CHAPTER I LIFE 0F F. A. MESMER.
Friedrich (or Franz) Anton Mesmer was born at
Well, near the point at which the Rhine leaves the lake of. Constance,
on May .25, 1733. He studied medicine at Vienna under, the eminent masters of
that day, Van Swieten and De Haen, took a degree, and commenced practice. Interested in Astrology, he imagined that the stars
exerted an influence on beings living on the earth. He identified the
supposed force with, electricity, and then with magnetism; and it was but a
short step to suppose that stroking diseased bodies with magnets might effect a
cure. He published his first work (De Planetarum Influxu) in 1766.
Ten years later on meeting with Gassner in Switzerland,' he observed that the priest
effected cures without the use of magnets, by manipulation alone. This led
Mesmer to discard the magnets and to suppose that some kind of occult force
resided in himself by which he could influence others. He held that this
force permeated the universe and more especially effected the nervous systems
of men. He removed to Paris in 1778, and in a short time the French capital was
thrown into a state of great excitement, by the marvelous effects of mesmerism
Mesmer soon made many converts; controversies arose; he excited the indignation
'of the medical" faculty of Paris, who stigmatised him as a charlatan
still the people crowded to him. He refused an
offer of 20,000 francs from the Government for the disclosure of Ms secret, but
it is asserted that he really told all he knew privately to any one for 100
louis. He received private rewards of large sums of money;. Appreciating the
effect of mysterious surroundings on the imaginations of his patients, he had
his consulting apartments dimly lighted and hung with mirrors; strains of soft
music occasionally broke the profound. silence; odours were wafted through the
room; and the patients sat round a kind of vat in which various chemical
ingredients were concocted or simmered, over a fire, Holding each other's
hands, or joined by cords, the patients sat in expectancy, and then Mesmer,
clothed in the dress of a magician glided amongst them, affecting this one by a
touch, another
by a....... look, and making
"passes"with his hands
towards a third. The effects were various, but
all were held to be salutary. Nervous ladies became
hysterical or fainted; some men became convulsed, or were seized with
palpitations of the heart or other bodily disturbances. The Government
appointed a commission of physicians
and members of the' Academy of Sciences to investigate these phenomena;
Franklin and Baillie were members of this commission, and drew up an elaborate
report admitting many of the facts but contesting Mesmer's theory that there
was an agentcalled animal
magnetism, and attributing the effects to physiological causes. Mesmer himself
was undoubtedly a mystic; and, although the excitement of the time led him to
indulge in mummery and sensational effects, he was honest in the belief that
the phenomena produced were real, and called for further investigation. For a
time, however, animal magnetism fell into disrepute; it became a system
of downright jugglery, and Mesmer himself was denounced as a shallow empiric
and imposter. He Withdrew from Paris, and died at Mearsburg in Switzerland on
the 5th March 1815. He left many disciples the most distinguished of whom was
the marquis Be. Puysegur.
This nobleman revolutionized the art of mesmerism by showing: that many of the
phenomena might be produced by gentle manipulation causing sleep, and without
the mysterious surroundings' and violent means resorted to by Mesmer,
The gentler method was followed successfully by Deluxe, Bertrand, Gearget,
Rostan and Foissac in France and by Dr. John Miotson in. England up to
about 1830. In 1845, considerable attention was drawn to the announcement by
Baron Yon Reichenbach of a so-called new "imponderable" or
"influence" developed by certain crystals, magnets, the human body,
associated with heat, chemical action, or electricity, and existing throughout
the universe, towhich he gave.the name of Odyl. Persons;
sensitive of odyl saw luminous phenomena near the poles of. magnets, or even
around the hands or heads. of certainpersons in whose bodies the force
was supposed to be concentrated. In Britain an impetus was given to this viewof the
subject by the. translation in 1850 of Reichanbach's Researches on magnetism,
&c, in relation to Vital. Force, by Dr. Gregory, professor of
chemistry in the University of Edinburgh. These researches show many of the
phenomena to be of the same nature as those described previously by Mesmer and
even long before. Mesmer's, time by Swedenborg. The idea that some such force
exists has been a favourite speculation of scientific men having a mental bias
to mysticism, and it makes its appearance not unfrequently.
The next great step in the investigation of these phenomena was made by
James Braid, a surgeon in Manchester, who in 1841 began the study of the
pretensions of animal magnetism or mesmerism, in his own words, as a
"complete sceptic'" regarding all the phenomena. This led him to the
discovery that he could artificially produced "a peculiar condition of the
nervous system induced by a fixed and abstracted attention of the mental and
visual eye on one subject not of an eqciting nature" To this condition he
gave the name of neuro-hypnotism; for the sake if brevity, neuro was suppressed, and the term Hypnotism came into general use,. Braid read a paper at a meeting of the
British Association in Manchester on 29th June 1842, entitled Practical Essay
onthe •Curative Agency of Neuro-hypnotism; and his work Neurypnology, or
the Rationale of Nervous Sleep considered in relation with Animal Magnetism,
illus trated by nervous cases of its successful application in the relief and
cure of disease, was published in 1843. It is necessary to point this out, as
certain recent continental writers have obtained many of Braid's results by
following his methods and have not adequately recognised the value of the work
done by him forty years ago. Braid was undoubtedly the first to investigate the
subject in a scientific way, and to attempt" to give a Physiological
explanation. In this he was much aided by the Physiologist Herbert Mayo and
also by Dr. William B, Carpenter,—the latter being the first to recognise the
value of Braid's researches as bearing on the theory of the reflex action of
ganglia at the base of the brain and ofthecerebrum itself, with which
Carpenter's own name is associated.
Recently the subject has been reinvestigated by Professor Weinhold of
Chemnitz, and more particularly by Dr. Rudolf Heidenhain, professor of
physiology, in the university of Breslau, who has published a small but
interesting work on Animal Magnetism. In this work Heidenhain attempts to
explain most of the phenomena by the physiological doctrine of inhibitory
nervous action, as will be shown hereafter.
Phenomena and physiological explanation.—The usual method of inducing
the Mesmeric or Hypnotic state is to cause the person operated on to state
fixedly at a faceted or glittering piece of glass held at from 8 to' 15 inches
from the eyes, in such a position, above the forehead as wall strain the eyes
and eyelids. The operator may stand behind the patient, and he will observe
that the pupils are at first contracted from the effort of accommodation of
each eye for near vision on the object; in a short time the pupils begin
to relax, and then the operator makes a few "passes" over the
face without touching it. The eyelids then close; or the operator may gently
close them with the tips of the fingers, at the same time very gently stroking
the cheeks .Often a vibratory motion of the eyelids may be observed when they
are closed, or there may be slight spasm of the eyelids. The eyes may
afterwards become widely opened. The patient is now in a steep-like condition,
and the limbs often remain in almost any position in which the operator
may place, them, as in a cataleptic condition. At the same time the patient may
now be caused to make movements in obedience to the commands of the operator,
and to act according to ideas suggested to him, Thus, he may eat a raw onion
with gusto, apparently under the impression that it is an apple; he may make
sad faces on drinking a glass of water when told that what he is taking Is
castor oil, he may ride on a chair or stool as in a horse race; he may fight
with imaginary enemies, or show tokens of affection to imaginary friends; in
short, all kinds of actions, even of a ridiculous and a degrading nature, may
be done by the patient at the command of the operator. Another class of
phenomena consists in the production of stiffness or rigidity of certain
muscles or groups of muscles, or even of the whole body. For example, on
stroking the forearm it may become rigid in the prone or supine condition; the
knee may be •strongly bent, with the muscles in a state of spasm; the muscles
of the trunk may beecome so rigid as to allow the body to rest like a dog, head
and heels on two chairs, so stiff and rigid as to bear the weight of the
operator sitting upon it; or various cataleptic conditions may be induced and as
readily removed by a few passes of the hand. Many disorders of sensation have
been observed, such as defective colour perception, the hearing of social
sounds which have no objective existence, or deafness to certain tones, or
perverted sensations, such as tingling, prickling, rubbing, &c, referred to
the skin. The patient may remain in this condition for an hour or more,
and may then be roused by holding him for a
few minutes and blowing gently into the eyes. Usually the patient has a vague
recollection, like that of a disturbed dream, but sometimes there is an acute
remembrance of all that has happened, and even a feeling of pain at having been
compelled to do ridiculous actions. Certain persons are more readily-hypnotized
than others, and it has been observed. that, once the condition has been
successfully induced, it can be more easily induced a second time, a
third time more easily than a second and so on until the patient may be so
pliant to the will of the operator that a fixed look or a wave of the hand, may
throw him at once into the condition. Such are the general facts in artificially
induced hypnotism, and: they belong to the same class as those referred to
animal magnetism, electro-biological effects, odylic influences, &c.
according to the whim or theory of the operator. It is not surprising that such
phenomena have been the cause of much wonder and the basis of many
superstitions. Some have supposed that they were supernatural, others that they indicated the existence of a
specific force exerted by the experimenter upon the passive subject. Many
operators have no doubt believed they possessed such a force such a belief
would not affect the success of" their experiments except to make them
likely to be successful, as the operator would readily comply with all the
conditions; but most of. these phenomena can; be explained
physiologically, and those which cannot be so accounted for will remain hidden
until we get further light on the physiology of the nervous system. The
symptoms of the hypnotic state, as shown by Heidenhain, may be grouped
under four heads:— '(1) Those referable to conditions of the senroriune or
portions of the brain which receives nervous impulses, resulting in movements
of a reflex and imitative-character; (2) Insensibility to pain, and various
forms of perverted sensation; (3), Increased irritability of the portion of the
nervous system devoted to reflex-actions; and (4) States of file nervous
centres controlling the movements of the eye, and accommodation of the eye to objects
at various distances, and the movement of respiration, &c.
The state of the sensorium.—By the sensorium is meant that portion of
the nervous system which receives impulses from the nerves coming from the
organs of sense, such as those from the eye, ear, nose, tongue and skin. Each
of these nerves brings its: message to a portion of the central nervous system
in intimate connection with the rest of the nervous actions of consciousness
may be so transient as to leave a fain impress on the memory, so that it can be
revived only if no great interval has elapsed since the impression was made on
the sense organ If, however, the impression be vivid, then it may be revived
long afterwards. This impression may be consciously perceived, and then any
apparent effect may end; but it may set up a set of actions, resulting in
motion, which are apparently of a reflex character. Thus, suppose a person in
the . dark; light is suddenly brought before the eye; this affects the retina,
and through the changes in it the optic nerve and central organ, there may be
consciousness or there may not; if the person be wide awake he will see the
light; if he be asleep he will not see it, at all events he will give no
indication of seeing it; on awaking, he may have a recollection of a dream in
which light has a place, or his memory maybe blank; but nevertheless the light
will cause the pupil of the eye to contract by reflex action without his
consciousness; and perhaps, also without consciousness, the sleeping person may
make an effort to avoid the light, as has been noticed in the case of
somnambulists. Now, when a patient has been thrown into a weak hypnotic state,
there may be a mind recollection on awaking of all that happened during the
apparent sleep. This implies, of course, that conscious sensory perceptions
took place during the condition. Memory depends on the direction of the
attention to sensations. If the effort of attention be strong, the recollection
will probably
be vivid, and the converse is true. But this does not preclude the
supposition that sensory perceptions may come and go, like the shadows of
clouds on a landscape without any attempts at fixing them, and consequently
with no recollection following their occurrence!. The sensory perceptions may
have existed for so short a time as to leave no impress behind. This may
explain how it is that in the
deeper forms of hypnotism there is either no recollection of what
occurred or the recollection can only be aroused by hints and leading
questions. Attention is necessary, therefore, to form a conscious idea arising
out of a sensation.
It is generally admitted by physiologists that the cerebral hemispheres
are the seat of the higher mental operations, such as attention, &c,
although the interdependence of these hemispheres with the lower sensory
ganglia, which receive all sensory impressions in the first instance, and with
motor ganglia, which are, in like manner, the starting points of motor
impulses, is not understood. The one portion of the nervous system may work
without the other. Thus during "free cerebral activitywe pay
little attention to what we see or hear, and consequently we remember nothing,
A man in a reverie may have many impressions of sight or of hearing of which he
has been really unconscious. On the other hand the cerebral apparatus may be so
attuned with the recipient portion that if the latter receives a message the
former sympathetically responds. For example, a mother's sound sleep is
disturbed by the slightest cry of her child, although loud sounds of other
kinds may not awake her.
It would appear then that impressions on the senses and the
consciousness of impression are two separate states which may occur in a manner
independently; that is to say there may be purely sensory operations, in which
consciousness is not involved, or there may be the conscious repetition of old
impressions, or what is called memory. Now it
is a law of nervous action that processes which at first are always of a
conscious kind may by repetition . become so habitual as to be performed
without consciousness. Thus a child learns to perform a piece. of music on the
pianoforte by conscious efforts, often. of a painful kind; each note has to be
recognised and. the appropriate muscular movements required for its production
on the instrument executed with precision and delicacy; but by and by the music
may be performed accurately even while the attention is directed to something
else. In like manner, all movements which are the results of sensory
impressions. may become
unconscious movements; the sensory .impressions are at first paid attention to;
but as they become habitual the mind becomes less and less engaged in the
process, until the movements resulting from, them are practically unconscious,
A familiar illustration is. that of a man in deep reverie, walking. alonga street.
Immersed in thought, he pays little or no attention to passers by; as his eyes
are open, their images, or those of adjacent objects, must affect-Ms visual
apparatus, but they arouse no conscious impression and still those impressions
evanescent as they are sufficient to excite the appropriate movements of
locomotion. These movements are in all respects like voluntary movements but
they are not really voluntary showing that by the machinery of the nervous system,
movements like voluntary movements may be executed without volition. It is
important to observe, however, that these movements are the result of sensory
impression. A man in the deepest reverie with his eyes blindfolded, could not
execute the requisite movements; and when we see the blind walking in the
streets, they afford no-contradiction to this view, as their minds are busily
engaged in noticing another set of sensory impressions derived from the sense
of touch, muscular movement, and hearing, a set of impressions of the greatest
importance to them, although of little importance comparatively to ordinary
people, who are guided chiefly by visual impressionss.
A person in a state of hypnotism may be regarded as in a condition in
which the part of the nervous apparatus associated
with conscious perception is • thrown out of gear, without
preventing the kind of movements
which would result were it
really in' action,
Impressions are made on the sensory organs the sensory nerves convey the
impressions to a part of the brain; in the deepest condition of hypnotism these impressions may not arouse any
consciousness, but the result may be the kind of movement which would naturally
follow supposing the person had been conscious. The
movements made by the hypnotic are chiefly those of an
imitative kind. It has often
been noticed that the mere suggestions of the movement may not be enough to excite it; to secure success, the movefent must
be made before the eyes •of the person. For example it is a common part of the exhibition of
such persons for the operator to clench his fist, the patient at once clenches
his; the, operator blows his nose; the patient does likewise; but if the
operator performs these actions behind the back of his patient the chances are
that the patient will not repeat the movements.
The condition seems to be one which the sensory impression leads to no
conscious perception and to no voluntary movements, but is quite sufficient to
arouse those nervousand muscular mechanisms Which lead
to unconscious imitation.
Thepatient is in a sense
an automation played upon by the operator through the medium of the
patient's sensory organs. It is important to observe that. in. deep hypnotism
the patient has no idea corresponding to the movements he makes in obedience to
the example of the operator. For example, suppose he is swallowing a glass of
water and the operator tells Mm it is castor oil, at the same time making the
requisite grimaces, the. patient will imitate these grimaces without having any
idea either of water or of castor oil. The grimaces are purely imitative,
without any connection with the idea which would naturally excite them This is
the case only with those deeply hypnotised
In some cases, however, the hypnotism is so, deep as to resemble coma,
and in these there is no trace of -any sensory impressions or of movements.
In cases where the hypnotism is slight there may be a curious
mixture of effects. Here the
patient may
be partially conscious of the requests made to him, and ofthe imitative movements executed before
his eyes; to some extent he may resistthe commands of the operator, he may
feel he is being fooled, and yet. he may perform many ridiculous actions; and
when he awakes he may have a vivid recollection of the events in which he
participated. A hypnotised person, m fact, is in a state similar to that
of the somnambulist, who acts the movements of a disturbed dream. There are
many degrees of the sleeping state from the profound condition resembling coma
to that of the light sleeper who starts with every sound. In some sleeps there
are dreams in. which the sleeper is so occupied with the phantoms of thought as
to pay no attention to external impressions, unless these be sufficiently
powerful to awake him, whilst there are other sleeps in which the boundary
between the conscious reception of new impressions and the reproduction of old
ones is so thin as to permit of a blending of the two. In this kind of sleep a
spoken word, a familiar touch, the suggestion of something in keeping with the
thoughts of the dreamer are sufficient to change the current of the dream:, and
even,to excite movements. When the ideas of the dreamer cause movements
corresponding to these ideas, then the dreamer becomes a comnambulist. He acts
the dream; according to the depth of the semiconscious state will be his
capacity for responding to external impressions. Some somnambulists respond to
external suggestions readily, others do not; and in all there is almost
invariably no recollection of the state. Artificial hypnotism is a condition of
the same kind, though usually not so profound.
The question now arises as to how this artificial state may be
induced. In one awake and
active, all
sensory impressions as arule are quick, evanescent,
and constantly renewed. New successions of images and thoughts pass
rapidly before the mind during walking, working, eating or in the leisure hours
of social life; but none last so long as to cause fatigue of any particular
part of the body. By and by there is a general feeling of "fatigue, and
then sleep is needed to restore exhausted nature. But if the attention be fixed
on one set of sensory impressions, fatigue is much sooner experienced than if
the impressions are various in kind and degree. Thus one or two hours spent at
a picture gallery or at a concert, if the attention be devoted to the
impressions on the eye or ear, usually cause fatigue. It would appear that the
method of exciting hypnotist by causing the patient to gaze at a bit of glass or
a bright button depends in the first place on the feeling of fatigue
induced. At first there is a dazzlingfeeling; then the eyes become moist,
images become blurred and indistinct, and seem to swim in the field of vision
because unsteady and. just about this period the ideas donot pass in
the mindin orderly sequence, but
irregularly as in the few minutes immediately before passing into sleep, At
this stage also the pupils become widely dilated and the eyeballs become more
prominent than. usual. The.. innervation of. the iris must be understood, so as
to appreciate the physiological meaning of these changes'. The muscular
structure of the iris is supplied by two nerves, the third cranial nerve and
the sympathetic nerve. If the third nerve be cut the pupil dilates, if the distal
end of the nerve be irritated, the pupil contracts. On the other hand, if
the sympathetic nerve be cut the
pupil dilates. These experimental facts show that the tradiating fibres of the
iris which dilate the pupil are under the control of the sympathetic nerve,
whilst the circular fibres. which contract the pupil are supplied by the third.
Further it can be shown that the corpora quadrigemina two ganglionic masses in
the brain, are the reflex centres for the regulation of these movements. The
optic nerve from the retina supplies the sensory
stimulus which causes the pupil to contract. Thus suppose light
to be brought before the eye while the pupil is dilated; the retina is affected
a stimulus is sent to the corpora quadrigemina along the fibres of the
optic nerve, and from the corpora quadrigemina a nervous influence passes
along the fibres of the third nerve to the circular fibres of the iris causing
the pupil to contract. It is also very probable that the corpora
quadrigemina act as reflex centres for nervous impulses regulating the calibre
of the blood-vessels of the eye the vaso-motor nerves. If we apply these facts.
to the case of a hypnotised person we find that (1) the pupil of a Hypnotised
person contracts energetically when light falls upon the eye, showing that the
reflex mechanism is still intact; (2) just before the hypnotic state is induced
the pupil dilates, indicating feeble nervous impulses passing along the third
from the corpora quadrigemina; (3) at first, the eyeballs seem to sink
in, but when hypnotism is complete they project in a mannersimilar to
what has been observed in an animal when the arteries supplying the head have
been compressed so as to make the brain anaemic or bloodless; and (4) the
opthalmoscope has not shown any change in the calibre of the bloodvessels of
the retina in' the hypnotic state, From a . consideration of these facts and
inference Heidenhain was at first inclined to believe that hypnotism might be
due to a reflex influence on the vessels of the brain causing them to contract
so as to permit the passage of only a small quantity of blood, and make the
brain anaemic. This view, however, had to be abandoned, as the faces of
hypnotised persons are usually red, and not pale, as they would be were the
asterioles contracted. Further, Heidenhain performed a crucial experiment by
giving to his brother nitrite of amyl, which causes dilatations of the vessels
by vaso-motor paralysis, when he still found hypnotism could be readily induced, showing that the state
was not caused by deficient blood supply.
Heidenhain has advanced another mid more
probable hypothesis. During
the past twenty years
a new mode of nervous action, known as Inhibitory action has been
discovered by physiologists. A good example is supplied by the innervation of
the heart. This organ has nervous ganglia in its substance by which its
rhythmic contractions are maintained. Further it is supplied by the vagus or
pneumogastric nerve and by the sympathetic. Section of the vagus is followed by
quickening of the heart's action, and stimulation of the lower end causes
slowing and if the stimulation be strong enough, stoppage of the heart, not,
however in a tetanic state (which would be the case if the fibres of the vagus
acted directly on the muscular structure of the heart, as a motor nerve), but
in a state of complete relaxation or diastole,
Opposite results follow section and stimulation of the sympathetic
fibres. It has been clearly made out that the terminal fibres of both nerves do
not act on muscular fibres but on ganglion cells, those of the vagus
"inhibiting" or restraining, whilst those of the sympathetic
"accelerate', the action of the cells. Inhibition Is now known to play an
important part in all nervous actions, and it would seem that any powerful
impression in a sensory nerve may inhabit or restrain motion. This is
strikingly seen in some of . the lower animals. A ligature applied loosely
round the thigh of a frog whilst It lies on the back apparently deprives It of
all power of motion, The weak sensory stimulation in this case seems to stop
voluntary motion. Pressure on the internal organs of such animals as the
rabbit, although gentle, sometimes causes paralysis of the lower or hinder
limbs. Again it has been ascertained that, whilst the spinal cord is the chief
reflex centre, the reflex activity can be inhibited by impulses transmitted to
it from portions of the cerebral hemispheres which are in a state of high
activity. It would appear then, that if we suppose one set. of sensory or
recipient cells in the brain to be brought into a state of exalted
irritability by the preliminary operations of hypnotism the result might be
inhibition of the parts devoted to voluntary movement. In like manner, the activity
of sensory nerve cells may become inhibited. Thus stimulation of a
certain arm by a mustard plaster has been found to lower the sensibility
of the corresponding portion of skin on the opposite arm.The theory then
offered is that the cause of the phenomena of hypnotism lies in the inhibition
of the activity of the ganglion-cells of the cerebral cortex----the
inhibition being
brought about by gentle prolonged stimulation of the sensory nerves of
the face or of the
auditory, or optic nerve.
According to this view, the portion of the brain devoted to voluntary
movements is as it were thrown out of gear and the movements that follow, in
the hypnotic state are involuntary, and depend on impressions made on thesenses of
the patient, To understand how this is possible we must now consider shortly
some of the views presently held as to the action of the brain. The
researches of Hilzig, Fritsch, Ferrier, Hughlings, Jackson and many others
indicate that certain movements initiated as a consequence of perception, and
of the ideas thereby called forth, are due to nervous actions in the grey
matter in certain areas on the surface of the cerebral hemispheres and that
there is another class of movements which do not require the agency of the
cortex of the brain but depend on the activity of deeper centres. These deeper
centres are in the optic thalami, which receive sensory impressions from all
parts of the skin; the corpora quadrigemina which receive luminous impressions
from the retina; and the corpora striata which are the motor centres whence
emanate influences passing to the various groups of muscles. No doubt other
sensory centres exist for hearing, taste and smell but these have not been
clearly ascertained. In the case of conscious and voluntary movements carried
out as the result of external impressions, the excitation would pass first to
the thalami optici (tactile) or corpora quadrigemina (visual), thence to
cerebral hemispheres, where ideas would be called forth and volitional impulses
generated; these would then be transmitted downwards through the corpora
striata
(motor) to the crura cerebri and spinal cord, and from thence to special groups of muscles, thus
causing specific movements.
Suppose now that the portions of cerebral hemispheres connected
with ideation and volition were
thrown out of gear, and that a similar sensory impression was
made on the person; again the path of nervous impulses would be to the
thalami optici (tactile) or corpora
quadrigemina (visual), and from thence directly through corpora striata
(motor) to crura cerebri and spinal cord, then passing out to muscles, and
causing movements as precise as those in the first instance, and apparently of
the same character. The
difference between the two operations, however, would be this—in the first
there would be movements
following perception,
ideation and volition; in the second the same class of movements would be effected by an automatic mechanism without any of the physical operations
above alluded to. This theory has the merit of
simplicity and is in accordance with most of the facts.
The chief difficulty in the way of accepting it is to understand why, if
hypnotism be so induced, it is
not Induced much oftener.
One would suppose that, if gazing at a corn and ..havinga few passes made with the hand were sufficient
to bring about physiological changes of such importance, men would be oftener
hypnotised in daily life than they are. But it is to be remembered that
attention is seldom fixed in one subject so long as in the experiment of
producing hypnotism. The
first occasion the experiment is made, even with so called susceptible persons,
the time occupied may be from 10 to 20 minutes, and during that time the
attention is on the strain, and feelings of fatigue are excited in the way above described. Again it is well-known that sudden and strong
sensory impression often paralyse voluntary action for a time, even in ordinary
life, and what is called "presence of mind" really means the power of
self-control which prevents the bodily energies being paralysed by strong
sensory impressions. A
carriage bearing down on a nervous lady in a crowded street
may deprive her of all power of movement or she may automatically run
here and there In obedience to the shouts of the bystanders; but one with
coolness can thread her way among the vehicles without fear or trouble. A
hypnotized person is therefore to be regarded as an automation. "To cause
him to move his arm, the Image of a moving arm must pass over his retina, or an
unconscious sensation of motion must be induced through passive movements of
his arm,
2.
Insensibility to pain.—It has often been noticed that in the mesmerized
or hypnotized person, there may be complete Insensibility to pain, so that deep
pricks with a needle are not felt. During deep hypnotism a pin .rnay be run
into the hand without pain, but pain will be felt on awaking, and pulling out
the pin in the waking state will cause acute pain. It would appear that certain
nerves may convey tactile sensibility whilst others convey only painful
impressions, and in certain forms of paralysis the patient may have tactile
sensibility without pain, or the reverse. In hysterical women, as has been
shown by Charcot and. others disorders of sensibility of this kind are not
uncommon, indicating changes in the nervous centres.
3. Increased
Reflex Spasm of Muscles.—One of the most striking phenomena of the hypnotic
state is the case with which certain voluntary muscles may be rendered stiff, For
example, if the operator
stroke the skin over the biceps muscle in the upper arm the limb will be
at once powerfully fixed and the bicepscan be felt stiff and rigid. To
understand the physiological explanation offered of this phenomenon it will be
necessary shortly to describe the mechanism of reflex arts. If a sensory nerve
be irritated at its periphery, say in the skin, a nervous impulse is
transmitted to a central nervous organ, such as the spinal cord, and through
the agency of nerve cells in this organ impulses are then transmitted by motor
nerves to muscles, causing movements, without any operation of the will. Thus a
particle of food getting Into the larynx irritates sensory nerves of
the. vagus and there is a reflex spasm of various muscles of expiration causing
a violent cough. That such reflex acts not only can occur without the mill, but
in spite of it, is shown by the want of control over a sneeze when the
nostril is irritated by snuff. Now these reflex centres in the cord are
partially under the control of higher centre in the brain. If the agency
of the latter be removed, the activity of the cord-centres is Increased, and
reflex actions are more easily induced. This we have . assumed to be the state
of the hypnotic. If a portion of his skin be stroked, first one muscle, say the
one immediately under the skin stroked will become stiff, then in obedience
to law regulating reflex actions,— namely, that they tend to become diffused,
according to the strength and duration of the stimulus,—other muscles become
rigid, and so on until the whole trunk becomes cataleptic. This phenomenon is
well described by Heidenhain. This condition of the muscles is exactly like
that in catalepsy, a peculiar nervous disease; and hypnotism may be regarded as
an artificial catalepsy.
4. "Other Peculiar Nervous Phenomena of the Hypnotic State.—The
changes in the eyes have been already alluded to. The pupils dilate, the
eyelids open widely, and the eyeballs protrude. Occasionally the upper eyelids
droop, so that the eyelids seem closed. It has often been asserted that
clairvoyants see with the eyelids, closed, but they are really partially open.
The movements of respiration are often quickened from 16 to 30 or 35 per
minute, indicating stimulation of the respirator centres in the medulla
oblongata. Sometimes the flow of saliva is increased. Hallucinations of sense
may occur, though they are rare. One man in the hypnotic state experienced a
strong odour of violets.
There is a class of phenomena referred to the hypnotic state of a very
doubtful character, in as much as we have to depend entirely on the statements
of the person operated on, and no objective
tests can be employed. Such, for. example, are various disturbances of
sensation hearing with the pit of the stomach more acutely than when the sound
is made in the usual ways towards the ear, and the application of the hand of
the operator to the body giving rise to profound sleep or dreams, induced
dreaming &c. Again it is asserted by Heidenhain. and Gritzner that
unilateral hypnosis is possible. Thus stroking the left forehead and, temple
caused immobility of the right arm and leg.
Charcot has pointed that in certain kinds of hysteria in women there are
remarkable unilateral disturbances or. perversions of sensory impression of colour.
Phenomena of the same kind have been, observed by Cohn, Heidenhain, and
others in hypnotized persons, Thus
A. Heidenhain became completely colour blind in the eye of the cataleptic side.
All colours appeared grey in different degrees of brightness, from a dirty dark
grey to a clear silvery grey. These facts are interesting as showing perverted
sensation in the particular individual affected, but they throw no light on the
condition of hypnotism,
It is evident then that animal magnetism or hypnotism is a peculiar
physiological condition excited by perverted action of certain parts of the
cerebral nervous organs, and that it' is not caused by any occult force
emanating from the operator. Whilst all. the phenomena cannot be accounted for,
owing- to the imperfect
knowledge we possess of the.functions- of the brain and cord, enough has been
stated to show that just in proportion as our knowledge has increased has it
been possible to give a rational explanation of some of the phenomena. It is
also clear that the perverted condition of the nervous apparatus of hypnotism
is of a serious character, and therefore that these experiments should not be
performed by-ignorant empirics for the sake of gain or with the view of causing
amusement. Nervous persons maybe seriously injured by being subjected to suck
experiments, more especially if they undergo them
repeatedly; and it should be illegal, to have public exhibitions of the
kind alluded to. The medical professions has always been rightly jealous of the
employment of hypnotism in the treatment of disease, both from fear of the
effect of such operations on the nervous systems of excitable people, and
because such practice is in the border land of quackery and of imposture. Still
in the hands of skilful men there is no reason why the proper employment of a
method influencing the nervous system so powerfully as hypnotism should not be
the means of relieving pain or remedying disease.
ANIMAL MAGNETISM
The terms Animal Magnetism, Electro-Biology, Mesmerism, Clairvoyance,
Odylic, or Odic force and Hypnotism, have been used to
designate peculiar nervous conditions in which the body and mind of an individual,
were supposed to be Influenced by a Mysterious force emanating from another
person. With the exception of Mesmerism, a name given to the phenomena
in honour of one of their earliest investigators, F. A. Mesmer, each of these
terms implies a theory. Thus the phenomena of Animal Magnetism were supposed to
be due to some kind of magnetic force or influence peculiar to living beings
and analogous to the action of a magnet upon steel or certain metals; Electro-Biology,
a more modern term, introduced in 1850 by two American Lecturers, referred
the phenomena to the action of Electrical Currents generated in the
living body, and capable of influencing electrically the bodies of others,
Clairvoyants implied a power of mental Vision or of mental hearing, or of a
mental production of other sensations, by Which the individual became
aware of events happening in another part of the world from where he was, or
could tell of the existence of objects which could not affect at the time any
of his bodily senses; odylic force was a term given to a force of a mysterious
character by which all the phenomena of
animal magnetism might be accounted for; and Hypnotism,
from "Hypnos" sleep was a nameapplied to a condition artificially produced in
which the person was apparently asleep and yet acted in obedience to the
will of the operator as regards both motion and sensation.
HISTORY.—It was natural that the apparent power
of influencing the bodies and minds of others should attract much attention and
be eagerly sought after for purposes of gain, or from a love of the marvellous,
or for the cure of diseases. Hence we find that, whilst not a few have investigated
these phenamena in a scientific spirit, more have done so as Quacks, and
Charlatans who have thrown discredit on a department of the physiology of man
of the deepest interest. Recently, however, as will be shown in this article,
physiologists and physicians have set about Investigating the subjects in such
a manner as to bring it into the domain of exact science, and to dispel the
idea that the phenomena are due either to any occult force or to supernatural
agency. It would appear that in all ages, diseases were alleged to be affected
by the touch of the hand of certain persons, who were supposed to communicate a
healing virtue to the sufferer. It Is also known that among the Chaldarans, the
Babylonians, the Persians, the Hindus, the Egyptians, the Greeks and the Romans
many of. the priests effected curesor threw people into deep -sleeps in the shades of the temples;
during which the sleeper sometimes had prophetic dreams and, that they
otherwise produced effects like those now referred to animal magnetism. Such
influences were "held to be supernatural, and no doubt they gave
power to the priesthood. In the middle of the 17th '"Century there
appeared in England several persons who said they had the power of curing
diseases by stroking with the hand. Notable amongst these was Valentine
Greatrakes, of Affane in the Country of Waterford, Ireland, who was born in
February 1628, and who attracted great attention in England by his
supposed power of curing the kings evil, or
Scrofula. Many of the most distinguished scientific and theological men of the
day, such as Robert Bryle and R. Cudworth, witnessed and attested the
cures supposed to be effected by Greatrakes, and thousands of sufferers crowded
to him from all parts of the kingdom. Phenomena of a marvellous
kind, more specially
such as imply a mysterious or supernatural power exercised by one person over
another, not only attract attention, but take so firm a hold on the imagination that belief in them
breaks out now and again with all
the intensity of an epidemic. Thus since the time of Greatrakes, at
short intervals, men have arisen who have led the public captive at their
will. About the middle of the 18th century John Joseph Gassner, a Roman
Catholic priest in Swabia, took up the notion that the majority of
diseases arose from demoniacal possession, and could only be cured by
exorcism. His method
was undoubtedly similar to that followed by Mesmer, and others and he
had an extraordinary influence over the nervous systems of his patients. Gassner, however, believed his power
to be altogether
supernatural and
connected with.. religion.
|