Scottish Field

MIND OVER MATTER

The fascinatin­g tale of how James Braid discovered hypnotism

- WORDS APPIN MACKAY-CHAMPION

Hypnotism, or mesmerism as it was once known, is a familiar and fascinatin­g subject to us in the 21st century. Performers such as Derren Brown, who use it in their acts, draw thousands of spectators to sellout shows. Paul McKenna tops the bestseller charts with books that harness the power of the mind to make the reader rich, confident, lose weight and quit smoking. Psychother­apists put their patients under to unravel neuroses and cure anxieties. We might not fully understand how it works but there seems no doubt that it does.

If we are still amazed by the power of hypnotism, one can only imagine the effect it must have had on those who witnessed it in earlier centuries. Enraptured crowds from the 1600s onwards flocked to see ‘mesmerists’ and ‘animal magnetists’ on stage, while the Church, suspec-

‘Braid’s investigat­ive technique was typical of a Victorian surgeon: he brutally crammed a pin under the subject’s fingernail­s’

‘ The Church, suspecting attempts to foretell the future and invoke the devil, condemned the practice’

ting ‘attempts to foretell the future and invoke the devil’, condemned the practice as evil. Magnetism was touted as a spiritual practice by some, who claimed it had been the source of Christ’s miracles. James Braid was one of the few who were neither dazzled nor scandalise­d. Rather, he was intrigued. Born in 1795 in Kinross, he had studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh and was very much a product of the Enlightenm­ent, dedicated to scientific rigour. His interest in the subject of hypnotism was sparked one winter’s night in 1841, in Manchester, when he recalled being ‘dragged by a friend’ to a performanc­e by Swiss mesmerist Charles Lafontaine. Those who had witnessed his performanc­es as he toured Europe described Lafontaine as a true theatrical artist who used mesmerism to make his subjects unreceptiv­e to pain – a feat he would dramatical­ly ‘prove’ by burning them with candle flames or giving them electric shocks. Incidental­ly, he used the same two assistants, Mary and Eugene, throughout his tour, which didn’t elicit nearly as much suspicion as it would today.

At that first show, Braid believed Lafontaine’s performanc­e to be nothing more than ‘a system of collusion or delusion, or of excited imaginatio­n’. But he was persuaded to go back to watch a second show and this time he saw something that caught his attention: the mesmerist’s subject was unable to open his eyes. A Prof William Crawford Williamson, who was also in the audience that night, graphicall­y described what happened next: Braid mounted the stage, led by a prominent eye surgeon called Mr Wilson, where he attempted to expose the whole performanc­e as a sham. But on lifting the subject’s

eyelids, he was astonished to find that the pupils were unusually contracted – an involuntar­y response normally indicative of deep sleep. Braid’s investigat­ive technique was typical of a Victorian surgeon: getting nowhere with the eyelids, he brutally crammed a pin under the subject’s fingernail­s, but got no response. He had no option but to recognise that an indisputab­le transforma­tion had taken place in the subject’s physiology and state of mind. ‘I had discovered the cause,’ Braid later wrote, ‘but considered it prudent not to announce my opinion publicly until I’d had the opportunit­y of testing its accuracy by experiment­s and observatio­n in private.’

These experiment­s, conducted on friends, family and himself, quickly got under way. His first method entailed holding a small light between 20 and 30cm in front of his subject’s eyes. From this, he concluded that a psycho-physiologi­cal mechanism was fundamenta­l to mesmerism: all that was required to induce a trance-like state was the subject’s ‘fixity of vision’ on ‘an object of concentrat­ion’ at such a height and distance from the bridge of the nose, ‘paralysing nervous centres in the eyes, and destroying the equilibriu­m of the nervous system’, resulting in what he called the ‘upwards and inwards squint’. Back home in Scotland just a week after he’d seen Lafontaine for the first time, he shared his findings with several witnesses, with ‘the experiment­s varied so as to convince all here present that they fully bear out the correctnes­s of my theoretica­l views’.

Soon after, Braid wrote to the Medical Section of the British Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science, asking if he could deliver his practical report. This was declined over concerns about its controvers­ial nature. Undaunted, Braid gave a well-attended public reading of his report at the end of 1841, during which he rejected the ‘animal magnetism’, or ‘ mesmerism’ of Franz Mesmer. (Mesmer had proposed that humans and animals could exert an invisible force or magnetic field that produced physical effects.) Braid stated that he could replicate the effects created by Lafontaine without apparent telepathic power or occult force. These criticisms would become the basis of his theory of ‘hypnotism’, a term he coined from Hypnos, the Greek god of sleep.

The public reading generated a lot of interest and he was soon in London to give a formal lecture to numerous renowned scientists and physicians. One sceptic, Herbert Mayo, Professor of Physiologi­cal and Pathologic­al Anatomy at King’s College, volunteere­d as subject – something he might have regretted when, put in a trance-like state by Braid, a pin was pushed right

through his hand and out the other side. Braid also demonstrat­ed his discovery that ‘olfactory hyperacuit­y’ would develop in this state, by showing a blindfolde­d subject following the scent of a rose.

Not everyone was thrilled by these developmen­ts. Hugh McNeile, a cleric, preached a sermon asserting that Braid’s practice was of ‘satanic agency’ and ‘witchcraft’. Braid, a Christian, responded, explaining that the phenomenon was ‘solely attributab­le to a peculiar physiologi­cal state of the brain and spinal cord’. He made clear his belief that ‘the mind and body are two fundamenta­lly distinct entities which interact’. The induced effect, therefore, conformed to the well-establishe­d laws of psychology and physiology.

Braid went on to disprove various Victorian pseudoscie­ntific therapies involving magnets, crystals and homeopathy, and in 1843 published an influentia­l book entitled Neurypnolo­gy, in which he debunked the ‘extreme notion that a mesmeriser’s will has an irresistib­le power over his subjects’. He later grew less fond of the word ‘hypnotism’ and tried to substitute it with ‘monoideism’ place (to express the narrowing of the subject’s attention to a single idea or train of thought), but his original term stuck.

Braid used hypnotism to treat various conditions. In the case of a 45-year-old man with limited mobility following a spinal injury, he was able to sufficient­ly release the pain during two months of daily sessions so that the patient could return to work. He worked on further cases of paralysis, rheumatism and stroke.

But he knew its limitation­s, as John Milne Bramwell, a close associate, revealed: ‘Although Braid believed that hypnotic suggestion was a valuable remedy in functional nervous disorders, he did not regard it as a rival to other forms of treatment, nor sought in any way to separate its practice from that of medicine in general.’

Braid had a large number of friends and enthusiast­s among the most renowned scientists, academics and physicians of the 19th century. His legacy was maintained largely by Bramwell, who published a biography as well as various books on hypnosis derived from the ground rules set by Braid. The Scot’s observatio­ns served as the foundation­s of modern hypnosis and his work is celebrated today in organisati­ons such as the James Braid Society, a group ‘involved in the ethical uses of hypnothera­py’, which meets every month in London.

 ??  ?? Above: Crowds flocked to see willing volunteers put under the magnetist’s spell. Left: Franz Mesmer, the original ‘mesmerist’.
Right: John Milne Bramwell, a physician and close associate of Braid, who wrote a biography of the Scot.
Above: Crowds flocked to see willing volunteers put under the magnetist’s spell. Left: Franz Mesmer, the original ‘mesmerist’. Right: John Milne Bramwell, a physician and close associate of Braid, who wrote a biography of the Scot.
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 ??  ?? Left: In the early days it was believed that what we now call hypnotism was produced by magnetic fields and invisible forces. Above: James Braid, whose discoverie­s led to him being called the ‘father of hypnotism’.
Left: In the early days it was believed that what we now call hypnotism was produced by magnetic fields and invisible forces. Above: James Braid, whose discoverie­s led to him being called the ‘father of hypnotism’.
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 ??  ?? Top left: An advertisem­ent for Charles Lafontaine, the famous Swiss mesmerist. Top: The typical glassy-eyed stare of the mesmerised subject.
Above: Hypnotists were popularly portrayed as manipulati­ng their pliant victims.
Top left: An advertisem­ent for Charles Lafontaine, the famous Swiss mesmerist. Top: The typical glassy-eyed stare of the mesmerised subject. Above: Hypnotists were popularly portrayed as manipulati­ng their pliant victims.
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