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  2. History of hypnosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_hypnosis

    Avicenna (Ibn Sina) (980–1037), a Persian psychologist and physician, was the earliest to make a distinction between sleep and hypnosis. In The Book of Healing, which he published in 1027, he referred to hypnosis in Arabic as al-Wahm al-Amil, stating that one could create conditions in another person so that he/she accepts the reality of ...

  3. André Muller Weitzenhoffer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/André_Muller_Weitzenhoffer

    Weitzenhoffer published his first paper, "The Production of Anti-Social Acts Under Hypnosis" in the Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology for 1949, and subsequently authored over 100 journal articles, books, etc., on hypnosis. Weitzenhoffer published his first book on hypnosis, Hypnotism: An Objective Study in Suggestibility in 1953.

  4. George Estabrooks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Estabrooks

    George Hoben Estabrooks (December 16, 1895 – December 30, 1973) was a Canadian-American psychologist and an authority on hypnosis during World War II. He was a Harvard University graduate, a Rhodes Scholar, and chairman of the Department of Psychology at Colgate University. He claimed to have used hypnosis to help spies have split ...

  5. Hypnosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnosis

    Hypnosis has been used as a supplemental approach to cognitive behavioral therapy since as early as 1949. Hypnosis was defined in relation to classical conditioning; where the words of the therapist were the stimuli and the hypnosis would be the conditioned response. Some traditional cognitive behavioral therapy methods were based in classical ...

  6. Hippolyte Bernheim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hippolyte_Bernheim

    Bernheim himself increasingly turned from hypnosis to the use of suggestion in a waking state. In 1886, he adopted Hack Tuke's term 'psycho-therapeutic action' and in 1891 he used the term 'psychotherapy' in the title of book as a synonym for his suggestive therapeutics.

  7. Ambroise-Auguste Liébeault - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambroise-Auguste_Liébeault

    By contrast to the "Paris School", the main, fundamental belief of the "Nancy School" was that hypnosis was a normal phenomenon and not a consequence of a pathology analogous to hysteria. Liébeault published several books on his theories, techniques, and results in working with hypnosis.

  8. Jean-Martin Charcot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Martin_Charcot

    Jean-Martin Charcot (French: [ʒɑ̃ maʁtɛ̃ ʃaʁko]; 29 November 1825 – 16 August 1893) was a French neurologist and professor of anatomical pathology. [2] He worked on groundbreaking work about hypnosis and hysteria, in particular with his hysteria patient Louise Augustine Gleizes. [3]

  9. Hypnotic induction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnotic_induction

    James Braid in the nineteenth century saw fixing the eyes on a bright object as the key to hypnotic induction. [3]A century later, Sigmund Freud saw fixing the eyes, or listening to a monotonous sound as indirect methods of induction, as opposed to “the direct methods of influence by way of staring or stroking” [4] —all leading however to the same result, the subject's unconscious ...