- Franz Mesmer
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"Mesmer" redirects here. For 1994 film, see Mesmer (film).
Franz Anton Mesmer
Franz Anton MesmerBorn May 23, 1734
Iznang, Bishopric of Constance,
today Moos, Baden-Württemberg, GermanyDied March 5, 1815 (aged 80)
Meersburg, BadenNationality Germany Known for animal magnetism Franz Anton Mesmer (May 23, 1734 – March 5, 1815), sometimes, albeit incorrectly, referred to as Friedrich Anton Mesmer, was a German physician with an interest in astronomy, who theorised that there was a natural energetic transference that occurred between all animated and inanimate objects that he called magnétisme animal (animal magnetism[1]) and other spiritual forces often grouped together as mesmerism. The evolution of Mesmer's ideas and practices led Scottish surgeon James Braid to develop hypnosis in 1842. Mesmer's name is the root of the English verb "mesmerize".
Contents
Early life
Mesmer was born in the village of Iznang, on the shore of Lake Constance in Swabia, Germany a son of master forester Anton Mesmer (1701—after 1747) and his wife Maria/Ursula (1701—1770), née Michel.[2] After studying at the Jesuit universities of Dillingen and Ingolstadt, he took up the study of medicine at the University of Vienna in 1759. In 1766 he published a doctoral dissertation with the Latin title De planetarum influxu in corpus humanum (On the Influence of the Planets on the Human Body), which discussed the influence of the Moon and the planets on the human body and on disease. This was not medical astrology—relying largely on Newton's theory of the tides—Mesmer expounded on certain tides in the human body that might be accounted for by the movements of the sun and moon.[3] Evidence assembled by Frank A. Pattie suggests that Mesmer plagiarized[4] his dissertation from a work[5] by Richard Mead, an eminent English physician and Newton's friend. That said, in Mesmer's day doctoral theses were not expected to be original.[6]
In January 1768, Mesmer married Anna Maria von Posch, a wealthy widow, and established himself as a physician in the Austrian capital Vienna. In the summers he lived on a splendid estate and became a patron of the arts. In 1768, when court intrigue prevented the performance of La Finta Semplice (K. 51) for which a twelve-year-old Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart had composed 500 pages of music, Mesmer is said to have arranged a performance in his garden of Mozart's Bastien und Bastienne (K. 50), a one-act opera,[7] though Mozart's biographer Nissen has stated that there is no proof that this performance actually took place. Mozart later immortalized his former patron by including a comedic reference to Mesmer in his opera Così fan tutte.
The advent of animal magnetism
Hypnosis Applications Hypnotherapy
Stage hypnosis
Self-hypnosisOrigins Animal magnetism
Franz Mesmer
History of hypnosis
James BraidKey figures Marques of Puységur
James Esdaile
John Elliotson
Jean-Martin Charcot
Ambroise-Auguste Liébeault
Hippolyte Bernheim
Pierre Janet
Sigmund Freud
Émile Coué
Morton Prince
Clark L. Hull
Andrew Salter
Theodore R. Sarbin
Milton H. Erickson
Stephen Brooks
Dave Elman
Ernest Hilgard
Martin Theodore Orne
André Muller Weitzenhoffer
Theodore Xenophon Barber
Nicholas Spanos
Irving KirschRelated topics Hypnotic susceptibility
Suggestion
Post-hypnotic suggestion
Age regression in therapy
Neuro-linguistic programming
Hypnotherapy in the UKview · talk In 1774, Mesmer produced an "artificial tide" in a patient by having her swallow a preparation containing iron, and then attaching magnets to various parts of her body. She reported feeling streams of a mysterious fluid running through her body and was relieved of her symptoms for several hours. Mesmer did not believe that the magnets had achieved the cure on their own. He felt that he had contributed animal magnetism, which had accumulated in his work, to her. He soon stopped using magnets as a part of his treatment.
In 1775, Mesmer was invited to give his opinion before the Munich Academy of Sciences on the exorcisms carried out by Johann Joseph Gassner, a priest and healer, and also a Swabian. Mesmer said that while Gassner was sincere in his beliefs, his cures were because he possessed a high degree of animal magnetism. This confrontation between Mesmer's secular ideas and Gassner's religious beliefs marked the end of Gassner's career as well as, according to Henri Ellenberger, the emergence of dynamic psychiatry.
The scandal that followed Mesmer's unsuccessful attempt to treat the blindness of an 18-year-old musician, Maria Theresia Paradis, led him to leave Vienna in 1777. The following year Mesmer moved to Paris, rented an apartment in a part of the city preferred by the wealthy and powerful, and established a medical practice. Paris soon divided into those who thought he was a charlatan who had been forced to flee from Vienna and those who thought he had made a great discovery.
In his first years in Paris, Mesmer tried and failed to get either the Royal Academy of Sciences or the Royal Society of Medicine to provide official approval for his doctrines. He found only one physician of high professional and social standing, Charles d'Eslon, to become a disciple. In 1779, with d'Eslon's encouragement, Mesmer wrote an 88-page book Mémoire sur la découverte du magnétisme animal, to which he appended his famous 27 Propositions. These propositions outlined his theory at that time.
According to d'Eslon, Mesmer understood health as the free flow of the process of life through thousands of channels in our bodies. Illness was caused by obstacles to this flow. Overcoming these obstacles and restoring flow produced crises, which restored health. When Nature failed to do this spontaneously, contact with a conductor of animal magnetism was a necessary and sufficient remedy. Mesmer aimed to aid or provoke the efforts of Nature. To cure an insane person, for example, involved causing a fit of madness. The advantage of magnetism involved accelerating such crises without danger.
Procedure
Mesmer treated patients both individually and in groups. With individuals he would sit in front of his patient with his knees touching the patient's knees, pressing the patient's thumbs in his hands, looking fixedly into the patient's eyes. Mesmer made "passes", moving his hands from patients' shoulders down along their arms. He then pressed his fingers on the patient's hypochondrium region (the area below the diaphragm), sometimes holding his hands there for hours. Many patients felt peculiar sensations or had convulsions that were regarded as crises and supposed to bring about the cure. Mesmer would often conclude his treatments by playing some music on a glass armonica.[8]
By 1780 Mesmer had more patients than he could treat individually and he established a collective treatment known as the "baquet". An English physician who observed Mesmer described the treatment as follows:
In the middle of the room is placed a vessel of about a foot and a half high which is called here a "baquet". It is so large that twenty people can easily sit round it; near the edge of the lid which covers it, there are holes pierced corresponding to the number of persons who are to surround it; into these holes are introduced iron rods, bent at right angles outwards, and of different heights, so as to answer to the part of the body to which they are to be applied. Besides these rods, there is a rope which communicates between the baquet and one of the patients, and from him is carried to another, and so on the whole round. The most sensible effects are produced on the approach of Mesmer, who is said to convey the fluid by certain motions of his hands or eyes, without touching the person. I have talked with several who have witnessed these effects, who have convulsions occasioned and removed by a movement of the hand...
Investigation
In 1784, without Mesmer requesting it, King Louis XVI appointed four members of the Faculty of Medicine as commissioners to investigate animal magnetism as practiced by d'Eslon. At the request of these commissioners the King appointed five additional commissioners from the Royal Academy of Sciences. These included the chemist Antoine Lavoisier, the physician Joseph-Ignace Guillotin, the astronomer Jean Sylvain Bailly, and the American ambassador Benjamin Franklin.
The commission conducted a series of experiments aimed, not at determining whether Mesmer's treatment worked, but whether he had discovered a new physical fluid. The commission concluded that there was no evidence for such a fluid. Whatever benefit the treatment produced was attributed to "imagination".
As said, the investigation of the commission was not conducted on Mesmer himself, but on his work according to d'Eslon. Many affirmed that d'Eslon didn't know completely the true system of Mesmer.[9]
In 1785 Mesmer left Paris. In 1790 he was in Vienna again to settle the estate of his deceased wife Maria Anna. When he sold his house in Vienna in 1801 he was in Paris. Mesmer was driven into exile soon after the investigations on animal magnetism. His exact activities during the last twenty years of his life are largely unknown. He died in 1815.
Abbe Faria, an Indo-Portuguese monk in Paris and a contemporary of Mesmer, emphasized that “nothing comes from the magnetizer; everything comes from the subject and takes place in his imagination i.e., autosuggestion generated from within the mind”.
See also
- Mesmer, a 1994 film written by Dennis Potter, directed by Roger Spottiswoode, and starring Alan Rickman as Mesmer.
Works
- De planetarum influxu in corpus humanum (Über den Einfluss der Gestirne auf den menschlichen Körper; "The Influence of the Planets on the Human Body" / original language: Latin) (1766).
- Sendschreiben an einen auswärtigen Arzt über die Magnetkur ("Circulatory letter to an external[?] physician about the magnetic cure" / original language: German) (1775).
- Mesmerismus oder System der Wechsel-beziehungen. Theorie und Andwendungen des tierischen Magnetismus ("Mesmerism or the system of inter-relations. Theory and applications of animal magnetism" / original language: German) (1814).
Other
- Among Mesmer's followers was Armand-Marc-Jacques Chastenet, Marquis de Puységur (1751–1825), who discovered induced or artificial somnambulism.
- Mesmer is mentioned in Edgar Allan Poe's short story A Tale of the Ragged Mountains.
- Mesmer and his technique are key elements in Kiyoshi Kurosawa's film Cure.
- In his early writings, F. Anton Mesmer used a way of exposing his ideas very similar to the way of writing of the ancient alchemists. His way of thinking shows clearly the influence of the alchemists' ideas. He sees three basic elements: God, Energy (movement), Matter (on the top left in the guide), analog to Sulphur, Mercury and Salt, (Soul, spirit and body) of the alchemists. Some of his writings used therefore symbols to represent these and other meaningful concepts. He used over 100 symbols in a text sometimes, making it difficult, if not impossible, to read without a guide to the symbols. The idea behind it is that images are the basis for a true understanding while instead words can lead to many different and opposite meanings.
- The multiplayer online role-playing game series Guild Wars features a profession called the Mesmer, which focuses on illusion and hypnotic spells.
- A magical ability in the Artemis Fowl series of novels is named after Mesmer.
Footnotes
- ^ The use of the (conventional) English term "animal magnetism" to translate Mesmer's magnétisme animal is extremely misleading for three reasons:
- Mesmer chose his term to distinguish his variant of "magnetic" force from those referred to, at that time, as "mineral magnetism", "cosmic magnetism" and "planetary magnetism".
- Mesmer felt that this particular force/power resided only in the bodies of humans and animals.
- Mesmer chose the word "animal", for its root meaning (from Latin animus = "soul") specifically to identify his force/power as a quality that belonged in all animate beings (humans and animals.)
- ^ Prinz
- ^ Bloch, xiii
- ^ Pattie, 13ff.
- ^ De Imperio Solis ac Lunae in Corpora Humana et Morbis inde Oriundis (On the Influence of the Sun and Moon upon Human Bodies and the Diseases Arising Therefrom.(1704). See Pattie, 16.
- ^ Pattie, 13
- ^ Pattie, 30
- ^ Bakken glass harmonica
- ^ Many declared that what ascertained by the Royal Commission was not the true work of Mesmer. See Nouvelle Découverte sur le magnètisme animal ou lettre adressé à un Ami de Province par un partisan zélé de la vérité (disponible on the site of National French Library [1] In this small booklet pag. 33-34 the author says explicity that Deslon (on which the academic Commission investigated) didn't know the real system of Mesmer. "the true theory of the magnetic system has been revealed to very few students, and we defy Deslon to accomplish what we do"
References
- "Report of the Commissioners charged by the King in the examination of Animal Magnetism" (originally published 1784), English translation in Skeptic magazine of the Skeptic society, vol 4 no 3 1996.
- "Classics: memoir on the discovery of animal magnetism (Franz A. Mesmer) [Classics: memoir on the discovery of animal magnetism (Franz A. Mesmer)]" (in Spanish). Actas luso-españolas de neurología, psiquiatría y ciencias afines 1 (5): 733–9. Sep 1973. ISSN 0300-5062. PMID 4593210.
- Akstein D (April 1967). "Mesmer, the precursor of spiritual medicine (I) [Mesmer, the precursor of spiritual medicine (I)]" (in Portuguese). Revista Brasileira de Medicina 24 (4): 253–7. ISSN 0034-7264. PMID 4881184.
- Darnton, Robert (1968). Mesmerism and the End of the Enlightenment in France. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674569512.
- Eckert H (1955). "An unknown portrait of Franz Anton Mesmer. [An unknown portrait of Franz Anton Mesmer]" (in German). Gesnerus 12 (1–2): 44–6. ISSN 0016-9161. PMID 13305809.
- Ellenberger, Henri (1970). The Discovery of the Unconscious. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 0465016723.
- Forrest D (October 2002). "Mesmer". The International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 50 (4): 295–308. doi:10.1080/00207140208410106. ISSN 0020-7144. PMID 12362948.
- Gallo DA, Finger S (November 2000). "The power of a musical instrument: Franklin, the Mozarts, Mesmer, and the glass armonica". History of Psychology 3 (4): 326–43. doi:10.1037/1093-4510.3.4.326. ISSN 1093-4510. PMID 11855437.
- Gould, Stephen (1991). Bully for Brontosaurus. New York: Norton. ISBN 039330857X.
- Gravitz MA (July 1994). "The first use of self-hypnosis: Mesmer mesmerizes Mesmer". The American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis 37 (1): 49–52. doi:10.1080/00029157.1994.10403109. ISSN 0002-9157. PMID 8085546.
- Iannini R (1992). "Mesmer and mesmerism [Mesmer and mesmerism]" (in Italian). Medicina nei Secoli 4 (3): 71–83. ISSN 0394-9001. PMID 11640137.
- Kihlstrom JF (October 2002). "Mesmer, the Franklin Commission, and hypnosis: a counterfactual essay". The International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 50 (4): 407–19. doi:10.1080/00207140208410114. ISSN 0020-7144. PMID 12362956.
- Lopez CA (Jul 1993). "Franklin and Mesmer: an encounter". The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 66 (4): 325–31. ISSN 0044-0086. PMC 2588895. PMID 8209564. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=2588895.
- Makari GJ (February 1994). "Franz Anton Mesmer and the case of the blind pianist". Hospital & Community Psychiatry 45 (2): 106–10. ISSN 0022-1597. PMID 8168786. http://ps.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=8168786.
- Mesmer, Franz (1980). Mesmerism. Los Altos: W. Kaufman. ISBN 0913232882.
- Miodoński L (2001). "Romantic medicine in Germany as the philosophical explication for understanding the world and man - Mesmer and mesmerism [Romantic medicine in Germany as the philosophical explication for understanding the world and man - Mesmer and mesmerism]" (in Polish). Medycyna Nowozytna 8 (2): 5–32. ISSN 1231-1960. PMID 12568094.
- Parish D (February 1990). "Mesmer and his critics". New Jersey Medicine : the Journal of the Medical Society of New Jersey 87 (2): 108–10. ISSN 0885-842X. PMID 2407974.
- Pattie, Frank (1994). Mesmer and Animal Magnetism. Hamilton: Edmonston Pub. ISBN 0962239356.
- Pattie FA (July 1979). "A Mesmer-Paradis myth dispelled". The American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis 22 (1): 29–31. doi:10.1080/00029157.1979.10403997. ISSN 0002-9157. PMID 386774.
- Prinz, Armin (1994). Mesmer, Franz Anton in: Neue Deutsche Biographie 17. http://www.deutsche-biographie.de/pnd118581309.html
- Schott H (1982). "Die Mitteilung des Lebensfeuers. Zum therapeutischen Konzept von Franz Anton Mesmer (1734-1815)". Medizinhistorisches Journal 17 (3): 195–214. ISSN 0025-8431. PMID 11615917.
- Schott H (1984). "Mesmer, Braid and Bernheim: on the history of the development of hypnotism [Mesmer, Braid and Bernheim: on the history of the development of hypnotism]" (in German). Gesnerus 41 (1–2): 33–48. ISSN 0016-9161. PMID 6378725.
- Shultheisz E (July 1965). "MESMER AND MESMERISM [Mesmer and Mesmerism]" (in Hungarian). Orvosi Hetilap 106: 1427–30. ISSN 0030-6002. PMID 14347842.
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External links
- Mesmer's 27 Propositions (Via archive.org)
- Pictorial web-exhibit based on a handful of works from the Bakken’s extensive collection of books, pamphlets, manuscripts, and journals documenting the mesmerist movement.
- Memoires de Mesmer digitalized copy of Mesmer's memoirs written by himself (original version, in French)
- Deleuze's account of Mesmer's experiments
Categories:- 1734 births
- 1815 deaths
- People from the District of Konstanz
- German physicians
- 18th-century German physicians
- Rosicrucians
- German astrologers
- Hypnosis
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