Freud Hypnosis
Tuesday, March 16th, 2010
Hypnosis: A Brief History
The beginnings of formal medical research with hypnosis began with James Braid who is considered the â œFather € € of Modern Hypnotism. In 1842 Braid coined the term â € € œHypnosisâ to describe his use of â € œmesmeric € tranceâ in treating psychological and physiological conditions. Braid believed that the hypnotic trance was induced through prolonged attention on an object of fixation as a bright moving object to fatigue certain parts of the brain and cause a dream-like trance in a process known as visual fixation prolonged.
Al Braid study further concluded that sleep was not involved in the process of hypnosis and tried to change the name hypnosis to monoideasism. Unfortunately for him, the original term had already stuck with popular sources for hypnosis is the term they know and still use today. James Braid is remembered for his work œNeurypnologyâ € â €, the first book on hypnosis published in 1843, and his use of hypnosis in the treatment of pain.
Practice of complementary medicine is documented following James Braid. In 1834, an English surgeon Dr. John Elliotson reported using mesmerism (a term at the beginning of the hypnosis) in the performance of numerous surgical procedures without pain. During the mid-1800s in British India, Dr. James Esdaile reported the use of â € € œmesmeric sleep as an anesthetic in 345 single major operations. After the death by Drs. Esdaile Elliotson and there was a decrease of interest in hypnotism and the development of chemical anesthetics replaced hypnotism in this role. The practice and experimentation with hypnotism in continental Europe increased during the 1800s, when new translations of Braida € ™ s original hypnosis works distributed. It was also during this time (around 1880) that the practice of hypnosis moved from the surgical field of medicine in the field of mental health.
The beginnings of formal psychological research began in late 1800 with systematic experiments and tests of hypnosis is practiced in France, Germany and Switzerland. It is during this time that after hypnotic suggestion described above, and the correlation between hypnosis and dramatic improvements in sensory acuity and memory.
Neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot used hypnosis to treat hysteria. Charcot € ™ s pupil Pierre Janet describes the dissociation theory of hypnosis was used by the division of mental aspects to access and retrieve the skills and memories. This research generated increased interest in the subconscious and created a framework for therapy dissociated personalities.
Liébault Ambroise-Auguste (1864-1904) wrote about the need for the relationship between the hypnotist and a participant and the importance of suggestion. Psychologist and psychiatrist Boris Sidis formulated a law of hypnotic suggestion suggestion indicating that varies as the amount of disaggregation, and inversely as the unification of consciousness. French pharmacist Emile Coue developed The following laws of suggestion: The Law of Concentrated Attention – focusing attention on several occasions in the same idea tends to realize itself spontaneously invert the law of effect – The more you try to do something less chance of success is, and the law of dominant effect – strong emotions and suggestions tend to replace the weakest. German psychiatrist Johannes Schultz developed a system called Self-Hypnosis Autogenic training adaptations based on the theories of Abbe Faria and Emile Coue.
Modern applications of hypnosis include many hypnosis, psychoanalysis, hypnotherapy, hypnosis in obstetrics, the treatment of neurosis, as PTSD, hypnotic anesthesia, possible increase in physical abilities, change the threshold of sensory stimulation given pain management, increased motivation, altered patterns of behavior, social influence, increased memory and criminal investigation. The modern study of hypnotism is accredited Leondardo Clark Hull. Hypnosis and suggestibility Hull published in 1933, an experimental analysis shows that hypnosis had no connection with sleep. Hypnosis was influential in Sigmund Freud € ™ s the invention of psychoanalysis, was applied to medicine in Russia through obstetrics hypnosis in the 1920s by Platanov, used to treat panic in World War I, World War II and the Korean War.
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