 270 Duveen amp Klickstein 1955 p 287 Pattie 1994 p 145 Note that the contemporary English translation Godwin 1785 passim consistently rendered the Franklin Commission s technical term attouchement as compression which given that the contemporary translator s most likely had some direct understanding of d Eslon s techniques strongly suggests that d Eslon s degree of contact was of a far greater intensity than just a superficial stroking In his summary of the Society Commission s report i e Poissonnier et al 1784 Pattie 1994 pp 156 158 notes that the report s references to the issue of d Eslon s contact and its mention of a lengthy application of the hands the heat produced by this application and the irritation excited by friction i e sont une longue application des mains la chaleur produite par cette application l irritation excitee par le frottement Poissonnier et al p 15 seems to indicate that d Eslon used actual contact and pressure of the hands more than Mesmer did Pattie 1994 p 156 That is the response expectancy of Kirsch 1997 and certain aspects of the role enactment theory of hypnotism postulated by Theodore Sarbin and William Coe in the mid 1960s i e Coe amp Sarbin 1966 That is the imitation that is universally observed in the circumstances of behavioral contagion such as for example the contagious yawning reflex of individuals exposed to the yawning of others Mackay 1841 p 323 There is also another modern distortion through the consistent prochronistic misrepresentation of the Commissioners use of blinding and sham procedures due to the cherry picking in support of the modern understandings of placebo rather than that is in examining the historical significance of one of the first ever controlled trials Namely ibid pp 6 7 the direct connections between Mesmer and Freud e g see Ellenberger 1970 Chertok amp de Saussure 1979 and Crabtree 1993 and in contrast the distance between them e g see Gauld 1992 Mesmer s brother Joseph had been writing master to Marie Antoinette then about thirteen years old and the personal physician to her mother the empress Maria Theresa had stood as a witness at Mesmer s 1768 wedding in St Stephen s Cathedral Walmsley 1967 p 264 He had signed he declared the proposals of two weeks ago through weakness and respect for the opinions of others but he should never have allowed himself to do so Pattie 1994 p 111 Gillespie 2009 p 276 Bailly 1784b p 2 translation taken from Donaldson 2014 p 78 emphasis added Castronovo 1999 See Fuller 1982 Darnton 1968 esp pp 106 125 Armando 2018 Armando amp Belhoste 2018 Belhoste 2018 Rance 2018 and Zanetti 2018 According to Belhoste 2018 p 29 in the final section viz Moral Morality of his final published work Mesmerismus Wolfart 1814 pp 225 341 we find texts on the organization of society legislation and government education justice and worship as well as a draft constitution which indisputably show that Mesmer had fixed political ideas closely linked to his theory of animal magnetism and his moral philosophy According to Gray 2018 p 54 Mesmer was an outsider both as a foreigner and as someone who was found to be unacceptable to the scientific community doubts about his credibility had circulated and Mesmer reinforced these by making it clear that he had privilege to a technique that was above needing proof through experimentation resorting to the endorsement of public approval when he could not receive that of the Establishment For more on Mesmer the foreigner see Pick 2000 pp 44 67 Seeing persons events distant in time or place see Melton 2001a pp 297 301 Directing their readers to Pace s on Spiritism at pp 221 224 in Volume 14 of The Catholic Encyclopedia Spanos and Gottlieb 1979 p 538 noted that The church was particularly concerned by reports of clairvoyant phenomena occurring within mesmerism Clairvoyance it will be recalled had traditionally been one of the church s most rigorous tests of demonic possession Its occurrence allowed for only two interpretations The clairvoyant was either divinely inspired or demonically possessed Because there was nothing about mesmerism that the church would consider divine satanic influence remained as the only possible explanation for transcendent mesmeric phenomena See also Gregory 2015 Poissonnier et al 1784 p 1 Godwwin s commentary at p xv of the Introduction to his translation of the Report of the Franklin Commission Despite the widespread erroneous statements to the effect that he was executed by his own invention namely the guillotine which in fact although its use had been promoted by Guillotin had been invented by others Guillotin survived the Revolution and died of natural causes from the effects of a carbuncle on 26 March 1814 however both Lavoisier executed on 8 May 1794 and Bailly executed on 12 November 1793 were guillotined during the Reign of Terror Majault was not one of the original group of Commissioners The original commissioner was Professor Jean Francois de Borie a medical practitioner and advocate of hydrotherapy e g de Borie 1714 of the Paris Faculty who died on 21 May 1784 Majault also a member of the Paris Faculty was appointed to replace him Bailly 1784a p 1 Pattie 1994 p 142 At Lavoisier 1865 pp 508 510 Remarques de Lavoisier at p 510 translation taken from Donaldson 2014 p 27 Although the item is undated it was obviously from its content compiled following the Commission s investigations and prior to the publication of its Report And as Lavoisier later warned his readers in his Elementary Treatise on Chemistry 1789 p 7 the imagination was also a problem for the researchers as well It is in these things which we neither see nor feel that it is especially necessary to guard against the extravagancy of our imagination which forever inclines to step beyond the bounds of truth and is very difficultly restrained within the narrow line of facts translation taken from Kerr 1790 pp 6 7 Benjamin Franklin the American minister to France living at Passy received the signal honor due his international eminence of being named to head the Academy of Science s commission His age seventy eight made his appointment nominal and his duties devolved upon his colleagues Buranelli 1975 p 161 As Franklin 2021 records Benjamin Franklin was a long term intermittent sufferer from the extremely painful conditions of gout and bladder stone Mulford 2018 See for example Bailly 1784a at p 22 translated at Godwin 1785 p 48 as Dr Franklin though the weakness of his health hindered him from coming to Paris and assisting at the experiments which were there made was magnetised by M d Eslon at his own house at Passy According to McConkey amp Perry 1985 p 124 2002 p 323 Franklin s first encounter with Mesmer was not long after Mesmer s arrival in Paris when Franklin accompanied the accomplished composer and celebrated clavichord player Madame Anne Louise Brillon de Jouy 1774 1824 fr one of the most beautiful women in France who was very close to Franklin during his time in Paris and whom Franklin was pursuing strongly p 323 on a visit to Mesmer s establishment specifically to observe Mesmer s use of Franklin s glass armonica It is also significant that the glass armonica now held in the collection of the Baken Museum was specifically manufactured by Franklin for Mme Brillon de Jouy see Glass armonica Instrument before 1785 case probably early 19th century The Phillips Museum of Art Franklin awarded the Royal Society s Copley Medal in 1753 and elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society FRS in 1756 for his ground breaking work on the nature of electricity and his invention of the lightning rod had made a presentation to the Royal Society on 12 January 1758 on the Effects of Electricity in Paralytic Cases Franklin 1758 see also Finger 2006 For more on electricity and mesmerism see Schneck 1959 Ludwig 1964 and Sutton 1981 See Sutton 1981 Duveen amp Klickstein 1955 p 287 note that he was opposed to all new discoveries in science and to political revolution It was said of him in the latter connexion that he could utter anything he wanted without danger because nobody listened to him The inaccurate comments by Harte reflect the typical misrepresentation of the Committee s investigations into D Eslon as being concerned with Mesmer The Franklin Report was taken to be a refutation of the claims of Animal Magnetism and is still believed generally to be so but if examined it is found to have avoided the main issue whether Mesmer had discovered a new means for curing disease and to have confined itself to the theoretical question whether or not there exists a universal medium such as Mesmer described and whether the curious effects which no one denied that the process of Mesmer produced were caused by it Harte 1902 p 66 That is Dissertatio Physico Medica de Planetarum Influxu Note however that elsewhere such as Mesmer 1779 p 6 Mesmer identifies the same dissertation as de l infuence des planetes sur le corps humain The Influence of the Planets on the Human Body i e using the title appended to his original manuscript De Planetarum Influxu in Corpus Humanum It is important to note that despite the dissertation providing a series of brief case histories wherein the symptoms waxed and waned with the gravitational influences of the sun and the moon which produced tides in the ocean and atmosphere and also in the human body the dissertation had nothing to do with astrology a practice which Mesmer repudiated Pattie 1994 p 1 and as Gauld 1992 remarks rather than it being a treatise on astrology it is however essentially an essay in popular Newtonian physics p 1 The dissertation s title page identifies Mesmer as Antonii Mesmer Marisbergensis Acron Suev A A L L amp Phil Doct a Swabian from Meersburg on the Lake of Constance Doctor of Liberal Arts and Philosophy Having been unable to find any other reference in any of Mesmer s extensive works or anywhere else to the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Pattie 1994 concluded that it is reasonable to suspect that this degree was self conferred p 15 Gauld 1992 p 3 Peter 2005 p 8 According to Pattie 1994 p 116 this work despite being the chief source for the history of animal magnetism between 1779 and 1781 and providing a recital of Mesmer s difficulties in propagating his theories and having them investigated by learned societies contains little about theories and little about cures According to Michel Augustin Thouret 1749 1810 fr an energetic and leading member of the Royal Society of Medicine and a vigourous opponent of animal magnetism Gauld 1992 p 19 Mesmer s principles did not belong to him and rather than his theories representing some piquant novelty nouveaute piquante they belonged in fact to an ancient system that has been abandoned for more than a century un ancien systeme abandonne depuis pres d un siecle Thouret 1784 p xxv Similarly useful qualitative metaphorical abstract overarching constructs of later creation are those such as Georg Ernst Stahl s vis conservatrix naturae the sustaining force of nature and vis medicatrix naturae the healing force of nature Arthur Schopenhauer s Wille zum Leben the will to live Friedrich Nietzsche s Wille zur Gesundheit the will to health Henri Bergson s Elan vital the vital impetus etc Rosen 1959 p 8 also notes that in fact this whole sequence of events viz intentionally refusing to investigating the effects of imagination as an agent of cure set a kind of pattern which was to be repeated at intervals during the succeeding decades von Haller s irritability referred to the condition within which the contractive capacity of irritable organs muscles nerves etc i e physiological aspects capable of being excited into action by external irritation were excited by the application of an external irritating stimulus For more on Von Haller s theories see von Haller 1753a 1753b von Haller 1755 and English translation of von Haller 1753a 1753b Temkin 1936 and Steinke 2005 In his post Commission Memoire 1799 pp 29 42 translated at Bloch 1980 pp 101 106 Mesmer makes numerous references to both irritablilite and to irritation in his expositions on his views on the influence of muscle fibres upon movement See for example Tsouyopoulos 1988 For Mesmer animal magnetism was a logically sound system fitting well within and contradicting none of the empirical natural philosophical discourses that prevailed at this time Davies Wilson 2014 p 1 Translation at Bloch 1980 pp 96 97 In a similar vein two centuries later Michael Yapko warned therapists against reifying their inner child construct There is no inner child it is simply a metaphor 1994 p 34 emphasis in original He also refers to it 1799 p 12 as a new method for preserving and re establishing health un moyen nouveau de conserver et de retablir la sante Mesmer rejected the idea that psychological factors were involved since he could treat infants and comatose patients with apparent success and he scornfully rejected the notion that he was healing through the mind calling it a miserable objection Pattie 1994 p 2 See for instance Peter 2005 especially pp 3 5 Hilgard 1980 p xvi Gassner s supposedly supernatural therapeutic interventions had been debunked by Mesmer himself in 1775 when he visited Gassner and observed him in action at the behest of Maximilian III Joseph Elector of Bavaria see Mesmer and Gassner at Crabtree 1993 pp 8 10 And it is to this activity of Mesmer s that Gauld 1992 p 3 attributes the decision to admit Mesmer to the Bavarian Academy of Sciences Lafontain remained a committed magnetist publishing the journal Le Magnetiseur Journal du Magnetisme Animal in Geneva continuously from 1859 to 1872 Namely We can see from the facts that this principle in accordance with the practical rules I shall set forth can cure nervous ailments directly and other ailments indirectly Buranelli s 1975 p 102 translation of On reconnoitra par les faits d apres les regles pratiques que j etablirai que ce principe peut guerir immediatement les maladies des nerfs amp mediatement les autres Mesmer 1779 p 81 Crabtree 1993 p 16 Crabtree 1993 p 16 notes that having seen Mesmer at work d Eslon was convinced of the reality of animal magnetism and that d Eslon constantly in search of ways to benefit his patients placed himself under Mesmer s tutorship Crabtree loc cit also notes that as a disciple of the surgeon J L Petit and a highly respected member of the powerful Paris Faculty of Medicine d Eslon gave a prima facie legitimacy to the practice of animal magnetism and further that d Eslon s high standing with the faculty held out the hope that that august body might be persuaded to put its stamp of approval on Mesmer s discovery Pattie 1994 remarks that as a consequence of this relationship Mesmer had permitted d Eslon to observe his work for four years d Eslon 1780 pp 40 89 see Pattie 1994 pp 115 116 for brief summary of the disorders which d Eslon reported that Mesmer had treated For an historical account of changes in the understanding of the imagination over the centuries see Fischer Homberger 1979 Translation taken from Goldsmith 1934 p 155 Duveen amp Klickstein 1955 p 285 it would seem that application of the term misdemeanour viz wrong behaviour in this case as distinct from misfeasance or malpractice is intended to denote something similar to the military notion of conduct unbecoming d Eslon 1782 The reason that similar professional ostracism was not taken against Mesmer was that Mesmer was not and had never been either a docteur regent or a member of the Paris Faculty of Medicine See d Eslon 1784a Pattie 1994 p 131 estimated that there were something like 60 of these patients who left Mesmer and went with d Eslon See for example Brown 1933 Gauld 1992 pp 6 7 Crabtree 1993 pp 16 18 and Pattie 1994 pp 86 94 116 Ceux qui savent le secret en doutent plus que ceux qui l ignorent Deleuze 1813 p 24 The Royal Commissions had not been requested by Mesmer or any of his followers It is possible that some noblemen who were patients of d Eslon used their influence to have the commissions set up it is also possible that the King and his advisors were annoyed by the strife between Mesmer and d Eslon and were determined either to accept animal magnetism or to get rid of it Pattie 1994 p 142 According to Darnton 1968 p 50 d Eslon died while being mesmerized in August 1786 Grimm 1880 p 446 See Encounter with Maximillian Hell at Pattie 1994 pp 33 41 In other words the initial apparent from a first impression plausibility in contrast to so called pro tanto to that extent plausibity a state of affairs in which later empirical experience shows that the plausibility involved is far deeper than simply superficial For more on prima facie plausiblity see 2 3 Plausibility in Bartha 2019 See Mesmer 1779 p 35 On 5 January 1775 Mesmer had sent an open letter to a number of eminent scientists and also to a number of German and foreign scientific associations see Mesmer 1784 pp 21 22 in which he presented the details of his over arching theoretical principle describing its nature action and properties through direct analogies to both electricity and magnetism and inviting their views and comments He received only one reply that from the Berlin Academy The Academy s reply was negative and in Mesmer s view showed a complete misunderstanding of animal as distinguished from mineral magnetism Pattie 1994 p 42 For details of the Academy s reply see Mesmer 1784 pp 21 22 translated at Pattie 1994 pp 45 46 See for instance Gallo amp Finger 2000 Hadlock 2000 Finger amp Gallo 2004 and Kennaway 2010 2012 Mesmer regarded animal magnetism as a matter of sympathetic vibration just as much as music and argued that it could be communicated propagated and reinforced by sounds Kennaway 2012 p 273 Mesmer s assertion is in his Proposition 19 at Mesmer 1779 p 79 See for instance Hyatt King 1945 and Meyer amp Allen 1988 Franklin was most emphatic that his device was an Armonica and not as many modern writers suppose a Harmonica having named it in honour of armonia the Italian word for Harmony Meyer amp Allen 1988 p 185 Turner Christopher 2006 Mesmeromania or The Tale of the Tub The Therapeutic Powers of Animal Magnetism Cabinet No 21 Spring 2006 See also Landefield 1976 Paulet 1784 pp 117 118 English translation taken from Bloch 1980 p 83 For instance see his Catechism at Paulet p 117 Namely at Mesmer 1781 p 189 This statement by Mesmer is directly supported by the observation of Binet and Fere 1888 p 9 that the patients were ranged in several rows round the baquet connected with each other by cords passed round their bodies and by a second chain formed by joining hands emphasis added to original For instance as water is to the mill Mesmer 1799 p 24 as wind or water are to a mill p 100 etc Anon 1911 1912 p 79 translation of Bailly 1784a pp 5 6 Anon 1911 1912 p 80 translation of Bailly 1784a pp 6 7 Anon 1911 1912 p 80 translation of Bailly 1784a pp 7 8 At Poissonnier et al 1784 pp 9 19 Ibid p 10 In 1877 James Braid s colleague William Carpenter observed that the nervous paroxysm termed the crisis that was manifested in the hysterical subjects who constituted the great bulk of Mesmer s patients was at once recognized by medical men as only a modified form of what is commonly known as an hysteric fit the influence of the imitative tendency being manifested as it is in cases where such fits run through a school nunnery factory or revivalist meeting in which a number of suitable subjects are collected together Carpenter 1877 p 17 In 1972 Ronald Shor concluded 1972 p 20 that overall the patients agitated reactions were probably due to three factors i expectations deriving from medieval demonic exorcism rites the dancing manias St Vitus s Dance for example and possibly epilepsy ii a probable aftereffect of anxiety release after direct symptom suppression Shor drew particular attention to the case of Maria Theresia von Paradis and iii a derivation of the vapeurs the hysterical fainting and nervous fits fashionable among society women at that time The standard at the time term animal economy is derived from the original meaning of economy the management of a household and is best understood by the definition supplied by Jean Joseph Menuret in his article Œconomie Animale Medecine in Denis Diderot s Encyclopedie of 1765 at Vol XI pp 360 366 This term taken in the most exact and common sense refers only to the order mechanism and overall set of the functions and movements which sustain life in animals the perfect universal and constant exercise of which performed with ease and alacrity is the flourishing state of health the least disturbance of which is itself illness and the full ceasing of which is the extreme diametrical opposite of life that is death translation taken from Huneman 2008 p 618 emphasis in originsl Anon 1911 1912 p 137 translation of Bailly 1784a p 61 Anon 1911 1912 p 137 translation of Bailly 1784a pp 61 62 Anon 1911 1912 p 137 translation of Bailly 1784a pp 62 63 Anon 1911 1912 p 137 translation of Bailly 1784a pp 63 64 He also notes that in their magnetic treatment of 37 patients the Commissioners were unable to produce a single crisis loc cit According to Dingwall 1967 p 6 Mesmer s earlier conceptualization of animal gravity was later replaced by his more sophisticated concept of animal magnetism p 276 in Arguments to prove that Animal Magnetism is the cause of sympathy in Man and other animals and in plants amp c Sibly 1820 pp 276 277 Namely correctness of behaviour as distinct from its counterpart orthodoxia correctness of theory For more on action at a distance see Hesse 1961 and especially Kovach 1979 pp 161 171 Specifically referring to Browne 1658 pp 83 84 Pollitt 2019 p 70 Magnetic demonstrator Alan Gauld s term Gauld 1992 p 204 accurately describes Lafontaine Whilst in the U K Lafontaine only demonstrated magnetic phenomena he did not demonstrate its applications to the treatment of patients at any time in public or private Yeates 2018 p 52 lower phenomena included displays of amnesia state dependent memory loss of sense of identity suggestibility heightened memory deadening of the senses insensibility to pain rapport with the operator and Schlafwachen sleep waking see Elliotson 1835 pp 627 630 Herfner 1844 pp 81 83 etc Yeates also notes that al though the defining somnolence of the sleep waking state a subset of sleepwalking was often combined with somniloquism sleeptalking it was never combined with ambulism walking of any sort Barth 1851 p 24 Yeates 2018 p 52 higher phenomena included displays of transposition of the senses hearing with fingers sensing colours with the soles of the feet etc see Melton 2001a 533 534 2001b pp 1027 1359 1360 1499 1585 etc physical rapport or community of sensation subjects experiencing the operator s physical sensations of taste smell etc see Townshend 1840 p 65 Melton 2001a p 319 2001b pp 989 990 etc clairvoyance seeing persons events distant in time or place see Melton 2001a pp 297 301 psychical rapport able to read operator s thoughts and be mesmerised from a distance see Crabtree 2008 p 569 and ecstasy immersed in an elevated state of consciousness with an awareness of spiritual things see Crabtree 1988 p xxiv 2008 p 569 Salas amp Salas 1996 p 70 Franklin et al 2002 p 335 emphasis added See Donaldson 2006 Joseph Marie Francois de Lassone 1717 1788 fr personal physician to the King Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette and President of the Paris Faculty of Medicine Mesmer 1781 p 198 translation at Donaldson 2005 p 575 note that a the passages in square brackets come from Donaldson and b Donaldson cites the passage as coming from page 196 rather than 198 of Mesmer s work As Yeates 2018 p 61 observes the presence of gifts in a child s Xmas stocking does not support claims for the supposed existence of Santa Claus a b Salas amp Salas 1996 p 71 Franklin et al 2002 p 338 One cannot avoid the suspicion that the Commissioners were relieved that they were able to extricate themselves from a full investigation of the remarkable phenomena they had observed at the baquet an investigation for which at the time there was no precedent and no methodology Forrest p 67 Salas amp Salas 1996 p 71 Franklin et al 2002 p 338 the Commissioners were quoting statements from Mesmer 1781 pp 35 37 Godwin 1785 pp 37 38 translates the relevant passage as follows citing Mesmer 1781 pp 35 37 Upon this head the commissioners are of the opinion of M Mesmer He rejected the cure of diseases when this method of proving the magnetism was proposed to him by a member of the academy of sciences It is a mistake replied he to imagine that this kind of proof is unanswerable it cannot be demonstrated that either the physician or the medicine causes the recovery of the patient And according to Pattie 1994 p 147 it was in their quest of an experience of these momentary effects that the commissioners decided to submit themselves to magnetization en depouillant ces effets de toutes les illusions qui peuvent s y meler Translation taken from Godwin 1785 p 38 other translations at Anon 1911 1912 p 81 Salas amp Salas 1996 p 71 Franklin et al 2002 pp 338 339 and Donaldson 2014 p 47 Stengers 2003 p 14 We see men succumb it seems to the same sickness cured by taking contradictory treatments and in taking entirely different treatments Nature is thus powerful enough to support life in spite of poor treatment and able to triumph over both illness and its remedy If she has this power to resist remedies then she has all the more reason to have the power to work without them The translation is taken from Godwin 1785 pp 33 35 for other translations see Anon 1911 1912 pp 80 81 Salas amp Salas 1996 pp 70 71 Franklin et al 2002 p 337 and Donaldson 2014 p 45 Yeates 2018 p 52 emphasis added Pattie 1994 p 147 For Lavoisier s involvement with the investigations in general see Lavoisier 1865 passim and Donaldson 2017 passim For a specific example of Lavoisier s experimental design see Lavoisier s Plan d Experiemces at Lavoisier 1865 pp 511 513 also see the English translation Lavoisier s Plan of Experiments at Donaldson 2017 pp 167 Braid spoke of these at a conversazione he conducted in Manchester on 22 April 1844 see Anon 1844 Bramwell 1903 pp 144 149 and Yeates 2013 pp 741 743 After defining the issues to be investigated the commissioners conducted their investigation in a very systematic manner They employed public observation self study case study and hypothesis testing McConkey amp Barnier 1991 p 78 Salas amp Salas 1996 p 71 Franklin et al 2002 p 339 Godwin the translator in a footnote p 23 notes that the diameter of this box is usually large enough to admit of fifty persons landing round its circumference Translation taken from Godwin 1785 p 23 other translations at Anon 1911 1912 p 79 at Salas amp Salas 1996 p 69 at Franklin 2002 p 333 and Donaldson 2014 p 41 It is significant that not only was physicist Le Roy an expert on all things electrical but also that in 1749 with Patrick d Arcy he had constructed of one of the first ever electroscopes often described as a floating repulsion electrometer Hackmann 1998 p 220 Translation taken from Godwin 1785 pp 24 25 other translations at Anon 1911 1912 p 79 Salas amp Salas 1996 p 69 and at Franklin 2002 p 334 and Donaldson 2014 p 42 See Bailly 1784a translated at Godwin 1785 Anon 1911 1912 pp 79 84 133 137 Salas amp Salas 1996 Franklin et al 2002 and Donaldson 2014 pp 39 67 a b c d Yeates 2018 p 51 Bailly 1784a p 48 At Bailly 1784a pp 1 3 Bailly 1784a p 3 This is Godwin s 1785 p 21 translation of Bailly 1784a p 3 which is directly quoting Mesmer s 1779 p vi la Nature offer un moyen universel de guerir et le preserver les Hommes a b Anon 1911 1912 p 79 translation of Bailly 1784a pp 1 3 See Bailly 1784a pp 64 66 translated at Godwin 1785 pp 106 108 and also at Anon 1911 1912 p 137 Salas amp Salas 1996 p 83 Franklin et al 2002 p 363 and Donaldson 2014 pp 75 76 Anon 1911 1912 p 137 translation of Bailly 1784a pp 64 65 Anon 1911 1912 p 137 translation of Bailly 1784a pp 65 66 Bailly 1784a a b Founders Online n d Note that both Anon 1911 1912 p 249 and Lanska amp Lanska 2007 p 313 refer to more than 20 000 copies while Eden 1974 p 15 speaks of 60 000 copies Regardless of which source is correct it was certainly a considerable number Ogden 2012 p 143 More recent translations at Anon 1911 1912 pp 79 84 133 137 Salas amp Salas 1996 Franklin et al 2002 and Donaldson 2014 pp 39 67 Anon 1837 Bailly 1784a pp 57 58 translation taken from Anon 1911 1912 p 136 These conclusions are consistent with the declaration made on 1 May 1784 by the eminent French chemist Claude Louis Berthollet both a member of the Paris Faculty of Medicine and the Royal Academy of Sciences when leaving Mesmer s training in 1784 halfway through the course of instruction that he had undertaken at the specific request of his patient the Duke of Orleans in the hope of learning Mesmer s secret that everything that he had observed could be attributed to the imagination touch and imitation declaration reprinted at Figuier 1860 pp 177 178 translations at Podmore 1908 p 55 and at Pattie 1994 p 133 Winter 1801 pp 11 12 The lectures in question were delivered by Jean Bonnoit de Mainauduc 1750 1797 a former student of Charles d Eslon The translation is from Salas amp Salas 1996 p 70 and Franklin et al 2002 p 336 other translations at Godwin 1785 pp 30 31 Anon 1911 1912 p 80 and Donaldson 2014 p 44 Bailly 1800 translations at Bailly and Others 1963 at Bailly et al 2002 and at Donaldson 2014 pp 68 76 See also Crabtree 1993 pp 92 94 Pattie 1994 pp 154 155 English translation at Bailly and Others 1963 Bailly et al 2002 and Donaldson 2014 pp 77 83 See Charcot 1893 1897 and Bernheim 1888 pp 285 286 1889 p 202 Poissonnier Caille Mauduyt de La Varenne amp Andry 1784 summary at Crabtree 1993 p 28 and at Pattie 1994 pp 156 158 Although they too used blindfolded subjects Pattie 1994 p 156 Poissonnier 1784 p 2 the translation is from Pattie 1994 p 156 Pattie 1994 pp 156 157 paraphrasing Poissonnier 1784 p 12 Burdin amp Dubois 1841 pp 136 137 Citing Poissonnier 1784 p 35 Citing Poissonnier 1784 loc cit de Jussieu 1784 summary at Crabtree 1993 pp 28 29 and at Pattie 1994 pp 152 153 The translation is taken from Teste 1843 p 10 Thomas d Onglee 1785 p 4 Pattie 1994 pp 155 156 d Eslon had already been expelled for essentially the same reasons a year earlier Thomas d Onglee 1785 pp 4 6 See Crabtree 1993 pp 31 32 and Pattie 1994 pp 155 156 Crabtree s translation 1993 at p 32 of Thomas d Onglee 1785 p 8 Aucun Docteur ne se declarera partisan du Magnetisme animal ni par ses ecrits ni par sa pratique sous peine d etre raye du Tableau des Docteurs Regens emphasis in original d Eslon 1784b abridged translation at d Eslon 1963 also see discussion at Pattie 1994 pp 167 172 Paraphrasing d Eslon 1784b p 25 Note that it was published in The Hague rather than in Paris thereby avoiding the need for approval by the Royal censor That is 5 girls 6 boys 47 women and 56 men The book was compiled under great pressure there are many mistakes in proper names and the compiler has omitted to take notice that some of the reports deal with more than one patient Podmore 1909 p 9 Most likely these particular class notes were based upon the notes prepared by Mesmer s close associate Nicolas Bergasse for Mesmer s students who were dissatisfied with Mesmer s teaching and resorted to Bergasse asking him to give them a more coherent account Pattie 1994 p 131 Pattie 1994 p 132 also notes that in consequence of Mesmer s poor command of French Bergasse frequently interrupted Mesmer when he attempted to address the assembly of his students Pattie 1994 p 212 All who Mesmer taught were required to sign a contract declaring that they would not reveal any of Mesmer s doctrines teach mesmerism to others or open a mesmeric clinic without Mesmer s express permission see Forrest 1999 pp 37 38 for a translation of a typical contract in this case the contract signed by the Marquis de Lafayette on 5 April 1784 For the third edition see Caullet de Veaumorel 1785b and for an English translation of that version see Caullet de Veaumorel 1785c Also see Pattie 1994 pp 212 215 Note that although this appears in the original s Introduction i e 1785b pp 14 15 it is absent from the English version i e 1785c I have changed absolutely nothing to these words so as not to be accused of having wanted to introduce something foreign to his Doctrine Je n ai absolument rien change a ces dictees asin de ne pas etre accuse d y avoir voulu introduire quelque chose d etranger a sa Doctrine 1785b p 14 See 1785c p viii which is an abridgement of the original text at 1785 pp 14 15 For Mesmer s letter see Mesmer 1785 and for Caullet de Veaumorel s rejoinder see Caullet de Veaumorel 1785a Mesmer 1784a 1784b The contributors included aristocrats both Roman Catholic and Protestant clerics medical practitioners and both the Marquis de Puysegur and his brother the Comte de Chastenet de Puysegur fr Shermer 1996 pp 66 67 However as Lanska 2019 p 168 observes It was only with rare and methodologically limited exceptions that comparative prospective clinical trials were employed before the twentieth century thus allowing many ineffective and harmful traditional therapies to remain in routine use by orthodox physicians e g bleeding blistering purging and administration of highly toxic heavy metals a point repeatedly made by quacks and their supporters p 169 In 2002 McConkey and Perry p 329 observed that the Franklin Commission s scientific findings on the nature of animal magnetism remain intact and unchallenged They were called tractors from the Latin tractum to draw because they were drawn or rubbed across the skin See Haygarth 1801 Booth 2005 and Lanska 2019 A set of Perkins patent tractors are on display at the Wellcome Galleries at London s Science Museum see 1 Haygarth 1801 p 4 Younger 1887 p 69 See Collyer 1843 p 10 and 1871 pp 49 50 Footnote at Atkinson 1843 p 294 The additional welcome significance of this discovery was that to the supporters of animal magnetism and to the supporters of phrenology the legitimacy of the theoretical position of each science had now been confirmed by the other Yeates 2018 p 54 For a description of two exemplar cases see Anon 1843 pp 205 206 See Collyer 1843 pp 8 20 See Braid 1842a pp 105 149 See Braid 1843b From his extensive experiments Braid concluded that all of the observed phreno magnetic phenomena were entirely due to excitement by auricular suggestion or by muscular suggestion or by manipulating either the head trunk or extremities Braid 1844 p 181 See for instance the views of Newnham 1845 Pitres 1891 p 499 see Pitres 1891 pp 97 116 Note that in contrast to the being led into implications of the term induction the references to the subject being thrown into strongly suggests a sudden uninhibited knee jerk kind of entirely involuntary bio physiological reflex on the part of the subject Pitres 1891 p 98 Note that many modern English texts repeat the typographical error that occurs in the mistaken rendering of Moll s zones hypno frenatrices Moll 1890 p 26 as zones hypno fernatrices in Moll 1890b p 36 Pitres 1891 p 101 See for example Pitres 1891 pp 103 107 109 499 etc In noting that the degree of hypnosis attainable does not depend on the physician s procedure but on the chance reaction of the patient Freud also speaks of the strikingly soothing and lulling effect of stroking the patient s face and body with both hands continuously for from five to ten minutes in those cases where he was not satisfied with the degree of hypnosis attained See Freud 1957 1895 pp 107 112 especially the footnote at pp 110 111 Freud s visits were driven by his desire to investigate the claims and methods of the Nancy School or Suggestion School and compare them with those of the Paris School or Hysteria School with which he was already familiar in great detail from his own extended studies at the Salpetriere with Charcot Freud 1957 1895 p 110 See for instance Rosen 1946 James 1975 and Ridgway 1993 and 1994 See Elliotson 1845 1847a 1847b 1847c 1848 and 1852 and Esdaile 1846 1849 1850 and 1853 This issue is for example central to the contentious question of whether or not the cephalopod s eye and the vertebrate s eye evolved independently References EditNote that many pamphlets on magnetism bear false imprints they purport to have been printed in London The Hague Philadelphia Peking etc In this way they evaded French censorship Pattie 1994 p 179 Anon 1837 Animal Magnetism Report of Dr Franklin and other Commissioners charged by the King of France with the Examination of the Animal Magnetism as practised at Paris Translated from the French with an Historical Outline of the Science an Abstract of the report on Magnetic Experiments made by a committee of the Royal Academy of Medicine in 1831 and remarks on Col Stone s pamphlet Philadelphia H Perkins includes at pp 1 44 a reprint of Godwin 1785 pp 1 108 Anon 1843 Recent Demonstrations of Animal Magnetism Chambers s Edinburgh Journal Vol 12 No 598 Saturday 15 July 1843 pp 205 207 Anon 1844 Conversazione on Hypnotism At the Royal Manchester Institution The Medical Times Vol 10 No 243 18 May 1844 pp 137 139 Anon 1911 1912 Nova et Vetera New and Old Modern Faith Healing F Anton Mesmer The British Medical Journal Vol 2 No 2658 9 December 1911 pp 1555 1559 Vol 1 No 2663 13 January 1912 pp 79 84 Vol 1 No 2664 20 January 1912 pp 133 137 Vol 1 No 2665 27 January 1912 pp 199 201 and Vol 1 No 2666 3 February 1912 pp 249 252 includes at pp 79 84 133 137 a translation of Bailly 1784a and at pp 199 201 a translation of Bailly 1800 Armando D trans J Johnson 2018 Magnetic Crises Political Convulsions The Mesmerists in the Constituent Assembly Annales Historiques de la Revolution Francaise Vol 391 No 1 January March 2018 pp 129 152 Armando D amp Belhoste B trans J Johnson 2018 Mesmerism Between the End of the Old Regime and the Revolution Social Dynamics and Political Issues Annales Historiques de la Revolution Francaise Vol 391 No 1 January March 2018 pp 3 26 Atkinson H G 1843 On Mesmero Phrenology and the Function of the Cerebellum Being a Paper Read at the Second Meeting of the Phrenological Association July the 4th 1843 Dr Elliotson in the Chair The Medical Times Vol 8 No 202 5 August 1843 pp 294 296 No 203 12 August 1843 pp 308 311 Bailly J S ed 1784a Rapport des Commissaires charges par le Roi de l examen du magnetisme animal Imprime par ordre du Roi Paris Imprimerie Royale Bailly J S ed 1784b Expose des experiences qui ont ete faites pour l examen du magnetisme animal lu a l Academie des Sciences le 4 Septembre 1784 Exposition of the experiments that were carried out to examine Animal Magenetism Read at the Academy of Sciences on the 4th September 1784 Paris Chez Moutard Bailly J S 1800 Rapport secret sur le mesmerisme Le Conservateur Vol 1 pp 146 155 Bailly J S and Others 1963 Secret Report on Mesmerism or Animal Magnetism pp 3 7 in The Nature Of Hypnosis Selected Basic Writings ed Ronald E Shor and Martin T Orne New York NY Holt Rinehart and Winston Inc a translation of Bailly 1800 Bailly J S Franklin B de Bory G Lavoisier A Majault M J Sallin C L d Arcet J Guillotin J I amp Le Roy J B Secret Report on Mesmerism or Animal Magnetism International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis vol 50 No 4 October 2002 pp 364 368 a translation of Bailly 1800 a reprint of Bailly and Others 1963 doi 10 1080 00207140208410110 Barth G 1851 The Mesmerist s Manual of Phenomena and Practice With Directions for Applying Mesmerism to the Cure of Diseases and the Methods of Producing Mesmeric Phenomena Intended for Domestic Use and the Instruction of Beginners Second Edition London H Bailliere Bartha Paul 2019 Analogy and Analogical Reasoning in Edward N Zalta ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Spring 2019 Edition Belhoste B trans J Johnson 2018 Franz Anton Mesmer Magnetiser Moralist and Republican Annales Historiques de la Revolution Francaise Vol 391 No 1 January March 2018 pp 27 56 Bergasse N 1784 Considerations sur le Magnetisme Animal ou sur la Theorie du Monde et des etres organises d apres les principes de M Mesmer Considerations on Animal Magnetism or on the Theory of the World and Organized Beings according to the principles of M Mesmer The Hague n p Bernheim H 1888 De la Suggestion et de son Application a la Therapeutique Paris Octave Doin Bernheim H trans Herter C A 1889 Suggestive Therapeutics A Treatise on the Nature and Uses of Hypnotism New York G P Putnam s Sons an English translation of Bernheim 1888 Bersani F 2011 Mesmerism From an Ambiguous Physical and Medical Canon to Psychology pp 59 72 in A Calanchi G Castellani G Morisco and G Turchetti eds Interfacing Science Literature and the Humanities ACUME 2 Volume 7 The Case and the Canon Anomalies Discontinuities Metaphors between Science and Literature Gottingen V amp R unipress ISBN 978 3 89971 681 8 Best M Neuhauser D and Slavin L 2003 Evaluating Mesmerism Paris 1784 The Controversy over the Blinded Placebo Controlled Trials has not Stopped BMJ Quality amp Safety 12 3 June 2003 pp 232 233 Binet Alfred amp Fere Charles 1888 Animal Magnetism New York D Appleton and Company Bloch George 1980 Mesmerism A Translation of the Original Scientific and Medical writings of F A Mesmer Los Altos CA William Kaufman ISBN 0 913232 88 2 Bonnefoy J B 1784 Analyse raisonnee des Rapports des Commissaires charges par le Roi de l examen du Magnetisme Animal A Reasoned Analysis of the Reports of the Commissioners appointed by the King to examine Animal Magnetism Lyon and Paris Prault Booth C The Rod of Aesculapios John Haygarth 1740 1827 and Perkins Metallic Tractors Journal of Medical Biography Vol 13 No 3 August 2005 pp 155 161 Braid J 1843a Neurypnology or the Rationale of Nervous Sleep Considered in Relation with Animal Magnetism Illustrated by Numerous Cases of its Successful Application in the Relief and Cure of Disease London John Churchill N B Braid s Errata detailing a number of important corrections that need to be made to the foregoing text is on the un numbered page following p 265 Braid J 1843b Observations on the Phenomena of Phreno Mesmerism The Medical Times Vol 9 No 216 11 November 1843 pp 74 75 Braid J 1844 Experimental Inquiry to Determine whether Hypnotic and Mesmeric Manifestations can be Adduced in Proof of Phrenology The Medical Times Vol 11 No 271 30 November 1844 pp 181 182 Bramwell J M 1903 Hypnotism Its History Practice and Theory London Grant Richards Brandeis L D 1913 What Publicity Can Do Harper s Weekly Vol 58 No 2974 20 December 1913 pp 10 13 Brockliss L W B amp Jones C 1997 The Medical World of Early Modern France Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 198 22750 2 Broomhall S 2004 Women s Medical Work in Early Modern France Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 719 06286 5 Brown M W 1933 Charles Deslon Disciple of Mesmer Medical Journal and Record Vol 138 no 11 pp 232 233 Browne Thomas 1658 Pseudodoxia Epidemica or Enquiries into very many Received Tenents and commonly Presumed Truths Fourth Edition London Edward Dod note that the book s title page has Thomas Brown no final e Buranelli V 1975 The Wizard from Vienna Franz Anton Mesmer New York Coward McCann amp Geoghegan ISBN 978 0 698 10697 0 Burdin C amp Dubois F 1841 Histoire Academique du Magnetisme Animal accompagnee de Notes et de Remarques Critiques sur toutes les Observations et Experiences faites jusqu a ce Jour An Academic History of Animal Magnetism accompanied by Notes and Critical Remarks on all Observations and Experiments made to date Paris Chez J B Bailliere Cambry J 1784 Traces du magnetisme Traces of Magnetism The Hague n p Campbell A Mesmer and Hahnemann A Comparison British Homoeopathic Journal Vol 77 No 1 January 1988 pp 34 37 doi 10 1016 S0007 0785 88 80051 6 Carpenter W B 1877 Mesmerism Odylism Table Turning and Spiritualism I The Popular Science Monthly Vol 11 No 1 May 1877 pp 12 25 Mesmerism Odylism Table Turning and Spiritualism II No 2 June 1877 pp 161 173 Castronovo R 1999 The Antislavery Unconscious Mesmerism Vodun and Equality The Mississippi Quarterly Vol 53 No 1 Winter 1999 pp 41 56 Caullet de Veaumorel Louis 1785a Letter to the Editors dated 7 January 1785 Journal de Paris Vol 9 No 9 9 January 1785 pp 38 39 Caullet de Veaumorel Louis 1785b Aphorismes de M Mesmer dictes a l assemblee de ses Eleves amp dans lesquels on trouve ses principes sa theorie amp les moyens de magnetiser le tout formant un corps de Doctrine developpe en trois cens quarente quatre paragraphes pour faciliter l application des Commentaires au Magnestism Animal Ouvrage mis au jour par M C de V Medecin de la Maison de Monsieur Troisieme Edition Aphorisms of M Mesmer dictated to the assembly of his students in which are found his principles his theory and the methods of msgnetizing the whole forming a body of doctrine developed in 344 Paragraphs Work brought to light by M onsieur C de V a physician to the house of Monsieur viz Comte d Artoir the brother of the King Third Edition Paris Bertrand Compiegne Caullet de Veaumorel Louis 1785c Mesmer s Aphorisms and Instructions by M Caullet de Veaumorel Physician to the Household of Monsieur His Most Christian Majesty s Brother London Charcot J M 1893 The Faith Cure The New Review Vol 8 No 44 January 1893 pp 18 31 a simultaneously published English translation of Charcot s 1892 Revue Hebdomaine article that was reprinted at Charcot 1897 Charcot J M 1897 La Foi qui Guerit The Faith that Heals Paris Bureaux du Progres Medical Chertok L amp de Saussure R 1979 The Therapeutic Revolution From Mesmer to Freud New York Brunner Mazel ISBN 978 0 876 30208 8 Coe W C amp Sarbin T R 1966 An Experimental Demonstration of Hypnosis as Role Enactment Journal of Abnormal Psychology Vol 71 No 6 December 1996 pp 400 406 Collyer R H 1843 Psychography or The Embodiment of Thought With an Analysis of Phreno Magnetism Neurology and Mental Hallucination Including Rules to Govern and Produce the Magnetic State Philadelphia PA Zieber amp Co Collyer R H 1871 Animal Magnetism Mesmerism or Nervous Congestion and Other Allied Topics pp 48 56 in R H Collyer Mysteries of the Vital Element in Connexion with Dreams Somnambulism Trance Vital Photography Faith and Will Anaesthesia Nervous Congestion and Creative Function Modern Spiritualism Explained Second Edition London Henry Renshaw Colquhoun J C 1843 The Fallacy of Phreno Magnetism Detected and Exposed Edinburgh William Wilson Crabtree A 1988 Animal Magnetism Early Hypnotism and Psychical Research 1766 1925 An Annotated Bibliography White Plains NY Kraus International Publications Crabtree A 1993 From Mesmer to Freud Magnetic Sleep and the Roots of Psychological Healing New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 05588 9 Crabtree A 2008 The Transition to Secular Psychotherapy Hypnosis and the Alternate Consciousness Paradigm pp 555 586 in E Wallace amp J Gach eds History of Psychiatry and Medical Psychology With an Epilogue on Psychiatry and the Mind Body Relation New York NY Springer ISBN 978 0 387 34707 3 Craver C F amp Darnden L 2013 In Search of Mechanisms Discoveries across the Life Sciences Chicago IL University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 03982 4 d Eslon C 1780 Observations sur le Magnetisme Animal London amp Paris P Fr Didot C M Saugrain Clousier d Eslon C 1782 Lettre de M d Eslon docteur regent de la Faculte de Medicine de Paris Premiere Medicine ordinaire de Monseigneur le Comte d Artois amp c a M Philip Doyen en Charge de la meme Faculte The Hague d Eslon C 1784a Letter to the Editors dated 28 December 1783 Journal de Paris Vol 8 No 6 Supplement 10 January 1784 p 45 48 d Eslon C 1784b Observations sur les deux Rapports de MM les Commissaires nommes par sa Majeste pour l examen du Magnetisme Animal Observations on the two Reports of MM the Commissioners appointed by his Majesty for the examination of Animal Magnetism Philadelphia and Paris Chez Clousier d Eslon C 1784c Supplement aux deux Rapports de MM les Commissaires de l Academie amp de la Faculte de Medecine amp de la Societe Royale de Medecine Supplement to the two Reports of MM the Commissioners of the Academy amp of the Faculty of Medicine amp of the Royal Society of Medicine The Hague Chez Gueffier d Eslon C trans by D Chval ed and abridged by R E Shor 1963 Observations on the Two Reports of the Commissioners Named by the King to Investigate Animal Magnetism pp 8 20 in The Nature Of Hypnosis Selected Basic Writings ed Ronald E Shor and Martin T Orne New York NY Holt Rinehart and Winston Inc an abridged translation of d Eslon 1784b Darnton R 1968 Mesmerism and the End of the Enlightenment in France Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Davies Wilson Rebecca 2014 The Problem of Mesmerism Tooth amp Claw Vol 11 2014 pp 1 8 de Borie Jean Francois La Recherche des eaux minerales de Cauterez Avec la maniere d en user The Search for the Mineral Waters of Cauterets with the way to use it Tarbes Mathieu Roquemaurel 1714 de Jussieu Antoine Laurent 1784 Rapport de l un des commissaires charges par le Roi de l examen du magnetisme animal Report of one of the commissioners charged by the King with the examination of animal magnetism in French Paris Veuve Herissant Deleuze J P F 1813 Histoire Critique du Magnetisme Animal Premiere Partie A Critical History of Animal Magnetism Part One Paris Mame Deleuze J P F 1814 Sur l analogie des phenomenes du Magnetisme avec les autres phenomenes de la nature et conjectures sur le principe de l action magnetique On the analogy of magnetic phenomena with the other phenomena of nature and conjectures on the principle of magnetic action Annales du Magnetisme Animal Vol 1 No 5 1814 pp 225 240 Devereaux P J Bhandari M Montori V M Manns B J Ghali W A and Guyatt G H 2002 Double Blind You are the Weakest Link Goodbye BMJ Evidence Based Medicine vol 7 No 1 January 2002 pp 4 5 Devillers C J 1784 Le Colosse aux pieds d argille The Colossus with Feet of Clay Paris n p Dingwall E J 1967 Abnormal Hypnotic Phenomena A Survey of Nineteenth Century Cases Volume I Ftance London J amp A Churchill Donaldson I M L 2005 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 Donaldson I M L 2017 Antoine de Lavoisier s Role in Designing a Single Blind Trial to Assess whether Animal Magnetism Exists Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine Vol 110 No 4 April 2017 pp 163 167 Donaldson I M L 2014 The Reports of the Royal Commission of 1784 on Mesmer s System of Animal Magnetism and Other Contemporary Documents New English Translations and an Introduction by IML Donaldson Edinburgh James Lind Library Sibbald Library at pp 18 38 a translation of Lavoisier 1865 at pp 39 67 a translation of Bailly 1784a at pp 68 76 a translation of Bailly 1800 and at pp 77 83 a translation of Bailly 1784b Duveen Denis I Klickstein Herbert S December 1955 Benjamin Franklin 1706 1790 and Antoine Laurent Lavoisier 1743 1794 Part II Joint investigations Annals of Science 11 4 271 302 doi 10 1080 00033795500200295 Eden Jerome 1974 Animal Magnetism and the Life Energy the Natural Curative Force in Everyone The Definitive Study of the Astounding Discoveries of Dr Franz Anton Mesmer CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform ISBN 1 727 06170 5 Ellenberger H F 1970 The Discovery of the Unconscious The History and Evolution of Dynamic Psychiatry New York NY Basic Books Elliotson J 1845 More painless Amputations and other Surgical Operations in the Mesmeric State The Zoist A Journal of Cerebral Physiology amp Mesmerism and Their Application to Human Welfare Vol 3 No 12 January 1846 pp 490 508 Includes at pp 498 508 Mesmeric Facts reported by James Esdaile M D Civil Assistant Surgeon Hooghly reprinted from the India Journal of Medical and Physical Science Vol 3 No 6 June 1845 Elliotson J 1847a Report of the Calcutta Committee on Dr Esdaile s Mesmeric Operations The Zoist Vol 5 No 17 April 1847 pp 50 69 Elliotson J 1847b More Painless Surgical Operations in India The Zoist Vol 5 No 17 April 1847 pp 69 70 Elliotson J 1847c Dr Esdaile s First Monthly Report of the Calcutta Mesmeric Hospital and his Experiments with Ether used with the same view as Mesmerism in Surgical Operations The Zoist Vol 5 No 18 July 1847 pp 178 186 Elliotson J 1848 An Account of A Review of my Reviewers by James Esdaile M D Calcutta January 26 1848 The Zoist Vol 6 No 22 July 1848 pp 158 173 Elliotson J 1852 An Account of the Mesmeric Hospital in Bengal since Dr Esdaile s departure from India The Zoist Vol 10 No 39 October 1852 pp 278 293 Esdaile J 1846a Mesmeric Facts reported by James Esdaile M D Civil Assistant Surgeon Hooghly reprinted from the India Journal of Medical and Physical Science Vol 3 No 6 June 1845 reprinted in The Zoist Vol 3 No 12 January 1846 pp 498 508 Esdaile J 1849 The Reality of Clairvoyance The Zoist Vol 7 No 27 October 1849 pp 213 224 Esdaile J 1850 On the Operation for the Removal of Scrotal Tumours amp c The Effects of Mesmerism and Chloroform Compared The London Medical Gazette Vol 11 No 1189 13 September 1850 pp 449 454 Esdaile J 1853 The Protest and Petition of James Esdaile M D Surgeon H E I C S to the Members of the American Congress The Zoist A Journal of Cerebral Physiology amp Mesmerism and Their Application to Human Welfare Vol 11 No 43 October 1853 pp 294 297 Esmonin Antoine Marquis de Dampierre 1784 Reflexions Impartiales sur le Magnetisme Animal Faites apres la publication du Rapport des Commissaires charges par le Roi de l Examen de cette Decouverte Impartial Reflections on Animal Magnetism made after the publication of the Report of the Commissioners charged by the King with the Examination of this Discovery Geneva Barthelemy Chirol Faflack J 2009 Romantic Psychoanalysis The Burden of the Mystery Albany NY State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 79147 270 5 Figuier Louis 1860 Le Magnetisme Animal pp 171 182 in L Figuier Histoire du Merveilleux dans les Temps Modernes Tome Troisieme History of the Marvelous in Modern Times Volume Three Paris L Hatchette amp Co Finger S 2006 Benjamin Franklin Electricity and the Palsies On the 300th Anniversary of his Birth Neurology Vol 66 No 10 23 May 2006 pp 1559 1563 doi 10 1212 01 wnl 0000216159 60623 2b Finger S amp Gallo D A 2004 The Music of Madness Franklin s Armonica and the Vulnerable Nervous System pp 207 235 in Rose F C ed Neurology of the Arts Painting Music Literature Singapore World Scientific ISBN 978 1 86094 368 3 doi 10 1142 9781860945915 0012 Fischer Homberger Esther 1979 On the Medical History of the Doctrine of Imagination Psychological Medicine Vol 9 No 4 November 1979 pp 619 628 Forrest D 1999 Hypnotism A History London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 140 28040 1 Founders Online n d Report of the Royal Commission to Investigate Animal Magnetism Resume with Extracts 11 August 1784 The National Historical Publications and Records Commission U S National Archives Franklin B 1758 An Account of the Effects of Electricity in Paralytic Cases In a Letter to John Pringle M D F R S from Benjamin Franklin Esq F R S Philosophical Transactions 1683 1775 Vol 50 12 January 1758 pp 481 483 Franklin B Majault M J Le Roy J B Sallin C L Bailly J S d Arcet J de Bory G Guillotin J I amp Lavoisier A Report of The Commissioners charged by the King with the Examination of Animal Magnetism International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis Vol 50 No 4 October 2002 pp 332 363 a translation of Bailly 1784a a reprint of Salas amp Salas 1996 doi 10 1080 00207140208410109 Franklin J L The Three Contraries of Benjamin Franklin the gout the stone and not yet master of all my passions Hektoen International Journal Vol 13 No 1 Winter 2021 Freud S 1891 Hypnose pp 724 732 of Anton Bum Therapeutisches Lexikon fur praktische Arzte Viena Urban amp Schwarzenberg Freud S 1957 1895 Case 3 Miss Lucy R age 30 pp 106 124 in J Breuer amp S Freud trans J Strachey Studies on Hysteria New York NY Basic Books Inc Freud S 1966 Hypnosis pp 105 114 in J Strachey ed and trans The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud Vol I 1886 1899 The Pre Psycho Analytic Publications and Unpublished Drafts London Hogarth Press English translation of Freud 1891 Fuller R C 1982 Mesmerism and the American Cure of Souls Philadelphia PA University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 812 27847 7 Gallo David A amp Finger Stanley 2000 The Power of a Musical Instrument Franklin the Mozarts Mesmer and the Glass Armonica History of Psychology No 3 Vol 4 November 2000 pp 326 343 Gauld A A History of Hypnotism Cambridge University Press 1992 ISBN 978 0 521 30675 1 Gillespie C C 2004 Science and Polity in France The Revolutionary and Napoleonic Years Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 11541 2 Godwin William trans 1785 Report of Dr Benjamin Franklin and other Commissioners charged by the King of France with the Examination of the Animal Magnetism as now practised at Paris Translated from the French with an Historical Introduction London J Johnson includes at pp 19 108 a translation of Bailly 1784a Goldsmith M Franz Anton Mesmer A History of Mesmerism Doubleday Doran amp Co New York 1934 Gould Stephen J The Chain of Reason vs The Chain of Thumbs Natural History Vol 89 No 7 July 1989 pp 12 14 16 18 20 21 Gray L C 2018 Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Mesmer and His Legacy Literature Culture and Science Ph D Dissertation University of Kent 2018 Green S A The Origins of Modern Clinical Research Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research Vol 405 December 2002 pp 311 319 325 Gregory S 2015 Media in Action From Exorcism to Mesmerism communication Vol 4 No 1 September 2015 pp 1 30 Grimm F M 1880 Remarks on the death of d Eslon at pp 446 447 in September 1786 at pp 438 447 in F M Grimm Correspondance Litteraire Philosophique et Critique par Grimm Diderot Raynal Meister Etc Tome Quatorzieme Paris Garnier Freres Hackmann W D 1998 Electroscope pp 219 221 in R Bud amp D J Warner eds Instruments of Science An Historical Encyclopedia London The Science Museum Washington DC National Museum of American History Smithsonian Institution 1998 ISBN 978 0 81531 561 2 Hadlock H 2000 Sonorous Bodies Women and the Glass Harmonica Journal of the American Musicological Society Vol 53 No 3 Autumn 2000 pp 507 542 doi 10 2307 831937 Harte R 1902 Hypnotism and the Doctors Volume I Animal Magnetism London L N Fowler amp Co Haygarth J 1801 Of the Imagination as a Cause and as a Cure of Disorders of the Body Exemplified by Fictitious Tractors and Epidemical Convulsions Second Edition Bath R Crutwell Herfner Irys pseud of Henry Ferris 1844 A Few More Words About Mesmerism The State of Sleep Waking The Dublin University Magazine A Literary and Political Journal Vol 24 No 139 July 1844 pp 78 90 Herr H W Franklin Lavoisier and Mesmer Origin of the Controlled Clinical Trial Urologic Oncology Seminars and Original Investigations Vol 23 No 5 September 2005 pp 346 351 doi 10 1016 j urolonc 2005 02 003 Hesse M B 1961 Forces and Fields The Concept of Action at a Distance in the History of Physics New York NY Philosophical Library Hilgard E R 1980 Introduction pp xi xxiii in George Bloch Mesmerism A Translation of the Original Scientific and Medical writings of F A Mesmer Los Altos CA William Kaufman 1980 ISBN 0 913232 88 2 Huneman Phillippe 2008 Montpellier Vitalism and the Emergence of Alienism in France 1750 1800 The Case of the Passions Science in Context Vol 21 No 4 2008 615 647 Hyatt King A 1945 The Musical Glasses and Glass Harmonica Proceedings of the Royal Musical Association Vol 72 No 1 1943 pp 97 122 doi 10 1093 jrma 72 1 97 James C D 1975 Mesmerism A Prelude to Anaesthesia Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine Vol 68 No 7 July 1975 pp 446 447 Jensen M B Janik E L and Waclawik A 2016 The Early Use of Blinding in Therapeutic Clinical Research of Neurological Disorders Journal of Neurological Research and Therapy Vol 1 No 2 2016 pp 4 16 Kaptchuk T J 1998 Intentional Ignorance A History of Blind Assessment and Placebo Controls in Medicine Bulletin of the History of Medicine Vol 72 No 3 Fall 1998 pp 389 433 Kaptchuk T J Kerr C E amp Zanger A 2009 Placebo Controls Exorcisms and the Devil The Lancet Vol 374 No 9697 10 October 2009 pp 1234 1235 Kennaway J 2010 From Sensibility to Pathology The Origins of the Idea of Nervous Music around 1800 Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences Vol 65 No 3 July 2010 pp 396 426 doi 10 1093 jhmas jrq004 Kennaway J 2012 Musical Hypnosis Sound and Selfhood from Mesmerism to Brainwashing Social History of Medicine Vol 25 No 2 May 2012 pp 271 289 doi 10 1093 shm hkr143 Kerr Robert 1790 Elements of Chemistry etc Edinburgh William Creech a translation of Lavoisier 1789 Kihlstrom J F Mesmer the Franklin Commission and Hypnosis A Counterfactual Essay International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis Vol 50 No 4 October 2002 pp 407 419 doi 10 1080 00207140208410114 Kirsch I Response Expectancy Theory and Application A Decennial Review Applied and Preventive Psychology Vol 6 No 2 1997 pp 69 79 doi 10 1016 S0962 1849 05 80012 5 Kovach F J The Enduring Question of Action at a Distance in Saint Albert the Great The Southwestern Journal of Philosophy Vol 10 No 3 November 1979 pp 161 235 doi 10 5840 swjphil197910356 Landefeld Seth LE BACQUET DE Mṛ MESMER Paris circa 1780 Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences Vol 31 No 3 July 1976 p 368 doi 10 1093 jhmas XXXI 3 368 Lanska D J 2019 The Assessment of Perkins Patent Metallic Tractors Abandonment of an 18th century Therapeutic Fad following Trials using Sham Instruments Journal of the History of the Neurosciences Vol 28 No 2 April June 2019 pp 147 175 doi 10 1080 0964704X 2019 1589833 Lanska D J amp Lanska J T 2007 Franz Anton Mesmer and the Rise and Fall of Animal Magnetism Dramatic Cures Controversy and Ultimately a Triumph for the Scientific Method pp 301 320 in H Whitaker C U M Smith and Stanley Finger Eds Brain Mind and Medicine Essays in Eighteenth Century Neuroscience Boston MA Springer Laurence J L 2002 1784 International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis Vol 50 No 4 October 2002 pp 309 319 doi 10 1080 00207140208410107 Lavoisier A 1789 Traite Elementaire de Chimie amp c Tome Premiere Elementary Treatise on Chemistry Volume One Paris Chez Cuchet English translation at Kerr 1790 Lavoisier A 1865 Sur le Magnetisme Animal pp 499 527 in A Lavoisier Oeuvres de Lavoisier Publiees par les Soins de S Exc le Ministre de l Instruction Publique Tome III Paris J B Dumas E Grimauxm and F A Fouque for a complete English translation see Donaldson 2014 pp 18 38 Lopez C A 1993 Franklin and Mesmer An encounter The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 66 4 325 31 PMC 2588895 PMID 8209564 Ludwig A M 1964 An Historical Survey of the Early Roots of Mesmerism International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis Vol 12 No 4 October 1964 pp 205 217 doi 10 1080 00207146408409107 Mackay Charles 1841 The Magnetisers pp 283 404 in Charles Mackay Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds Volume III Philosophical Delusions London Richard Bentley McConkey K M amp Barnier A J 1991 The Benjamin Franklin Report on Animal Magnetism A Summary Comment Australian Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis Vol 19 No 2 November 1991 pp 77 86 McConkey K M amp Perry C 1985 Benjamin Franklin and Mesmerism The International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis Vol 33 No 2 April 1985 pp 122 130 doi 10 1080 00207148508406642 McConkey K M amp Perry C 2002 Benjamin Franklin and Mesmerism Revisited The International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis Vol 50 No 4 October 2002 pp 320 331 doi 10 1080 00207140208410108 Melton J G 2001a ed Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology Fifth Edition Volume 1 A L Farmington Hills MI Thomson Gale ISBN 0 810 39488 X Melton J G 2001b ed Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology Fifth Edition Volume 2 M Z Farmington Hills MI Thomson Gale ISBN 0 810 39489 8 Mesmer F A 1766 Dissertatio Physico Medica de Planetarum Influxu Vienna Ghelen summary at Pattie 1994 pp 13 27 for an English translation of a modern 1971 French version of the original Latin see Bloch 1980 pp 1 22 Mesmer F A 1779 Memoire sur la decouverte du magnetisme animal Memoir on the Discovery of Animal Magnetism Geneva and Paris P Fr Didot includes Mesmer s 27 Propositions as an appendix pp 74 85 complete translation including Propositions at Tinterow 1970 pp 32 57 and at Bloch 1980 pp 41 79 translation of Propositions only at Binet amp Fere 1888 pp 5 8 Anon 1911 1912 pp 1557 1558 Goldsmith 1934 p 117 121 Buranelli 1975 pp 101 103 Wyckoff 1975 pp 76 78 and Pattie 1994 pp 87 89 Mesmer F A 1781 Precis historique des faits relatifs au magnetisme animal jusques en avril 1781 Par M Mesmer Docteur en Medecine de la Faculte de Vienne Ouvrage traduit de l Allemand Historical Summary of the facts relating to animal magnetism until April 1781 By Monsieur Mesmer Doctor of Medicine of the Faculty of Vienna Book translated from German London Mesmer F A n d Catechism du Magnetisme Animal Catechism on Animal Magnetism reprinted at pp 113 120 Jean Jacques Paulet 1784 L antimagnetisme ou origine progres decadence renouvellement et refutation du magnetisme animal Antimagnetism or the origin progress decadence renewal and refutation of animal magnetism London n p translation at Bloch 1980 pp 81 86 Mesmer F A 1784a Lettres de M Mesmer a Messieurs les auteurs du Journal de Paris et a M Franklin 20 Aout 1784 Paris Mesmer F A 1784b Lettre de M Mesmer a M le Comte de C 31 Aout 1784 Paris Mesmer F A 1785 Letter to the Editors dated 4 January 1785 Journal de Paris Vol 9 No 6 6 January 1785 p 22 Mesmer F A 1799 Memoire de F A Mesmer Docteur en Medecine sur ses Decouvertes Dissertation by F A Mesmer Doctor of Medicne on his Discoveries Paris Fuchs for an English translation see Bloch 1980 pp 87 132 Mesmer F A et al 1784 Recueil des Pieces les plus interessantes sur le Magnetisme Animal A collection of the most interesting pieces on Animal Magnetism Paris Gastelier Meyer Vera amp Allen Kathleen J Benjamin Franklin and the Glass Armonica Endeavour Vol 12 No 4 January 1988 pp 185 188 doi 10 1016 0160 9327 88 90165 2 Moll A 1890a Der Hypnotismus Zweite vermehrte und umgearbeitete Auflage Berlin Fischer Moll A 1890b Hypnotism Second Edition London Walter Scott Morabito Carmela Rethinking Mesmerism and its Dissemination in the 19th Century at the Intersection between Philosophy Medicine and Psychology Medicina nei Secoli Arte e Scienza Vol 31 No 1 June 2019 pp 71 92 Mulford Carla J 2018 Benjamin Franklin in Passy 1784 Reviews in American History Vol 46 No 4 December 2018 pp 573 578 doi 10 1353 rah 2018 0086 Newnham W 1845 Of Phreno Magnetism pp 374 411 in W Newnham Human Magnetism Its Claims to Dispassionate Inquiry Being an Attempt to Show the Utility of Its Application for the Relief of Human Suffering London John Churchill Ogden Emily 2012 Mesmer s Demon Fiction Falsehood and the Mechanical Imagination Early American Literature Vol 47 No 1 2012 pp 143 170 JSTOR 41705645 Pattie F A 1956 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 No 3 July 1956 pp 275 287 JSTOR 24619389 Pattie F A 1994 Mesmer and Animal Magnetism A Chapter in the History of Medicine Hamilton NY Edmonston Publishing ISBN 978 0 962 23935 9 Paulet Jean Jacques 1784 L antimagnetisme ou origine progres decadence renouvellement et refutation du magnetisme animal Antimagnetism or the origin progress decadence renewal and refutation of animal magnetism London n p Peter B 2005 Gassner s Exorcism not Mesmer s magnetism is the real Predecessor of modern Hypnosis International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis Vol 53 No 1 February 2005 pp 1 12 doi 10 1080 00207140490914207 Pick D 2000 Svengali s Web The Alien Enchanter in Modern Culture New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 08204 3 Pitres A Lecons Cliniques sur l Hysterie et l Hypnotisme Faites a l Hopital Saint Andre de Bordeaux Tome 2 Ouvrage precede D une Lettre Preface de M le Professeur J M Charcot Octave Doin Paris 1891 Podmore F 1909 Mesmerism and Christian Science A Short History of Mental Healing Philadelphia G W Jacobs Poissonnier P I Caille C A Mauduyt de La Varenne P J C amp Andry C L F 1784 Rapport des commissaires de la Societe royale de medecine nommes par le Roi pour fair l examen du magnetisme animal Imprime par ordre du Roi Paris Imprimerie royale Pollitt Ben 2019 Sympathy Magnetism and Immoderate Laughter The Feather in Cook s Last Voyage The Art Bulletin Vol 101 No 4 October 2019 pp 70 94 doi 10 1080 00043079 2019 1602454 Rance K trans J Johnson 2018 Between Enlightenment and Romanticism A Counter Revolutionary Mesmerism Annales Historiques de la Revolution Francaise Vol 391 No 1 January March 2018 pp 177 196 Ridgway E S 1993 John Elliotson 1791 1868 A Bitter Enemy of Legitimate Medicine Part I Earlier Years and the Introduction to Mesmerism Journal of Medical Biography Vol 1 No 4 November 1993 pp 191 198 doi 10 1177 096777209300100401 Ridgway E S 1994 John Elliotson 1791 1868 A Bitter Enemy of Legitimate Medicine Part II The Mesmeric Scandal and Later Years Journal of Medical Biography Vol 2 No 1 February 1994 pp 1 7 doi 10 1177 096777209400200101 Rosen G 1946 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 doi 10 1093 jhmas 1 4 527 Rosen G 1959 History of Medical Hypnosis in Schneck J M ed Hypnosis in Modern Medicine Second Edition Springfield IL Charles C Thomas 1959 Rosen G M Lilienfeld S O amp Glasgow R E 2019 Psychiatry s stance towards scientifically implausible therapies Are we losing ground The Lancet Psychiatry Vol 6 No 10 October 2019 pp 802 803 doi 10 1016 S2215 0366 19 30276 7 Salas D amp Salas D trans The First Scientific Investigation if the Paranormal Ever Conducted Commissioned by King Louis XVI Designed Conducted amp Written by Benjamin Franklin Antoine Lavoisier amp Others Skeptic Fall 1996 pp 68 83 a translation of Bailly 1784a Schneck J M 1959 The History of Electrotherapy and its Correlation with Mesmer s Animal Magnetism Vol 116 No 5 November 1959 pp 463 464 doi 10 1176 ajp 116 5 463 Schwartz S A 2004 Franklin s Forgotten Triumph Scientific Testing American heritage Vol 55 No 5 October 2004 pp 65 69 Servan J M A 1784 Doutes d un provincial Proposes a MM les Medecins Commissaires charges par le Roi de l examen du Magnetisme animal Doubts of a Man from the Provinces Proposed to MM the Medical Commissioners Charged by the King with the Examination of Animal Magnetism Lyon Prault Shermer M Testing the Claims of Mesmerism Skeptic Fall 1996 pp 66 67 Shor R E 1972 The Fundamental Problem in Hypnosis Research as Viewed from Historic Perspectives pp 14 40 in E Fromm amp R E Shor eds Hypnosis Developments in Research and New Perspectives New York Aldine Atherton ISBN 978 0 202 25070 0 Sibly E 1820 Of Animal Magnetism pp 256 277 in A Key to Physic and the Occult Sciences etc London G Jones Spanos N P amp Gottlieb J 1979 Demonic Possession Mesmerism and Hysteria A Social Psychological Perspective on their Historical Interrelations Journal of Abnormal Psychology Vol 88 No 5 October 1979 pp 527 546 doi 10 1037 0021 843X 88 5 527 Steinke H 2005 Irritating Experiments Haller s Concept and the European Controversy on Irritability and Sensibility 1750 90 Amsterdam Rodopi ISBN 978 9 042 01852 5 Stengers I The Doctor and the Charlatan Cultural Studies Review Vol 9 No 2 2003 pp 11 36 Sutton G Electric Medicine and Mesmerism Isis Vol 72 No 3 September 1981 pp 375 392 JSTOR 230256 Tatar Maria M 1978 Spellbound Studies on Mesmerism and Literature Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 06377 X Temkin O 1936 A Dissertation on the Sensible and Irritable Parts of Animals by Albrecht von Haller English Translation of 1755 Bulletin of the Institute of the History of Medicine Vol 4 No 8 October 1936 651 699 Teste Alphonse trans D Spillan 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 London Hippolyte Bailliere Thomas d Onglee Francois Louis 1785 Rapport au Public de quelques Abus Auxquels le Magnetisme animal a donne lieu Report to the public on some abuses occasioned by Animal Magnetism Paris Widow of Herissant Thouret M 1784 Recherches et Doutes sur le Magnetisme Animal Researches and Doubts about Animal Magnetism Paris Chez Prault Tinterow M M Foundations of Hypnosis From Mesmer to Freud Charles C Thomas Springfield 1970 ISBN 978 0 398 01928 0 Topley M 1976 Chinese Traditional Etiology and Methods of Cure in Hong Kong pp 243 265 in C Leslie Ed Asian Medical Systems A Comparative Study Berkeley CA University of California Press Townshend C H 1840 Facts in Mesmerism With Reasons for a Dispassionate Inquiry into It London Longman Orme Brown Green amp Longmans Tsouyopoulos N 1988 The Influence of John Brown s Ideas in Germany Medical History Vol 32 Supp 8 1988 pp 63 74 von Haller A 1753a De Partibus Corporis Humani Sensilibus et Irritabilibus Die 22 April 1752 Commentarii Societatis Regiae Scientiarum Gottingensis Tomus II pp 114 134 von Haller A 1753b De Partibus Corporis Humani Sensilibus et Irritabilibus Die 6 Maii 1752 Commentarii Societatis Regiae Scientiarum Gottingensis Tomus II pp 114 134 von Haller A 1755 trans M Tissot A Dissertation on the Sensible and Irritable Parts of Animals London J Nourse Vinchon J 1936 Mesmer et son Secret Paris A Legrand Walmsley D M 1967 Mesmer Marie Antoinette and a Royal Commission History Today Vol 17 No 4 1 April 1967 pp 264 270 Winter George 1801 Animal Magnetism History of its Origin Progress and Present State Its Principles and Secrets Displayed as delivered by the late Dr Demainauduc etc Bristol George Routh Wolfart K C 1814 Mesmerismus Oder System der Wechselwirkungen Theorie und Anwendung des thierischen Magnetismus als die allgemeine heilkunde zur Erhaltung des Menschen von Dr Friedrich Anton Mesmer Memerism or The System of Interactions Theory and Application of Animal Magnetism as General Medicine for the Preservation of Man by Dr Friedrich Anton Mesmer Berlin Nikolaischen Buchhandlung Wyckoff J 1975 Franz Anton Mesmer Between God and Devil Prentice Hall Englewood Cliffs 1975 ISBN 978 0 135 77379 6 Yapko M D 1994 Suggestions of Abuse True and False Memories of Childhood Sexual Trauma New York NY Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 87431 5 Yeates L B 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 Younger D 1887 The Magnetic and Botanic Family Physician and Domestic Practice of Natural Medicine With Illustrations Showing Various Phases of Mesmeric Treatment including Full and Concise Instruction in Mesmerism Curative Magnetism Massage and Medical Botany London E W Allen Zabell S 2016 The Virtues of Being Blind Chance Vol 29 No 1 January 2016 pp 32 36 doi 10 1080 09332480 2016 1156363 Zanetti F trans J Johnson 2018 The Setbacks and Counterpoints of Mesmerism Knowledge and Personalities on the Margins at the End of the Old Regime Annales Historiques de la Revolution Francaise Vol 391 No 1 January March 2018 pp 57 80 External links EditMuseum of the History of Medicine and Pharmacy at Lyon Museum of the History of Medicine and Pharmacy at Lyon Mesmer s Baquet Glass Armonica by Benjamin Franklin The Bakken Museum Artifact Collection catalog no 81 064 The Bakken Glass Armonica Archived from the original on 2021 09 08 Retrieved 2021 09 08 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Royal Commission on Animal Magnetism amp oldid 1146954533, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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