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PART
A: EARLY HISTORY
PART
B: MODERN HISTORY
Section
1. Father Gassner
Section
2. Franz Anton Mesmer
Section 3. Marquis de Puysegur
Section
4. James Braid
Section
5. John Elliotson
Section
6 James Esdalie
Section
7.
Dr. Ambroise-Auguste Liebeault
Section
8. Jean
Martin Charcot
Section
9. Josef Breuer
Section
10. Dr. Eugene Azam
Section
11. Sigmund Freud
Section
12. Milne Bramwell
Section 13. Other Physicians of the Era
PART C: LATE HISTORY
Section
1. Contemporary scientists in the field
Section
2. Dr. Sydney Van Pelt
Section
3. Hypnotism in France
An
Ancient Art Returns to France
Recent
Advances in Hypnosis in the United States
PART D: SUMMARY
Editor's Note:
PART A: EARLY
HISTORY
The early history of hypnosis actually begins before
any recorded history exists. In the religious and healing ceremonies
of all primitive peoples on the face of the earth there exist the elements
essential to place the subjects into a hypnotic trance. It is assumed,
therefore, by the study of ceremonies of primitive peoples who still exist
in Africa, Australia, and elsewhere that even before history was recorded,
induction's were accomplished by rhythmic chanting, monotonous drum beats,
together with strained fixations of the eyes accompanied by catalepsy
of the rest of the body.
Such primitive ceremonies had the essential of a central
focus of attention, with surrounding neurology areas of inhibition, which
two factors are responsible for 95% of the induction of the hypnotic trance.
Whether these were called religious ceremonies, healing ceremonies or
a combination of religious and healing ceremonies is actually immaterial.
The fact is that trances did exist and were hypnotic in character, although
the word "hypnosis" was never applied to them since it was not in use
until Braid coined the term in 1842.
All world travelers are familiar with the Hindus, Fakirs,
Yogis, snake charmers, and Eastern magicians who induced themselves and
others in cataleptic states by eye fixation and other mesmeric techniques,
and were able to perform unusual physical feats and eliminate pain.
An interesting incident was reported by James Esdalie,
MD, author of Hypnosis in Medicine and Surgery, in which he describes
a method for production of anesthesia by a famous Eastern magician of
the era: "June 9th, 1845 - I had today the honor of being introduced to
one of the most famous magicians in Bengal, who enjoys a high reputation
for his successful treatment of hysteria, and had been sent for to prescribe
for my patient (whose case will be afterwards given), but came too late;
the success of my charm, Mesmerism, having left him nothing to do.
Baboo Essanchunder Ghosaul, deputy magistrate of Hooghly, at my request
introduced me to him as a brother magician, who had studied the art of
magic in different parts of the world, but particularly in Egypt, where
I had learned the secrets of the great Soolevmann, from the moolahs and
fuqueers, and that I had a great desire to ascertain whether our charms
were the same, as the hakeems of Europe held the wise men of the East
in high estimation, knowing that all knowledge had come from that quarter.
I proposed that we should show each other our respective charms, and after
much persuasion, he agreed to show me his process for assuaging pain.
He sent for a brass pot containing water and a twig with two or three
leaves upon it, and commenced muttering his charms, at arm's length from
the patient. In a short time he dipped his forefinger into the water,
and with the help of his thumb, flirted it into the patient's face; he
then took the leaves, and commenced stroking the person from the crown
of the head to the toes, with a slow drawing motion. The knuckles
almost touched the body, and he said that he would continue the process
for an hour or longer if necessary; and it convinced me that if these
charmers ever do well by such means, it is by the mesmeric influence,
probably unknown to themselves. I said that I was convinced of the
great efficacy of his charm, and would now show him mine; but that he
would understand it better if performed on his own person. After
some difficulty, we got him to lie down, and to give due solemnity to
my proceedings. I chanted, as an invocation, the chorus of the "Kings
of the Cannibal Islands!" I desired him to shut his eyes, and he clenched
his eyelids firmly, that I might find no entrance to the brain by that
inlet. In a quarter of an hour he jumped up, and said he felt something
disagreeable coming over him, and wished to make his escape. He
was over-persuaded to lie down again, however, and I soon saw the muscles
around his eyes begin to relax, and his face became perfectly smooth and
calm. I was sure that I had caught my brother magician napping,
but, in a few minutes, he bolted up suddenly, clapped his hands to his
head, cried he felt drunk, and nothing could induce him to lie down again;
"abiit, excessit, evasit, erupit!" Next day I saw him, and said, "Well,
you were too strong for my charm last night, I could not put you to sleep."
"Oh! Yes Sahib," he answered, "You did; I allow it; it is allowed
that you put me to sleep."
As Moll has pointed out, these hypnotic phenomena are also found to have
existed several thousand years ago among the Persian Magi as well as up
to the present day among Indian Yogis and Fakirs.
The oldest written record of cures by hypnosis was obtained from the Ebers
Papyrus which gives us an idea about some of the theory and practice of
Egyptian medicine before 1552 BC. In the Ebers Papyrus, a treatment
was described in which the physician placed his hands on the head of the
patient and, claiming superhuman therapeutic powers gave forth with strange
remedial utterances which were suggested to the patients, and which resulted
in cures. King Pyrrhus of Egypt, The Emperor Vespasian, Francis
I of France and other French kings up to Charles X practiced healing in
this manner.
The Egyptians are thought to have originated the "Sleep
Temples", in which the priests gave similar treatment to their patients
through the use of suggestion. These temples became very popular
in Egypt, and spread throughout Greece and Asia Minor.
Hippocrates, the Greek physician referred to most frequently as "the father
of medicine" and whose oath all graduating physicians take, is known to
have discussed the phenomenon saying, "the affliction suffered by the
body, the soul sees quite well with the eyes shut."
The Romans borrowed trance healing from the Greeks, as they
did much else of the Greek culture during the period of the rise of the
great Roman Empire. Many men of great learning and wisdom were imported
from Greece as Roman slaves to teach the young in Roman households.
Among the Romans, Aesculapius often threw his patients 'into a "deep sleep"
and allayed pain by stroking, with his hand.
The advent of Christianity had a great deal to do with
the decline of the use of hypnosis and trance healing because hypnosis
was then considered to be witchcraft, and trance healing if practiced
at all was done secretly. Nevertheless, in spite of this Jesus employed
hypnosis to perform many of His miracles. A complete discussion
of this is to be found in my book entitled, Religious Aspects of Hypnosis,
published by Charles C. Thomas and Co. Springfield, Illinois in 1962.
In the tenth century, Avicenna, a great physician, stated, "The Imagination
can fascinate and modify man's body either making him ill or restoring
him to health."
About the middle of the sixteenth century, a man named Theophrastus
Paracelsus brought forth a new theory regarding the production of diseases.
This theory stated in effect that certain heavenly bodies, especially
the stars, influenced the behavior of men. He also postulated that
men influenced each other, which is still a basic concept in the study
of "behavior psychology."
Van Helmont, Maxwell from Scotland, and Santanelli from Italy,
said virtually the same thing about 1600, and laid the foundation for
the concept of animal magnetism, which was later to have been made so
famous by Mesmer. It can be proved that almost every ancient civilization
has been familiar with hypnosis in one form or another. LeCron points
out that it is described in some of the Mantras of India written in ancient
transcript; that the Mongols, Tibetans, and the Chinese all had knowledge
of hypnosis; and that even a detailed description of it is given in the
Kalevala, the great epic poem of the Finns.
PART B:
MODERN HISTORY
Section
1. Father Gassner

It is ironic that the modern history of hypnosis begins not
with a physician but with a clergyman, a catholic priest who lived at
Klosters. Father Gassner theorized, according to the beliefs of
that day, patients who were ill were possessed by devils, which must be
cast out, before the patient could again attain the state of good health.
The good priest obtained church approval for his actions by stating that
God was working through him to cast out devils that possessed his unfortunate
patients.
Unlike some other men of his time, Father Gassner was not secretive with
his methods, and frequently allowed physicians to observe him administer
treatment. The physicians who were to observe were ushered into
a room and seated much as in a theater and then the patient would be marched
onto a stage in the center of the room to await the appearance of Father
Gassner. Timing his entrance to make the most of the spectacle,
Father Gassner would stride out onto the platform in a long solid black
flowing cape, holding a "gold" crucifix high in the air before him.
The patient had been told in advance that when Father Gassner touched
him with the crucifix, he would promptly fall to the floor and remain
there for further instructions. Gassner's patients were told to
actually "die" while lying prostrate on the floor, and that during this
period of "death", he would cast out the devils from their body and then
restore them to normal life again. (This idea of rebirth permeates both
hypnosis and religion even as far back as the earliest primitive forms).
Again this has been discussed further in my book entitled, Religious
Aspects of Hypnosis.
After the observer physician examined the patient, felt no
pulse, heard no heart sounds, and pronounced him dead, then Father Gassner
would order the demon to depart, and shortly thereafter the patient would
revive and arise completely cured. Mesmer was said to have watched
a number of performances by Father Gassner in the early 1770's and is
responsible for introducing the phenomena to the medical profession.
Section 2.
Franz Anton Mesmer

Franz Anton Mesmer was born the son of a game warden on May 23, 1734,
at Iznang on Lake Constance. He studied at Dillingen and Ingolstadt
and received his Ph.D. following which he studied law. He received
his Doctor of Medicine degree in 1766 after presenting a paper entitled,
De Planetarum Influx (On the influence of the Planets). Two years
following his graduation, Mesmer married the wealthy widow of an army
Lieutenant Colonel, Marie Anna Von Posch, on January 10, 1768. Mesmer,
unable to swallow Father Gassner's hypothesis that patients were possessed
by demons, believed that in some way the metal crucifix held by the Father
was perhaps responsible for magnetizing the patient and hence developed
his ideas and explanation of the results into a theory of animal magnetism,
which he first tested in 1773 by treating a 28 year old female, Franziska
Osterlin, who eventually married Fredrich Von Posch, Mesmer's stepson.
Mesmer published his first account of the magnetic cure in 1775, under
the title of, Schreiben Uber die Magnetiker. Although his fame continued
to spread, he was forced to leave Vienna following the famous Paradis
case, in which Dr. Von Stoerck and Dr. Barth opposed him. In 1777
Maria Theresa Paradis, a blind child pianist, and favorite of the Empress,
recovered her sight after treatment by Mesmer despite the fact that she
had been under the care of Europe's leading eye specialist, Dr. Von Stoerck
for ten years without improvement. Influenced by jealous doctors,
the child's mother took her away from Mesmer's care before the cure was
complete. In an emotional scene, the mother struck the child across
the face because she did not wish to leave Dr. Mesmer's clinic and the
hysterical blindness reasserted itself.
Nevertheless, Mesmer's influence was still great enough to secure a recommendation
from the Austrian Foreign Minister to the Imperial Embassy in Paris, to
which he moved early in February 1778. He founded a clinic with
D'Eslon on the Place Vendome, and published his famous book, Memoirre
Sur La Decouverte Du Magnetisme Animal in 1779.
In 1784 the French Government investigated Mesmer,
and pronounced him a fraud. However, Benjamin Franklin, who was
a member of the investigating committee, wrote the minority report, which
stated the phenomenon was worthy of further consideration. Other
members of the commission were Jussieu, famous for his connection with
the Twilleries; Guillotin, the inventor of the Guillotine which bears
his name; and Lavoisier, the well-known French chemist whose name is still
familiar to Americans as the brand name of a mouth wash! Esdaile's
fascinating description of the investigation states he believed the verdict
was fair enough considering the nature of the evidence placed before them.
He goes on to say: ...but yet, (such is human fallibility), in this case
summum jus was also summa injuria; truth was sacrificed to falsehood,
as I think will clearly appear from a short analysis of their proceedings.
This will probably not be time wasted, as I have heard intelligent gentlemen
say that the report of the French philosophers still decided their opinions.
They had a series of axioms in Mesmerism presented to them, whose truth
they were to examine and the efficacy of certain processes was to be proved
to their satisfaction by experiment.
The Mesmerist's object seems to have been to try to
convince the commission that he had a secret worth knowing, and yet to
continue to keep it to himself by hiding its extreme simplicity under
a load of complicated machinery and various kinds of mummery. D'Eslon,
the pupil of Mesmer, propounded his laws of animal magnetism after this
fashion:
I. Animal magnetism is a universal
fluid, constituting an absolute polonium in nature, and the medium of
all mutual influence between the celestial bodies, and betwixt the earth
and animal bodies. This only a gigantic assertion.
II. It is the subtlest fluid in nature,
capable of flux and of reflux, and of receiving, propagating, and continuing
all kinds of motion.
III. The animal body is subjected to
the influences of this fluid by means of the nerves, which are immediately
affected by it. We see no other way at present.
IV. The human body has poles, and other
properties, analogous to the magnet. The first proposition has never been
proved, and takes everything for granted; there is only likelihood in
the second.
V. The action and virtue of animal magnetism
may be communicated from one body to another, whether animate or inanimate.
True, as regards to the relations between animate bodies; and these can
also impregnate inanimate substances.
VI. It operates at a great distance,
without the intervention of anybody. True
VII. It is increased and reflected by
mirrors, communicated, propagated and increased by sound, and may be accumulated,
concentrated, and transported
VIII. Notwithstanding the universality of
this fluid, all animal bodies are not affected by it; on the other hand
there are some though but few in number, the presence of which, destroys
all the effects of animal magnetism. The first part correct, the last
not improbable.
IX. By means of this fluid, nervous
diseases are cured immediately, and others medially; and its virtues,
in fact, extend to the universal cure and preservation of mankind True,
to so great a degree, that we do not yet know how far it may go.
Is it surprising that the commission dismissed contemptuously
such a mass of sheer assertion and unsupported theory, seasoned with truth
to be sure, but so diluted and obscured as not to be recognizable?
Like a Bengal witness, D'Eslon was not content to tell the truth simply,
but added so many corroborating inventions of his own that no one knew
what to believe, and the case was dismissed as unworthy of further investigation.
He ruined himself, and his cause, also, (perhaps in ignorance, however,)
by loading the truth with a parcel of trumpery machinery through which
he hoped the power of nature would nevertheless penetrate; but Nature,
like an overloaded camel, turned upon her driver and threw him and his
paraphernalia of magnetic platforms, conducting-rods and ropes, pianos,
magnetized trees and buckets, into the dirt; and truth retired in disgust
to the bottom of her well, there to dwell till more honest men should
draw her forth again to surprise and benefit the world.
As far as my observation goes, all that is necessary
for success, if the parties are in the relation of agent and subject,
is passive obedience in the patient and a sustained attention and patience
on the part of the operator. The process being a natural one, the
more the parties are in a state of nature the better: the bodies of my
patients being naked, and their heads generally shaved, is probably of
no small consequence in the proceedings...
There are a number of very important assertions in
this excerpt from Esdaile's book. First, he certainly points out clearly
the reason why the commission turned down the phenomenon as unworthy of
further investigation. Second, he also illustrates the point doubly
by even adding a number of misconceptions of his own, misconceptions which
were nevertheless accepted as true in his day regarding medical practice.
Thirdly, he sums up a really ingenious and brilliant theory in one sentence:
As far as my observation goes, all that is necessary for success, if the
parties are in relation of agent and subject, is PASSIVE OBEDIENCE in
the patient, and a sustained patience on the part of the operator.
Fourthly, he makes a statement which might serve further experimentation:
The process being a natural one, the more the parties are in a state of
nature the better. This might be better accomplished by means other
than mere nudity although perhaps the possibility that by being nude the
subject psychologically is "defenseless," or more "submissive" should
not be overlooked. My favorite induction method is to take the patient
with all his or her senses on a journey into a primitive wooded area,
peaceful and quiet, serene and still where concentration and relaxation
are greatest. Both the spirits of passive obedience as well as the
journey into the wilderness of nature to seek communion with God are a
part of every major religion in the world.
So much for the report of the commission which had as its ultimate effect
the denunciation of Mesmer, his methods and theories, although his theories
were actually far more on trial than his methods.
After being denounced in Paris, Mesmer's popularity quickly
faded, and he traveled to England, Italy and Germany, returning for a
brief visit to Paris before the outbreak of the revolution. He then
settled in Frauenfeld in Switzerland, until the summer of 1814 whence
he moved to Morsburg, where he died on March 5, 1815.
It is not generally known but nevertheless true that
Mesmer and his son published works on animal magnetism, and even today
copies of these completed works can be obtained.
As Mesmer's patients were placed in a tub filled with water and iron filings
protruding from which were larger iron rods, Mesmer would suggest to them
that as he touched them with his magnetic rod, they would become magnetized
and eventually would go into a state of "crisis" from which they would
emerge cured. His patients invariably did this and Mesmer considered
the crisis an absolute necessity for the cure. Mesmer made a very
imposing picture in his long flowing robes, holding his magnetic rod and
passing from room to room in his clinic. His methods of magnetism,
therefore, were unquestioned and his follower and pupil of good faith,
the Marquis de Puysegur placed patients in a trance which he called artificial
somnambulism, in which the patients did not enter the crisis or fit, but
rather into a state of quiet relaxation. (The Marquis had forgotten to
suggest to them in advance that they would experience a seizure!)
Section
3. Marquis de Puysegur

The Marquis de Puysegur was responsible for describing
the three cardinal features of Hypnosis; 1) concentration of the
senses on the operator, 2) acceptance of suggestion without question,
and 3) amnesia for events in a trance. In 1814 the Abbe Faria
suggested that the phenomena described by Mesmer were not due to animal
magnetism, but actually due to suggestion. However the popularity
of Mesmer was so well established that Faria's hypothesis was soon forgotten.
Dr. Wolfart journeyed from Berlin to Frauenfeld in 1812 at the request
of the Prussian government, to investigate Mesmer, and to learn all he
could about animal magnetism, and bring it back to the University of Berlin.
At the same time Koreff was already in Paris on a similar mission.
Mesmerism spread rapidly throughout Europe, including Switzerland, Italy
and even as far north as the Scandinavian countries. This produced
many experts including Eschenmayer, Kerner, Lallemant, Schelling, Passavant.
Kluge, Pace, Ostermeyer, Pfaff, Pezold, Selle, Bartels and many others.
Section 4.
James Braid

On November 13, 1841 a French magnetizer named La Fontaine,
who demonstrated Mesmerism, first introduced James Braid to Mesmerism
[theory based on animal magnetism] and Mesmeric experiments at a meeting
on that day. A complete description of this seance is found along
with a detailed history of Braid's activity in writing in Bramwell's book,
Hypnotism, Its History, Practice and Theory. James
Braid was most well known for the fact that he renamed Mesmerism, "Hypnotism"
in 1842, after the Greek word "Hypnos" meaning, "sleep" and offered to
read a paper on it at a meeting of the British Medical Association in
Manchester, but was rejected. Nevertheless, unlike Mesmer he maintained
a good professional standing in his community during his entire lifetime,
and was not only noted as an excellent hypnotist, but also was widely
acclaimed for his operating cases of clubbed foot and other deformities.
Later in life, Braid realized hypnotism was not a true sleep, but a concentration
of the mind, and tried to change the name to monoideism. But by
that time, "Hypnosis" and "Hypnotism" were words already well rooted in
every language of Europe, and he finally abandoned this effort to change
the name. He was born at Rylaw House in Fifeshire in 1795, studied
at Edinburgh and qualified there as a surgeon. After practicing
in Scotland for a short time he moved to Manchester, where he lived until
he died suddenly on March 25, 1860 of a heart attack. He maintained
his practice and interest in hypnotism during his entire lifetime, and
wrote many papers and monographs on the subject. Although Braid
is best known for his renaming Mesmer's art hypnotism, he also was responsible
for a number of ideas that still persist until the present day.
They are as follows:
1: That hypnosis is a powerful tool which should be limited entirely
to medical and dental professions.
2: That although hypnotism was capable of curing many diseases
for which there had formally been no remedy, it nevertheless was no panacea
and was only a medical tool which should be used in combination with other
medical information, drugs, remedies, etc. in order to properly treat
the patient.
3: That in skilled hands there is no great danger associated with
hypnotic treatment and neither was there pain or discomfort.
4: That a good deal more study and research would be necessary
to thoroughly understand a number of theoretical concepts regarding hypnosis.
These points of philosophy were extremely sound, especially for
a physician in the middle 1800's who had limited knowledge available to
him at that particular period. The fact that these concepts remain
virtually unchanged today speaks highly for the brilliance of this great
physician and hypnotist from Manchester.
Section
5. John Elliotson

Like Braid, Elliotson received his M.D. from Edinburgh,
but went on to study on the continent as well as in Cambridge and at Sir
Guy's Hospital where I had the pleasure of speaking in 1958. He
was born in 1791 and died on July 29, 1868 after a long illness, at the
house of his friend, Dr. Symes, a formal pupil. Like Braid, Elliotson
was a brilliant physician, lecturer, and Professor of Medicine.
Elliotson's fame however, even exceeded that of his predecessor, Dr. Braid,
for Elliotson ascended to the academic heights of a full Professorship
of Medicine at the London University. He was also named President
of the Royal Medical and Surgical Society and was one of the founders
of the University College Hospital in London.
He introduced the stethoscope into England together
with the methods of examining the heart and lungs and they are used to
this day. A complete history of his life also appears in Bramwell's
book.
Elliotson is best known for the fact that in 1846, he established the
first journal dealing with hypnotism. It was called Zoist, and complete
copies of the journal are still obtainable from some sources. He
was discharged from the University College Hospital for choosing hypnosis
as the subject for the Harveian Oration of 1846. In this Harveian
Oration, Elliotson quoted this memorable passage from Harvey's works,
"True Philosophers, compelled by the love of truth and wisdom, never fancy
themselves so wise and full of sense as not to yield to truth from any
source and at all times; nor are they so narrow minded as to believe any
art or science has been handed down in such a state of perfection to us
by our predecessors that nothing remains for future industry.
Elliotson then applied Harvey's words to the science
of Hypnotism and stated in no uncertain terms that it was the duty of
physicians of that age to carefully and dispassionately review his research
on the subject. Many interesting articles appeared in his journal,
Zoist that was published quarterly from April 1843 until December
31, 1855. For thirteen years, article after article, was published
by Elliotson, Esdalie, and many other brilliant physicians of that time,
testifying to the excellent results of hypnotic treatment in insanity,
epilepsy, hysteria, stammering, neuralgia, asthma, torticollis, headaches,
functional difficulties of the heart, rheumatism, tic-douloureux, spasmodic
colic, sciatica, lumbago, palsy, convulsions, acute inflammations of the
eyes and testicles, and reports of hundreds of painless operations, everything
from removal of a cataract to the amputation of the penis of which James
Esdalie reported two cases. Parker (from whom the expression "Painless
Parker" originated) reported over 200 painless operations in Exeter, an
institution Elliotson helped him to form. Elliotson was excellent
in the field of child hypnosis, and worked with many children and childhood
diseases, such as St. Vitus Dance, Chorea, tics, and other maladies.
Unlike Braid, however, Elliotson continued to believe in clairvoyance
and other mystical phenomena until his death.
Section 6
James Esdalie
Dr. James Esdaile probably performed more surgical
operations under hypnoanesthesia than any physician up until the present
time. He was a man of extreme ingenuity and intelligence who practiced
most of his life in India, and is probably better known for his work in
hypnosis than any other man with the possible exception of Mesmer himself.
He was born February 6, 1808, the son a minister, and like Elliotson and
Braid studied at Edinburgh where he graduated in 1830, obtaining a position
with the East India Company.
Esdaile did his first operation under hypnosis on April
4, 1845, on a Hindu convict with double hydrocele, at the native hospital
at Hooghly. After accomplishing 75 operations under hypnoanesthesia
he wrote to the medical board; but his letter was not even acknowledged.
Later, at the end of the year, having over a hundred operations to his
credit, he then contacted Sir Herbert Maddock, then the deputy governor
of Bengal, who appointed a committee of investigation composed primarily
of physicians.
On receiving their favorable report, the Governor then
placed Esdaile in charge of a small experimental hospital near Calcutta,
in order that he might continue his research into hypnosis for whatever
values it might have. Esdaile began his research in November of
1846, with the following physicians appointed to help him: R. Thompson,
M.D., D. Stuart, M.D., J. Jackson, F.R.C.S., F Mouatt, M.D., R. O'Shaughnessy,
F.R.C.S.; and at the end of the trial year of Esdaile's experimental works,
he had 133 more operations to his credit, and a goodly number of medical
cases as well. The reports by visitors to the institution continued
to be favorable, and therefore, with the deputy governor's continued support,
Esdaile was then appointed to Sarkea's Lane Hospital and Dispensary to
continue his work and expand it to other fields of medicine.
Esdaile's fame spread far and wide, and he once stated
truthfully that he did more operations on scrotal tumors in one month
than took place in all the hospitals in Calcutta in a year. Some
local physicians who felt that his patients were hysterical criticized
him in the medical journals. Esdaile's comment on this was that
his own report of the cases was still worthy of mention if only as an
example of an epidemic of insanity. His sense of humor stayed with
him until he left India in 1851. When he left, he had thousands of painless
operations to his credit, and over 300 major operations all done under
Mesmerism. While he was in India, chloroform was first introduced
as an anesthesia and later after he left India, a prize of $10,000 was
offered in 1853 to the discoverer of the anesthetic properties of ether,
which was described as the earliest anesthetic. Esdaile sent an
indignant letter of protest about this, drawing attention to the fact
that he had performed painless surgery under Mesmerism for years before
anyone had ever heard of ether. (For that matter, chloroform preceded
ether in any case.)
Disgusted with India and "caring not a straw" about
a big practice in Calcutta, Esdaile returned to Perth, the home of his
father, where he settled and remained until he developed an illness of
the lungs (tuberculosis?), and moved from Scotland to Sydenham, where
he died at the age of 50 on January 10, 1859. His works were many,
but perhaps his most famous work was a book originally titled, Mesmerism
in India, and later released under the title of Hypnosis
in Medicine and Surgery. In this particular book, he not
only reported 73 painless operations, but also reported 18 medical cases
of palsy, lumbago, sciatica, convulsions, and tic-douloureux, in addition
to informing the public on hypnosis. He lashed out at the stupidity
of some medical men who were blind to any new ideas; quoting in Latin,
"Stare super vias Antiquas" to describe such medical men.
He further went on to say that as a lover of truth for its own sake, he
was very little gratified by being told by his friends, "I believe because
you say so." He felt this was a barren belief, and constantly searched
out physicians to prove his newfound medical tool to them. Jacob
Conn, M.D. of the John Hopkins Medical School faculty has stated that
no one has worked more diligently to bring the value of hypnotic analgesia
and anesthesia to the attention of the medical profession than James Esdaile.
Esdaile's work evidently paid off, as the British Medical Association
reported favorably in 1891 that "As a therapeutic agent, hypnotism is
frequently effective in relieving pain, procuring sleep and alleviating
many functional ailments."
Section
7. Dr. Ambroise-Auguste Liebeault
 Liebeault is widely known as "The Father of Modern
Hypnotism." The reason for this is primarily because Liebeault was
the man who concluded and published the observation that all the phenomena
of hypnotism are subjective in origin. Liebeault was a humble French
physician, who though generally speaking was uninterested in research,
nevertheless was a genius at therapeutics. He maintained an overflowing
country practice that kept him busy night and day since the time he received
his M.D. in 1850. His practice in hypnotism was almost entirely
gratuitous, and because of this, it gained him the quiet respect of all
that knew him. He was born in 1823, began his study of medicine
in 1844, and started his experiments in hypnotism in 1848, even before
he left medical school. After having completed a number of therapeutic
sessions of hypnosis, he authored a book, which was two years in the writing.
Skepticism, however, was so great that he only sold one copy, which went
to Bernheim. In 1882 Liebeault cured an obstinate case of sciatica,
which Bernheim had treated without results for over six months.
Partly because of his curiosity, and partly because he wished to expose
Liebeault as a quack, Bernheim bought the book and then journeyed to see
Liebeault convinced that he was in fact a charlatan. Bernheim was,
however, so impressed by Liebeault's work that he decided to remain with
him and became a devoted pupil and lifelong friend. Bernheim and
Liebeault then published another book together, which was widely acclaimed.
This was especially true because of Liebeault's vast number of fascinating
case histories.
Whereas Parker and his contemporaries were interested primarily in painless
surgery, Liebeault invaded all fields of medicine and was in fact the
most important single physician in broadening the scope of therapeutics
through the use of hypnosis. An excellent description of Liebeault's
clinic appears in Bramwell's book.
Liebeault became quite adept at rapid hypnosis and
in fact was one of the first doctors who realized that for most hypnotherapy,
a deep trance was unnecessary, a fact frequently pointed out by Dr. S.
J. Van Pelt. Quite the contrary, Liebeault would induce his patients
with no more than a wave of the hand, and a quick phrase, such as "Sleep,
my little kitten"; suggest away the morbid symptoms and allow the patients
to wake up when they desired. He saw hundreds of patients rarely
spending more than a quarter of an hour with any of them. Bramwell
states that all of Liebeault's patients were either improved or cured
following his rapid suggestive treatments. Liebeault assisted by
Bernheim established what has been known as the "School of Nancy." This
was a period of development in hypnosis during which a great deal of experimental
work was done with many types of induction.
At the same time that Liebeault was merely using the word "sleep" with
a hand pass, Charcot on the other hand was violently ringing gongs and
flashing drummond lights. The Germans, Weinhold and Heidenhain,
preferred the ticking of a watch, and Berger was using warm plates of
metal. The idea of magnetism and magnetic processes had not yet
completely worn off yet. Despite Liebeault's explanation of the
phenomena as subjective, Piteres maintained that certain portions of the
body were particularly sensitive to stimulation of the skin, and these
so- called hypnotic zones which were described by him existed sometimes
on one side of the body and other times on both.
Moll has stated that he himself had seen many persons who were hypnotized
only when their foreheads were touched. Purkinje and Spitt stated
that touches on the forehead induced a sleepy state in many persons.
Cradle rocking used to induce children was well known, and Eisenhart has
mentioned stroking of the forehead as an excellent induction technique
for children. Hirt often used electricity to induce hypnosis, and
Sperling, a contemporary of Bramwell's and Moll's, described the hypnotic
trances of Dervishes which he had seen in Constantinople (now Istanbul).
Drzewiecki felt there was a difference in susceptibility to hypnosis because
of nationality, and stated that Russians were more easily hypnotized than
other people. It was felt later however, that neither nationality
nor sex entered into the ability of a person to be hypnotized. It
was only after Liebeault achieved a ripe old age and retired from medical
practice that he reaped a measure of the acclaim which was certainly due
him. He neither sought nor made a fortune. He remained to
his death, happy and secure in the knowledge of a life well spent in treating
the poor.
Dr. Bernheim of the Nancy School is perhaps the
best known for publicizing the use of hypnosis. Although Liebeault
was responsible for broadening therapeutics, his book was never widely
read. However, when Bernheim published his book on hypnosis (with
Liebeault's case histories), it was immediately accepted everywhere.
As a matter of fact, in spite of Charcot's tremendous reputation and early
start with the Salpetriere School, nevertheless, more and more persons
swung to the Nancy way of thinking. Medical dispute continued throughout
the entire 19th century on into the early 20th century, each side claiming
victories in the explanation of hypnosis. Bernheim would merely
ask the patient to look at him, think of nothing but sleep, and then would
tell the patient, "Your eyelids begin to feel heavy, your eyes are tired
and they begin to blink, they are getting moist, your eyes cannot see
distinctly, and they are closed." If the patient did not close his eyes
and fall asleep almost immediately as many did, then he would repeat the
process until success was assured. If the patients never showed
any signs of sleep or drowsiness, he would then assure them that sleep
was not essential and that hypnotic influence could be exerted without
it. Bernheim inspired hundreds of famous physician hypnotists such
as Von Schrenk, Noltzing, Babinski, and a great many others. Charles
Richet was credited with introducing the induction method of squeezing
of the thumbs and the hands together.
Section
8. Jean Martin Charcot

Jean Martin Charcot the famous French neurologist was born
in 1825 and died in 1893. He was so well known in the Medical profession
for so many varied accomplishments, and his biography is so easily obtainable,
that no detailed study will be given of him here. He is probably
the most famous physician to embrace hypnotism at that time and, in addition
to his work with Hypnotism was known for Charcot's bath, disease, joint,
syndrome, etc., as well as the Charcot-Marie-Tooth type, and his work
with progressive neuropathic muscular atrophy well known to all medical
students.
The Charcot-Weiss-Barber Syndrome (syndrome of the
carotid sinus) and the Charcot-Vigouroux sign are also both well known.
Charcot had a number of crystals named for him including the Charcot-Leyden
crystals, the Charcot-Neuman crystals and the Charcot-Robin crystals.
Despite his great fame in the medical field, he plunged into hypnotism
without the usual careful research that had attended his other works.
Consequently, his reputation weakened when his theories that hypnosis
was a pathological state that weakened the mind were later disapproved
by the Nancy School of Medicine. As a matter of fact, when Charcot
died, Babinski denounced many of Charcot's cures, stating that some were
actually faked and some were figments of Charcot's imagination.
This bitter attack on Charcot from Babinski, more than any other thing,
was responsible for the decline of the use of hypnosis in France.
This decline continued until modern times with only a few experts such
as Pierre Janet and Dr. Joseph Morlaas using hypnosis until it was officially
introduced to the French medical schools in the fall of 1958.
Section 9.
Josef Breuer

Until Breuer's time, hypnosis had primarily been used
for the alleviation of pain in surgery, and according to Liebeault's method,
the simple suggesting away of symptoms. However, circa 1880, Breuer
made an accidental discovery that changed the methods of hypnotherapy.
As a matter of fact, it not only changed the methods of hypnotherapy,
but actually introduced an entirely new art in itself as it was Breuer's
work which attracted Freud and led him into methods of psychoanalysis
which are so common to psychiatrists today.
In any case, Breuer had been treating a patient whom
he called Anna O. The case is a long and involved one, and is well known
to all students of psychiatry. During one portion of therapy, they
found however, much to her distress, (and Anna O. was a hysterical patient
with many, many different problems) that she could drink no water.
In fact, no matter how intense her thirst became, she felt it was a physical
impossibility for her to swallow water. Thereupon, she subsisted
for a number of months on watery fruits and melons until, during a hypnotic
session, she revealed in a fit of anger, how to her great disgust, a former
governess had permitted a dog to drink water out of a glass in her presence.
As soon as she awoke from the trance she immediately asked Breuer for
a drink of water, emptying the glass with ease. This led Breuer
to the realization that the simple recalling of the traumatic experiences
from the past of the dog drinking the glass of water was responsible for
removing the symptoms. After coming to this conclusion, Breuer then
attempted to associate all of the patient's symptoms with traumatic experiences
in the past. After working with Anna O. for over a year, Breuer
was able to remove her symptoms of blindness, paralysis, deafness, the
contracture of her right arm, her anesthesia's, cough, trembling, and
all of her other symptoms, merely by repeated trances which revealed more
and more of her previous experiences, which contained damaging traumatic
incidents.
As Wolberg states in his book, Medical Hypnosis,
"The importance of Breuer's work lies in the change of emphasis in hypnotic
therapy, from the direct removal of symptoms to the dealing with the apparent
cause of these symptoms." Although Janet simultaneously arrived
at this conclusion, Breuer has been given credit for the discovery.
Section
10. Dr. Eugene Azam

Azam, a professor on the faculty of Medicine at Bordeaux,
and a correspondent at the Academy of Medicine in Paris, wrote a book
on a case of splitting consciousness in 1887. He described in detail
the case of a young girl, named Felita X., who first came to him during
the month of June 1858. He perceived many hypnotic phenomena in
this patient, and made some psychological deductions that bore out a good
deal of Braid's conclusions. Professor Jean Martin Charcot wrote
the preface of the book, (supra) who highly praised Dr. Azam's work.
Translated from the French it said in effect:
Today, now that Hypnotism has arrived and is now the regular application
of this method of describing illness, which has finally taken place among
the facts of positive science, it would be unjust to forget the names
of those who had the courage to study this question a moment when it was
under universal disapproval. Dr. Azam has been one of the initiators;
the first in France, he has searched to control by his personal experience
the results announced by Braid. The good fortune of an unforeseen
discovery, it is true, was favorable to him by placing in his hand the
subject's experience, which had spontaneously presented several phenomena
which were described by Braid. But, how many physicians who were
placed in Dr. Azam's position would have passed by these interesting facts
without stopping either by fear to be mistaken by a jugular hysteria,
or by fear that they would compromise their reputations by undertaking
studies which have been discredited, or simply by following the scientific
laziness which deprives us of the benefit of new things in modern development.
The results of Dr. Azam are not solely of historical interest; this analysis
rediscovered the most important part of somatic phenomena and psychiatric
anesthesia, hyper-anesthesia and contracture and catalepsy which we have
learned since this year has produced a great deal according to the rigorous
determination by drawing our attention to a special category of subjects.
It is of interest to remark as a matter of fact, that by the choice of
subjects and by the nature of the phenomena produced, the case histories
of Dr. Azam belong to hysterical hypnosis. It is said that this
form of hypnosis first took place in science and only today has arrived.
It manifests symptoms so characteristic that the most skeptical person
cannot now doubt its existence. Therefore, we must invite our eminent
colleagues to take part in the success of the work to which he has contributed
after we have listed the research of Dr. Azam with those of the school
of Salpetriere.
Azam went to great difficulty to remove the aura of
mystery from hypnosis, and was praised by Charcot because of this.
Dr. Heinz Hammerschlag states in his book, Hypnose und Verbrechen
that the Azam studies in Bordeaux, while important, were important primarily
because these studies attracted the attention of Liebeault who first succeeded
in giving these researchers a new slant. He endeavored to attribute
the phenomena of hypnosis to the psychiatric influence of suggestion rather
than to the influence of magnetism, which had previously been so popular
in the days of Mesmer. How Charcot could continue to maintain the
ridiculous assertion that all hypnotic subjects were "hysterical" straight
to the face of Braid's research and then through the opposite side of
his mouth praise Dr. Azam for clarifying and reiterating Braid's conclusions
is completely un-understandable.
Section
11. Sigmund Freud

To even begin to try to summarize the life and work
of a genius is of course impossible. Also, to pick out specific
incidents in his life and in describing these, expect one to understand
the intricate working of the mind of Freud would be as ridiculous as describing
George Washington as "a boy who chopped down a cherry tree." There have
been hundreds of volumes written on Sigmund Freud, possibly the most complete
of which is The Life and Work of Sigmund Freud by Ernest
Jones (1879 - 1958) in three volumes. For a complete understanding
of Freud, this three-volume work surpasses all others, but such an undertaking
being beyond the scope of this work, we must be satisfied with a short
summary of Freud's connection with the development of hypnosis.
It was Breuer's work that attracted Freud and caused
him to publish his famous book co-authored with Breuer, Studien
uber Hysterie, which was published in 1895. Breuer and Freud
correctly concluded that hysterical symptoms developed as a result of
repressing damaging experiences and that if these damaging experiences
were once again released from the subconscious mind by a mental catharsis,
the hysterical symptoms would be eliminated. Breuer accomplished
this through the use of hypnosis, but Freud, a poor hypnotist, found that
free association coupled with psychoanalysis were vehicles by which he
could better accomplish his work. Parlour has pointed out that although
Freud spurned formal "hypnosis" he nevertheless used many hypnotic techniques
constantly such as "touching the patient's forehead," "the concentration
of the patient's mind," "the relaxation of the body on a couch," and "the
abundant use of the imagination." This was largely overlooked during Freud's
lifetime and attention was given to Freud's words that did not always
explain Freud's actions.
It was during this period that the greatest misconception
regarding hypnosis first gained a foothold, and which even now is still
regretfully difficult to dislodge in the minds of a number of learned
medical men and hundreds of lay persons. Because of Freud's denunciation
of hypnosis in favor of psychoanalysis, people began to associate hypnosis
with "direct suggestions" (only one aspect of hypnotism). Hence,
the general public and lay people as well began to think in terms of psychoanalysis
versus direct suggestion. What was not sufficiently explained was
that the science and art of hypnotism contains both analysis and suggestion
and when correctly applied not only breaks the problem into its component
for analysis but puts the individual back together again with a Synthesis.
Conventional psychoanalysis, however, with its lack of directive guidance,
eliminates the latter entirely and renders the former slow, cumbersome
and often times ineffective. Nevertheless, because of Freud's great
brilliance and popularity, the words "free associations and "psychoanalysis"
became the passwords of the day, and hypnosis again took a nosedive into
obscurity.
A few experts such as Pierre Janet of France, Bramwell
and Moll of Great Britain, Morton Prince and McDougall of the United States,
and Pavlov in Russia continued to use hypnotism. Most other neurologists
(most mental disease was approached from the standpoint of "neurology"
in those days) immediately were influenced by Freudian theory and methods.
Freud, himself was a fascinating man. He was
born on the 6th of May in 1856, in the Moravian town of Freiberg, a tiny,
ancient industrial town that then belonged to the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
His mother, Amalia, to whom he had a strong oedipal attachment, was 20
years younger than his father, Jacob. The family moved to Vienna,
where he spent his life. When Freud was four years old, his father
died in October 1896, and it profoundly affected Freud, which he expressed
in a letter to his close friend, Dr. Fliess.
The Freud family was Jewish, but Freud himself ignored
Jewish feasts, and instead celebrated Christmas and New Year because "it
was easier." This would seem a highly unusual behavior pattern from such
a nonconformist, but as stated above, Freud was actually a paradox who
said some things and practiced others. For one thing, he constantly
maintained that he was a scientist of the first quarter, seeking only
truth first, last, and always. He continued to believe until his death,
Lamarch's theory that acquired traits could be inherited, which no true
scientist of that age believed any more than they still believed the world
was flat. Freud also dabbled in occultism and telepathy, and openly
stated his belief in it, although he never published such works.
Freud was a great believer in the magic of numbers, and his close friend,
William Fliess, who was mentioned previously, has stated that Freud believed
that important things happen to men in cycles of 23 to 28 days.
He predicted his own death at age 61 or 62, and seemed quite dismayed
after passing this age, and thereupon raised his prediction to 85 1/2,
the age at which his father and half-brother both died. Freud's
eldest son, Jean Martin Freud, who was named after Charcot, whom Sigmund
admired so much, published a relatively new book of Freud's home life
as a father and a man. Freud first met his wife in April of 1882,
and fell in love at first sight, although they were not married until
after his one month of service on maneuvers with the Austrian Army in
1886, when he was promoted from First Lieutenant to Captain.
Freud practiced as a specialist in nervous diseases,
and was a junior lecturer at the University of Vienna when Jean Martin
was born. He lived at Suenhaus, facing Ringstrasze, but wrote many
of his best books in naturalistic settings. Interpretation
of Dreams, probably one of Freud's most famous books, was written
at a Villa in Berchtesgaden, a beautiful resort high in the Bavarian mountains,
later to become infamous as the well-guarded retreat of Adolph Hitler.
Freud was always immaculately and carefully dressed,
even during the last 17 years of his life in which he painfully suffered
one operation after another for the incurable cancers that beset him.
Even after much of his mouth and palate and jaw structure had been dissected
away, and he was forced to wear a monstrous prosthesis in order to close
the opening between the nasal cavity and the throat so that he could talk,
he maintained his sense of humor. Weak and unable to speak except
in his native German (although previously he spoke both French and English
well), he once said to French singer Yvette Guilbert, "Meine Prosthese
Spricht Keine Franzosisch" (my prosthesis does not speak French).
Freud had a total of 33 operations in all, including
a sterilization operation which he hoped would in some way change the
hormonal setup of his body and prevent the cancer from spreading.
He flew to England to escape Hitler in 1938, and at 82 years old, while
in London, he recovered sufficiently to do four analysis treatments daily.
Freud hated drugs and only took aspirin occasionally. In February
of 1939 his cancer finally caught up with him, being determined inoperable
and completely incurable at that time, and on September 21 of that year,
he asked his personal physician, Max Schur, for a sedative.
"It is only torture now, and it has no longer any sense," Freud said,
and days later, at the age of 83, he was dead. His daughter Anna,
remained at his side during his long protracted illness, and kept him
comfortable. "Most important," says biographer Jones (who himself
was perhaps the number one English speaking psychoanalyst of his time),
"is the increasing sense people have of being moved by obscure forces
within themselves, which they are unable to define. Few thinking
people nowadays would claim a complete knowledge of themselves or what
they are consciously aware of comprises the whole of their mentality,
and this recognition with all its formidable consequences for the future
of social organizations we owe above all to Freud. Man's chief enemy
and danger is his own unruly nature, and the dark forces pent up within
him. If our race is lucky enough to survive for another thousand
years, the name of Sigmund Freud will be remembered as that of the man
who first ascertained the origin and nature of those forces and pointed
the way to achieving some measure of control over them."
Section
12. Milne Bramwell
Bramwell is best remembered for his classic text, Hypnotism,
It's History, Practice and Theory, which even to the present day
remains one of the finest books ever written on hypnotism. In his
book, he states that his own first introduction to the subject was indirectly
due to Dr. James Esdaile, for Esdaile left India and lived for sometime
in Bramwell's native town of Perth. Many of Esdaile's experiments were
seen afterwards reproduced by Bramwell's father who was also a physician.
Bramwell witnessed many of these experiments as a boy, and they deeply
impressed him. He was an avid reader and student at Edinburgh when
Professor John Hughes Bennett again drew his attention to hypnotism.
After leaving Edinburgh, Bramwell became engaged in
general practice, and hypnosis was almost forgotten until he learned that
it had been revived in the wards of the Salpetriere. On March 28,
1890, he gave a demonstration of hypnotic anesthesia to a larger gathering
at Leeds. This was reported in the British Medical Journal and the
Lancet, and referrals of patients became so great that he abandoned general
practice and limited himself to the practice of hypnotism. Bramwell
was somehow able to avoid most of the great opposition and misrepresentation
that had been heaped on earlier physicians connected with the science.
Bramwell was probably most famous for his work in clinical hypnosis in
medicine and surgery. However, he also wrote on hypnotic theories,
hypnosis in animals, the management of hypnotic experiments, experimental
phenomena of hypnosis, and even on such occult subjects as spiritualism,
clairvoyance, and telepathy.
Moll, an English contemporary, is equally famous for
his book on hypnosis. Moll's book, copyrighted a few years before
Bramwell's, was arranged a bit differently and is noteworthy for its dissertation
on the legal aspects of hypnosis which Bramwell did not cover, but which
is liberally quoted in an earlier book of mine, Legal Aspects of Hypnosis,
the first complete volume on the subject ever written. Moll demonstrated
how everyday suggestions differ from hypnosis, and also gave the first
reference to waking hypnosis. He anticipated Erickson's studies
of the post-hypnotic state, and also investigated the relationship between
hypnotist and the subject. His book has long been considered one
of the best possible introductions to the study of hypnosis and was one
of the first pieces of literature to objectively separate hypnosis from
the mystical elements which surround it.
Section
13.
Other Physicians of the Era
The first reported use of hypnosis utilized as an anesthetic
occurred on April 12, 1829, when Jules Cleznet, a French surgeon, performed
a breast operation. The first reported uses of hypnosis in America
were in 1843, one year after Braid coined the term, in New York, Ohio,
Illinois and Missouri by Doane, Dugas and others. Crile's contribution
to hypnotic literature was that he recognized that even though a patient
was "unconscious" during inhalation anesthesia, that the greater part
of his brain was still awake, and nerve impulses could still reach the
brain producing cerebral depression and other undesirable manifestations.
Dupuytren, the famous French surgeon who is best known for his work on
contractures, made the statement that "pain kills like hemorrhage," and
indeed many patients of that era of medicine preferred death to extreme
pain. William Kroger, a well-known obstetrician hypnotist, reported
the decline of the use of hypnoanesthesia following the development of
chemoanesthesia.
PART C: LATE
HISTORY
Section
1. Contemporary scientists in the field
A new era of hypnosis began with World War I. The revival
was primarily due to a multiplicity of paralytic and amnesia cases with
psychogenic origin, and the fact that few psychiatrists were then available.
From Great Britain came Hadfield, who originated the term Hypnoanalysis,
meaning the use of age regression to uncover the damaging experiences
and then reliving the experience under hypnosis to produce mental catharsis.
The advent of hypnosis in our time brought forth many new experts including
many stage hypnotists. Lewis R. Wolberg M.D., an assistant clinical
professor of psychiatry at New York Medical College, wrote perhaps the
most extensive treatise on medical hypnosis in two volumes, which had
been published in the U.S.A. In 1955 the British Medical Association
officially endorsed the teaching of hypnosis in all medical schools and
the organization of teaching groups and societies began. WILLIAM
J. BRYAN JR. M.D., who became its first president, founded the American
Institute of Hypnosis on May 4, 1955. It was founded for the reason
that until that time there had been no educational body devoted exclusively
to promoting all the phases of hypnosis in medicine and dentistry, and
the Institute was founded to fill that gap. It has grown since that
time to become the world's most respected educational institution devoted
solely to teaching hypnosis in medicine and dentistry to physicians and
dentists all over the world. Past Presidents of the organization
include the experts of that time, including Butters, Moss, Sloan, Bryan,
Hedge, Boswell, and McCall.
Easily the most famous contemporary dental hypnotist
is Dr. H. Joshua Sloan D. D. S., a past president and fellow of the American
Institute of Hypnosis. He was instrumental in establishing the first
university course in hypnosis and taught it for many years. Author
of Introductory Information for Dentists in Hypnosis, and Goals in Dentistry,
he held many offices, including President of the Academy of Applied Psychology
in Dentistry and President of the American Institute of Hypnosis.
Best known for his research in polishing of various induction and deepening
techniques, and for his extensive work in the field of General Semantics,
he practices on Madison Avenue in New York City.
Aaron A. Moss, the third president of the American
Institute of Hypnosis, is most famous for his classical work Hypnosis
in Dentistry, the most complete book on the subject published
to date [January 1963]. He was instrumental in filming the first
movie on the use of Hypnosis in Dentistry.
Dr. Garland Fross of South Bend, Indiana, Dr. Tom Wall of Seattle, Washington,
Dr. Jack Bart of Riverside and Beverly Hills, California, and Dr. Martin
Cousins of Los Angeles, California have all distinguished themselves in
the field of Hypnodontics. All of these men have participated in
various courses given by the Institute in the capacity of Faculty members
and all are Fellows of the Society.
Dr. Fross, a legend in his own community and a full Commander
in the Navy Dental Corps has done much toward educating Naval Dental Officers
and thousands of civilian dentists regarding the ethical and proper place
of Hypnosis in Dentistry. He has written numerous articles and scientific
papers on the subject and has, with the approval of his county dental
society, taken to the airways on occasion to inform the public on the
subject on the dental society's public service radio program. Dr.
Wall has repeatedly lectured on Hypnodontics at various Universities and
medical and dental gatherings as well as having written a pamphlet explaining
Dental Hypnosis to patients.
Dr. Jack Bart has lectured at as far distant points as Paris,
France and Honolulu, Hawaii on the subject of Dental Hypnosis and has
been practicing it during his entire dental career. Dr. Cousins
is not only a member of the Faculty of the American Institute of Hypnosis,
but regularly conducts classes in Hypnodontics for the Beverly Hills Hypnodontic
Society and has taught both physicians and dentists the proper techniques
with regard to hypnoanesthesia. He is a world-renowned authority
on this subject especially as it applies to Dentistry.
Section
2. Dr. Sydney Van Pelt

A history of hypnosis would not be complete without
mentioning the foremost expert in the field of medical hypnosis of our
time. Dr. S. J. Van Pelt, an Australian physician who established
practice in London, England over 15 years ago, was the world's first modern
full-time medical hypnotist. Limiting his practice to the use of
hypnosis in medicine, Dr. Van Pelt built up an enviable reputation at
a time when the rest of the world was very suspicious of the new modality.
He became the first and lifetime president of the British Society of Medical
Hypnotism, and the Editor of the British Journal of Medical Hypnotism,
the oldest and most respected journal in the field still in publication.
The British Journal of Medical Hypnotism under his guidance from its inception
has lived even longer that Elliotson's Zoist and is now the world's undisputed
leader in its field. By means of the British Journal and the Journal
of the A.I.H., for which he has written a number of articles, the best
of the scientific literature on the subject of hypnotism is disseminated
throughout the English-speaking medical profession of the world.
Dr. Van Pelt participated as lecturer in the first international course
in medical hypnotism ever given in November 1959 aboard the M.S. Kungshohm
on a Caribbean Cruise, and except for myself, is still today the only
other living full-time medical specialist in hypnosis. He has written
more books on hypnosis than any other four authors combined if I am not
utilized in the combination, and has so many articles on the subject published
that they are too numerous to count. If there is any one man of
our time who will ascend to greatness via medical hypnosis, it is certainly
Dr. S. J. Van Pelt, the foremost authority on the subject in the world.
Section
3. Hypnotism in France
The formation of the American Institute of Hypnosis and the simultaneous
action of the British Medical Association in approving it in 1955 spurred
the Council on Mental Health of the American Medical Association to conduct
a three year exhaustive study which culminated in an official endorsement
of hypnosis by the American Medical Association at its 1958 June meeting.
This was reported in detail in the Journal of American Medical Association,
and a text of the unanimous endorsement, by the A.M.A. House of Delegates
can be found in the A.M.A. Journal Vol. 168, No 2, September 13,
1958. The House of Delegates without one dissenting vote
accepted the report of the Council on Mental Health approving Hypnosis.
Shortly after this happened, the French Government
again became interested in Hypnotism. Due to Babinski's denunciation
of Charcot's methods and treatments, although obviously untrue, this nevertheless
gave hypnotism an extremely bad reputation in France, and consequently
no one was even allowed to speak on the subject of hypnosis at any University
medical gathering for the French Medical Academy officially forbade discussion
of the topic in 1840, and this subject remained taboo until 1958, at which
time the Sorbonne University of Paris faculty of medicine invited me to
reintroduce the subject to France in a lecture to be given to over 200
famous French physicians at the St. Anne's Psychiatric Hospital in Paris.
The lecture was given in the auditorium of the Psychiatric Hospital in
France, and the reception was so enthusiastic that I was kept a full hour
and a half longer answering questions and performing demonstrations including
a demonstration of hypnosis performed through an interpreter, which was
the first known such medical exhibition in the world. Because of
this great success, the assistant mayor of Paris in his office with the
traditional champagne toast received me, in the absence of the Mayor who
was in New York on a goodwill mission. The success of this venture
led to an invitation to return and conduct a complete weeklong course
in hypnosis in the spring of 1960. The British Journal of
Medical Hypnotism Vol 10, No. 4, describes this important event
on the teaching of medical hypnosis as follows:
AN ANCIENT
ART RETURNS TO FRANCE
Report of a lecture given by Dr. William J. Bryan Jr., (USA)
The fact that British Medical Association gave an unqualified
approval of hypnosis three years ago led the American Medical Association
to immediately instruct its Council on Mental Health to investigate the
value of hypnosis in medicine. This investigation three years in
length led up to the unanimous endorsement of hypnosis by the Council
on Mental Health of the American Medical Association this last June.
Despite the great world interest in hypnosis, there has been relatively
little said or done about hypnosis in France in the recent years.
Dr. Pierre Pichot, professor of psychiatry on the faculty of medicine
of the University of Paris, and Chief of staff of the St. Anne's Psychiatric
Hospital in that city, has given some possible reason for this.
"There was a time," he said, "during the days of Mesmer and Charcot, when
hypnosis enjoyed a great following in France. In fact, France was
really the cradle of hypnotism, as it were. However, after Babinski,
Charcot's pupil, bitterly denounced much of Charcot's work following his
death, hypnosis fell into disrepute in France, and has largely remained
so until present day."
It was probably because of that desire of the French
Medical Profession to again renew their interest in hypnosis that caused
them to invite Dr. William J. Bryan Jr., of the United States of America,
to speak on the subject. He is probably the first physician who
has ever even been allowed to speak on the subject of hypnosis in a university
professional-type gathering in many, many years. Nevertheless, the
Faculte de Medecine of the Universite de Paris accorded him great courtesy
and honour. They asked him to address a professional group on September
11, 1958, at the Hopital Psychiatrique Ste. Anne, Rue Cannibis in
Paris. While in France, he certainly received the royal treatment.
He was entertained by the French Government, the French professional men,
and the French people themselves. "Naturally it would be impossible
to thank all the wonderful people there," he states, "but special mention
should certainly be made of Monsieur Pierre Taintiger, the Vice Mayor
of Paris, who personally welcomed me to Paris with the traditional Parisienne
champagne toast in his private office. Special mention must also
be made of Dr. Pierre Deniker and Dr. Pierre Pichot, who were so kind
to me during my stay in Paris. Miss Ellen Terry, a fabulous French
lady who was former director of the women's Army in France, and now holds
the position of Chief of Information Services for the United States Embassy,
receives my special appreciation for the giving generously of her valuable
time in assisting me in translating my address from English to French
(French that Frenchmen could understand)."
The address was given on September 11, 1958, in the
auditorium of the Sainte Anne's Psychiatric Hospital, using their new
public address system for the first time to an audience of over 200 physicians
from all parts of the country and one doctor from Great Britain to hear
it. The half-hour address was well received by a most gracious audience
who kept the speaker present for more than another hour and a half with
pertinent questions. In fact, the address was so well received that
Dr. Bryan decided to put on a short demonstration to illustrate some of
the points in his address. Therefore with the help of Dr. Pierre
Pichot as interpreter, the subjects were placed under hypnosis.
Anesthesia and other phenomena of hypnosis were produced and the audience
was generous in its reception of this ancient art returned to France.
* * * * *
Following this description of the address is the actual
text of the address itself only translated back into English (Though it
was given in French at the time). Following this is the text of
a letter in English from Dr. Pierre Pichot thanking Dr. Bryan for this
appearance at the hospital.
* * * * *
Text of the address given September 11, 1958 at the Hopital Phychiatrique
Ste. Anne, Rue Cannibis in Paris:
Recent
Advances in Hypnosis in the United States
Please allow me to tell you how honored I feel on being
asked to address you, and let me tell you most humbly that I have no intention
of making this a one-way lecture. Instead I ask for an exchange of ideas
between our two countries as a method of advancing worldwide scientific
knowledge on our subject. It would certainly be presumptuous of
me to speak to you of Hypnotism, you who can boast of such leaders as
Mesmer, Charcot, Bernstein, and Janet. It is your great country
which led the world in recognizing the art to begin with, and my humble
contributions in the field are only those of a redecorator as compared
with the initial architect. Nevertheless, because you might be interested
in the trend of happenings in this field of hypnotism in America, I should
like to cover a few points of which you may not be aware.
First: within the past five years a revolution
has taken place in my country regarding the teaching methods in postgraduate
schools. Because most medical doctors are unable to leave their
busy practices for both a vacation and postgraduate education each year,
and because postgraduate education is a deductible expense not taxed by
the government, many doctors have more and more begun to combine vacations
with postgraduate study. This has taken postgraduate medical studies
out of the classroom onto the cruise ship and into the resort hotels.
Since the great upsurge in the utilization of hypnotism in the practice
of medicine and dentistry in the past five years there have been no less
than four major groups teaching hypnotism to doctors and dentists, and
none of these groups confines their teaching to the hospital or medical
school. Indeed, quite the contrary. There is Dave Ellman's
group, the Seminars of Hypnosis, Symposiums of Hypnosis and The American
Institute of Hypnosis. As the Executive Director of the Institute,
I can tell you that now as never before the average general practitioner
in the United States, as well as his counterpart in the Dental profession,
is using hypnosis as a diagnostic and therapeutic tool in his practice.
When you consider that we instruct between fifty and one hundred new doctors
in this art every month, you must realize that the use of this art is
spreading rapidly throughout the country.
Secondly: Only this June the American Medical
Association went on record as approving and endorsing the teaching of
Hypnosis in Medical Schools and the use of Hypnosis as an approved method
for treating patients. This was a big step in the advance of hypnotism
in my country.
Thirdly: The establishment of new clinical journals
and experimental research in this country, together with associations
such as the Professional Association of the American Institute of Hypnosis,
the American Society of Clinical Hypnosis and the Society for Clinical
and Experimental Hypnosis.
Fourthly: The people themselves, having heard
what can be done with hypnosis, are asking their doctors in increasing
numbers about its use in all kinds of illnesses.
These four points, then, are responsible, more than
anything else for the rapid growth in the use of hypnosis in the practice
of medicine and dentistry in the United States.
Now you are probably wondering what we teach in our
courses on hypnosis for physicians and dentists. Our three-day beginner's
course number 101 you might find interesting. The course is restricted,
of course, to physicians and dentists. Our course consists of lectures,
films, demonstrations, laboratory periods and well-supervised practice
sessions. We expect each student to demonstrate his ability to use
hypnosis before the three-day course is over. These courses are
given on weekends to accommodate the doctors. History, suggestions,
theory, and trance management cover the first day. Dangers, misconceptions,
clinical material, Child, and Auto-Hypnosis cover the second day, and
the third day the groups are split into physicians and dentists for instruction
in their specialties. So much for our beginners' course.
In what field have we found hypnosis most valuable?
Paradoxically enough, hypnosis seems to be the most valuable where no
other treatment has worked very well. In diagnosis: where all other
methods have failed a complete and correct history can be taken using
age regression techniques under hypnosis. I have called attention
to the value of this in my article in the current issue of the British
Journal of Medical Hypnotism. In medicine: the deep-rooted causes
of Alcoholism, Enuresis, Asthma, Eczema, Constant Pruritus, and many Neuroses
and Psychoses can be uncovered by careful hypno-analysis. In surgery:
probably the least important use of hypnosis is for general anesthesia,
and probably the important use is to obtain the wonderfully postoperative
recoveries minus nausea, when hypnosis is utilized.
In Obstetrics and Gynecology, hypnosis has found its
most popularized use since there are so many young girls nowadays who
wish to experience painless childbirth and who also wish to remain fully
conscious and watch the birth of their babies. This I have found
is a wonderful and exhilarating experience for the young mother and one
she will always remember and cherish. Such a pleasant experience
cannot be had when the mother is snowed under with voluminous amounts
of sedatives and hallucinatory drugs. In dentistry, the control
of gagging, bruxism and the patient's cooperation obtainable with hypnosis
is nothing less than miraculous.
Dangers in using hypnosis are really very minor and
consist mostly of forgetting to remove suggestions, dangers of literal
suggestion, and dangers to the doctor because of misinterpretations made
by the patient.
Lastly, I would like to discuss some of the research
projects now in progress in the Institute program. We are experimenting
with the use of hypnosis to enlarge the female breast simply by directing
suggestion. Out of nine cases, eight have shown definite improvement.
We are also trying to see if the sex of an unborn baby can be determined
before birth by questioning the subconscious under deep hypnosis.
No results either way so far. We are using hypnosis in connection
with improving the ability of the senses to function i.e. deafness and
blindness. Hypnosis is also being used in connection with the new
Stapes Mobilization process in the ear both for operative anesthesia and
for hearing tests.
This, then briefly covers the field of hypnosis in
America today, (1958) but many other interesting projects are under way.
Again, let me thank you for the honor of appearing here. I would
prefer answering any questions in English, as my French is very limited.
Again, thank you.
Text of the letter from Dr. Pierre Pichot
Docteur Pierre Pichot
Professor Agrege a la Faculte de Medicine 24, Rue des Fosses Saint-Jacques,
Paris V
October 18, 1958
Dr. William J. Bryan Jr. M.D.
1204 B Street, P.O. Box 738
Sparks, Nevada, U.S.A.
Dear Dr. Bryan:
It has been a great pleasure to meet you in Paris,
and your colleagues here have greatly appreciated your very stimulating
presentation of hypnosis. I am certain that hypnosis has an important
future in the realm of psychiatric therapy, probably too in other fields,
and I know that you have stimulated the interest in this country.
Sincerely yours,
Dr. Pierre Pichot
(The above article was reprinted from the British Journal of Medical
Hypnotism with their kind permission)
No history of Hypnotism in France would be complete
without mentioning France's foremost Medical Hypnotist. Dr. Joseph
Morlaas, head of the Salpetriere Neurological Clinic. Dr. Morlaas
participated on the Faculty of the A.I.H. in giving the first course on
Medical-Dental Hypnosis ever given in France since 1840. It was
given in 1960 at the Claridge Hotel in Paris under the auspices of the
A.I.H.
PART D: SUMMARY
This brings the history of hypnosis up to our modern
times. Since 1958, the Institute has offered over 15 different courses
in Hypnotism in all the major cities of the United States and abroad.
Literally thousands of physicians and dentists have been introduced to
this important art of medicine. In 1958, Life Magazine estimated
the number of physicians and dentists qualified to utilize hypnosis in
their practice at 250. It is even doubtful that there were that
many; but assuming there were, within the past four years, through 1962,
largely due to the vigorous teaching program of the American Institute
of Hypnosis, there are now over 7500 physicians and dentists in the United
States fully qualified to utilize hypnosis in their practices, and are
actively doing so. This represents a 3000% increase over 1958.
44,000 operations were done in 1960 under hypnosis without a single anesthetic
death. 52,000 were done in 1961 and 68,000 in 1962. With the
tremendous increase in utilization of hypnosis by physicians of all specialties,
medical hypnotism, like radiology has begun to be a specialty in itself,
and physicians who do not yet know its use are more and more becoming
labeled "horse and-buggy doctors," and will soon find themselves facing
malpractice suits because of lack of knowledge which they should possess
about the subject.
Perhaps the biggest progress and advance has been made
in the psychiatric field, where long and tiresome techniques of psychoanalysis
lasting five or six years or more have been supplanted by rapid, specific,
and vastly more effective methods of treating the same illnesses by means
of hypnoanalysis. Modern Medical Research has definitely proven
that the time necessary for a complete psychoanalysis can now be reduced
from six years to approximately three months or less through the proper
use of hypno-analytic techniques as taught by the Institute. This
fact is extremely important when we consider the report of the Joint Commission
on Mental Illness and Health to the Congress of the United States in 1961.
It stated that "no more than 20% of 277 State Mental hospitals have participated
in modern advances designed to make them treatment rather than custodial
institutions!"
As the treatment of syphilis has been largely removed from
the dermatologist's practice to that of the general practitioner, because
of the development of penicillin and other antibiotics, so also the treatment
of psycho-neurotic and psychosomatic diseases is because of the advances
made in medical hypnosis progressively becoming the domain of the family
physician, with the referral of difficult cases to the medical hypnotist.
This is as it should be, because now through the use of hypnosis, this
treatment is not near as complex or complicated as it used to be under
other old outmoded methods of treatment. In the days of treating
pneumonia by means of specific antiserums, an expert in the field was
often needed, and yet today the American general practitioner treats the
vast majority of the cases of pneumonia with a few injections of penicillin,
referring only specialized or complicated cases to the internist.
The American Institute of Hypnosis is also not without
milestones of progress. Celebrating its eighth anniversary, the
Institute has been responsible for educating thousands of physicians and
dentists in the field of hypnotherapy, and has established the only referral
service of its kind in the world. Today, anyone wishing to find
a physician or dentist in his area who is qualified to utilize hypnosis
in his practice need only contact The American Institute of Hypnosis;
and he will receive the name, address and phone number of a physician
or dentist so qualified in his city.
A number of International courses in hypnosis for physicians
and dentists have been given, and the Institute has been praised by physicians
and dentists of many foreign countries (see Editorial of Journal of the
American Institute of Hypnosis for October 1960). The Journal was
established in October of 1960 and now in 1963 is in its fourth year of
publication. It is the only journal devoted exclusively to hypnosis
in medicine and dentistry which carries the seal of approval of the Association
of Medical and Allied Publications (the organization to which the Journal
of the American Medical Association, the New England Journal of Medicine
and other top flight medical and dental publications belong). None
of the other American Medical journals have "made the grade." Furthermore
its immediate worldwide acceptance soon after the first issue was published
testifies as to the extremely high quality of its articles. Among
its subscribers are; the Los Angeles County Medical Association; Stanford
University Medical Library; University of Kentucky; University of Illinois;
the AMA and the ADA; the Library of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia;
the Librarie des Facultes de Medicine of the University of Paris; Charles
University, Prague, Czechoslovakia; the British Society of Medical Hypnotists
Library in London, England and numerous other medical schools, and Universities
all over the world.
In the latter part of 1961 another first in medical hypnosis was begun
when the first class of lawyers were taught medical hypnosis (not for
the purpose of practicing medicine) but so that they might have an intelligent
concept of the phenomenon when dealing with it in the courtroom in malpractice
cases. They could then recognize when medical hypnosis practice
by a competent physician might be valuable to them or their client. (See
my book entitled, Legal Aspects of Hypnosis, 1962 Charles C. Thomas).
There is a big field in Hypnosis and the Law, the surface of which has
barely been scratched.
Summarizing these great new strides in Hypnosis and
Hypnotherapy, Wolberg very aptly states, "the history of hypnosis demonstrates
conclusively that it is no miracle worker but that shorn of extravagant
claims made for it by some of its adherents, it is an important and useful
tool." This one statement has more or less crystallized modern enlightened
opinion with regard to hypnosis. On reviewing the history of hypnotism,
we have learned that it has experienced many rises and falls in popularity.
It will experience further stormy courses due to the very nature of the
phenomena before its place in medicine, surgery, and dentistry is completely
secured.
Editor's Note:
Taken from the Journal of American Institute of Hypnosis, which
was founded by William J. Bryan, Jr. M.D. This Journal article is
dated January 1963 and has been edited by Anne H. Spencer, Ph.D.
1.98
Books, tapes and videos on hypnosis and conscious living are available
from Hypnosis and Holistic Living Store
For a free catalog call 248/549-5594, eastern standard time, M-Th,
10 am - 5pm.
For more information on how to become a Certified Hypnotherapist or to
receive a referral to a Certified Hypnotherapist Contact: International
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