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Introduction: Why study hypnosis

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Title: Introduction: Why study hypnosis


1
Introduction Why study hypnosis?
  • A trance behavior that has had no religious link
    to Judeo-Christian tradition for the last 200
    years.
  • Trance behavior and subjective experience that
    appear to be out of the ordinary anomalous
    experiences (altered state).
  • Anomalous experiences led to the first
    psychotherapeutic system and the investigation of
    suggestion (at the end of the 18th century) ... A
    tradition that we still see in stage hypnosis.

2
  • Basic process underlying hypnosis-like behaviors
    and experiences suggestion.
  • Suggestion historically linked to the work of
    the Devil Sub-icere to strike from under,
  • Sub-genere -- to manipulate (still viewed like
    this by the Catholic church).
  • Verbal and/or non-verbal communication aiming at
    influencing a persons behavior or experience
    consciously or non-consciously.? e.g.
    Conscious giving advice (not too
    interesting). Non-conscious subliminal
    suggestion or creating a false memory in
    someone without the person knowing it is
    false (or wart removal...).

3
The concept of Altered State
  • To qualify as an altered state must have
    specific physiological markers (for ex sleep
    EEG patterns different from awake state).
  • Natural versus Artificial altered states
  • Sleep, somnambulism, meditation, hypnosis, etc
  • - vs - Drug-induced.
  • If no specific physiological signs can be found,
    THEN
  • The concept of altered state is used only in a
    descriptive,
  • experiential sense it only means that the
    subject feels
  • different from normal day-to-day
    functioning.

4
  • It has NO explanatory value
  • For example if one asks
  • - Why is Peter behaving in such a strange way?
  • - Because he is hypnotized.
  • - How do you know he is hypnotized?
  • - Because he is behaving strangely.
  • ? It becomes a circular argument that doesnt
    explain anything. One needs to identify specific
    characteristics of each altered state (ex
    physiological or neuro-physiological signs).
  • In artificial states one can pinpoint to the
    cause of the behavior (ex alcohol intoxication,
    medication side-effects).

5
Origins of Hypnosis
  • The word hypnosis Greek origin hypnos
  • coined in 1840s by a British physician
    James Braid.
  • Hypnos sleep (so it is a incorrect analogy)
  • eventhough hypnotized people can look like they
    are asleep.
  • The actual origin of hypnosis can be found in a
    movement
  • called Animal Magnetism at the end of the 18th
    century
  • proposed by Mesmer (come back to it later).
  • The idea that beliefs (or the mind) can influence
    the body
  • can be found earlier in many primitive healing
    rituals.

6
Primitive Healing Rituals
  • primitive refers to non-medical treatment and
    does not imply naivety of beliefs.
  • All based on the concept of suggestion.
  • All nurtured by ones beliefs and expectations.
  • Psychological interactions (rituals) leading to
    the
  • improvement or cure of an illness.
  • Rituals set of regulated behaviors expected to
    bring a
  • desired outcome.

7
Examples of Primitive Healing Rituals
  • Disease Theory
  • Disease-Object Intrusion
  • Loss of Soul
  • Spirit Intrusion
  • (Possession)
  • Breach of Taboo
  • Sorcery
  • Therapy
  • Extraction of object.
  • Find, bring back restore lost soul.
  • Mechanical Extraction transference into another
    being. Exorcism.
  • Confession Propitiation.
  • Counter-magic.

8
Disease-Object Intrusion
  • Disease is caused by the presence of a harmful
    foreign substance.
  • Disease usually removed by Medicine-Man (with his
    mouth).
  • This technique is part of a more elaborate ritual
    (involving dances, music and a public audience).
  • It can only be successful only IF 3 conditions
    are met
  • ? The healer must believe in his own powers.
  • ? The patient must have faith in the healers
    power.
  • ? There has to be social support from the
    group (for both).
  • ?These conditions apply to ALL Primitive Healing
    Rituals

9
Loss of Soul
  • Can occur spontaneously or by accident (e.g.
    sneezing).
  • Is a widespread theory of disease that is based
    on naturalistic observations (i.e sleepwalking,
    fainting, dreaming).
  • The soul can be retrieved in different ways
  • ? A shaman (medicine-man) that travels to the
    world of the spirits.
  • ? Special incantations rituals.
  • Key expressions alienation, estrangement,
    loss of something, and such.

10
Possession
  • The idea that evil spirits have entered the
    patients body and taken possession of it.
  • Characteristics of the possessed body
  • Physical changes include voice, language,
    behaviors, strength and possible anesthetized
    areas.
  • Psychological changes include delusions,
    hallucinations, aggressivity and such.
  • Basically, a general loss of identity.

11
Possession cond
  • There are 2 types of Possession
  • ? Artificial Done at will and voluntarily (not
    our focus).
  • ? Spontaneous Occurs outside of will or
    control.
  • Of the spontaneous types, 3 have been delineated
  • ? Somnambulistic Involves a possession that
    spurs depersonalization and amnesia.
  • ? Lucid Involves an obsession that becomes a
    conscious struggle (i.e. no amnesia).
  • ? Circumsessio This one is a result of
    evolution. This became the kind of possession
    that imitated a given natural illness (ancestor
    of psychosomatic and somatoform disorders).

12
Possession cond
  • 3 ways to rid the body of the possession
  • ? Mechanical extraction through the use of
    e.g. Beating, whipping, bleeding, noises and
    smells (viz link with Hysteria).
  • ? Transference to another substance, usually
    another animal.
  • ? Exorcism release the possessed body through
    ritual chants, prayers and incantations (This is
    an important one a future tool of magnetism).
  • Changes in Possession are directly related to
    changes in social and religious values of the
    moment, and also vary from culture to culture.

13
Breach of Taboo
  • The chain reactions is as follows breach of
    taboo SIN ? guilty feelings ? illness.
  • Involves confession (personal, social or
    cultural) and/or propitiation (regaining status
    previously held in environment).
  • The resulting illness can take many forms e.g.
    aphasia (loss of voice) resulting from saying
    something forbidden.

14
A final word
  • The basic goal of any healing ritual is to bring
    a cure
  • These can be found in all cultures.
  • They all aim at creating a cathartic reaction in
    the patient.
  • Catharsis comes from the Greek theater (drama)
    where
  • the actors sought to create in the spectator an
    emotional reaction (think here of a book or movie
    that got to you).
  • ? Catharsis means purgation whether physical,
    psychological (emotional) and/or spiritual (still
    at the core of many therapeutic interventions
    today).

15
Comparison between Primitive Healers,
Psychiatrists and Psychologists
16
Synergistic Model of Hypnotic Behavior and
Experience(Laurence, 1991) 
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