登陆注册
26504600000160

第160章

but he may amplify and develop it enormously as he acts it out.His spontaneity is lost only for those systems of ideas which conflict with the suggested delusion, The latter is thus 'systematized'; the rest of consciousness is shutoff, excluded, dissociated from it.In extreme cases the rest of the mind would seem to be actually abolished and the hypnotic subject to be literally a changed personality, a being in one of those 'second' states which we studied in Chapter X.But the reign of the delusion is often not as absolute as this.If the thing suggested be too intimately repugnant, the subject may strenuously resist and get nervously excited in consequence, even to the point of having an hysterical attack.The conflicting ideas slumber in the background and merely permit those in the foreground to have their way until a real emergency arises; then they assert their rights.As M.Delboeuf says, the subject surrenders himself good-naturedly to the performance, stabs with the pasteboard dagger you give him because he knows what it is, and fires off the pistol because he knows it has no ball; but for a real murder he would not be your man.It is undoubtedly true that subjects are often well aware that they are acting a part.They know that what they do is absurd.They know that the hallucination which they see, describe, and act upon, is not really there.They may laugh at themselves; and they always recognize the abnormality of their state when asked about it, and call it 'sleep.' One often notices a sort of mocking smile upon them, as if they mere playing a comedy, and they may even say on 'coming to' that they were sham- ming all the while.These facts have misled ultra-skeptical people so far as to make them doubt the genuineness of any hypnotic phenomena at all.But, save the consciousness of 'sleep,' they do not occur in the deeper conditions; and when they do occur they are only a natural consequence of the fact that the 'monoideism'

is incomplete.The background-thoughts still exist, and have the power of comment on the suggestions, but no power to inhibit their motor and associative effects.A similar condition is frequent enough in the waking state, when an impulse carries us away and our 'will' looks on wonderingly like an impotent spectator.These 'shammers' continue to sham in just the same way, every new time you hypnotize them, until at last they are forced to admit that if shamming there be, it is something very different from the free voluntary shamming of waking hours.

Real sensations may be abolished as well as false ones suggested.

Legs and breasts may be amputated, children born, teeth extracted, in short the most painful experiences undergone, with no other anæsthetic than the hypnotizer's assurance that no pain shall be felt.Similarly morbid pains may be annihilated, neuralgias, toothaches, rheumatisms cured.The sensation of hunger has thus been abolished, so that a patient took no nourishment for fourteen days.The most interesting of these suggested anæsthesias are close limited to certain objects of perception.Thus a subject may be made blind to a certain per-son and to him alone, or deaf to certain words but to no others. In this case the anæsthesia (or negative hallucination , as it has been called) is apt to become systematized.Other things related to the person to whom one has been made blind may also be shut out of consciousness.What he says is not heard, his contact is not felt, objects which he takes from his pocket are not seen, etc.Objects which he screens are seen as if he were transparent.

Facts about him are forgotten, his name is not recognized when pronounced.

Of course there is great variety in the com- pleteness of this systematic extension of the suggested anæsthesia, but one may say that some tendency to it always exists.When one of the subjects' own limbs is made ansthetic, for example, memories as well as sensations of its movements often seem to depart.An interesting degree of the phenomenon is found in the case related by M.Binet of a subject to whom it was suggested that a certain M.C.was invisible.She still saw M.C., but saw him as a stranger, having lost the memory of his name and his existence.-- Nothing is easier than to make subjects forget their own name and condition in life.It is one of the suggestions which most promptly succeed, even with quite fresh ones.A systematized amnesia of certain periods of one's life may also be suggested, the subject placed, for instance, where he was a decade ago with the intervening years obliterated from his mind.

The mental condition which accompanies these systematized anæsthesias and amnesias is a very curious one.The anæsthesia is not a genuine sensorial one, for if you make a real red cross (say) on a sheet of white paper invisible to an hypnotic subject, and yet cause him to look fixedly at a dot on the paper on or near the cross, he will, on transferring his eye to a blank sheet, see a bluish-green after-image of the cross.This proves that it has impressed his sensibility.He has felt it, but not perceived it.He had actively ignored it, refused to recognize it, as it were.Another experiment proves that he must distinguish it first in order thus to ignore it.Make a stroke on paper or blackboard, and tell the subject it is not there, and he will see nothing but the clean paper or board.Next, he not looking, surround the original stroke with other strokes exactly like it, and ask him what he sees.He will point out one by one all the new strokes slid omit the original one every time, no matter how numerous the new strokes may be, or in what order they are arranged.

Similarly, if the original single stroke to which he is blind be doubled by a prism of sixteen degrees placed before one of his eyes (both being kept open), he will say that he now sees one stroke, and point in the direction in which the image seen through the prism lies.

同类推荐
  • 劝行乐

    劝行乐

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 苇碧轩诗集

    苇碧轩诗集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说人本欲生经

    佛说人本欲生经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛藏经

    佛藏经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 归田琐记

    归田琐记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 混沌之王之烈火异兽

    混沌之王之烈火异兽

    混沌生创世,创世开天地,天地衍众生,众生向往长生而出神魔。然纵使神魔也无法彻底摆脱天地的束缚。有借众生之力参悟混沌者,世称——混沌之王!
  • 夜辰传

    夜辰传

    夏皇不在,丘室为大,苍灵为天,破土后生,万年沉寂,只为一丝新生,国仇家恨,苍天为证。破开层层云雾,终见心中答案,待看夜辰传,步步莲生。
  • 步云茴

    步云茴

    上古时期妖界至尊之首妖王遨桀因错杀人类被女娲、帝尊合力诛灭,其妻滕蛇伤心欲绝流下一滴泪珠后跳入岩浆中噬骨焚心以怨气化作凶剑名曰焚天血挽。而后殉情之泪与遨桀残血奇迹般融合为一股超出六界的神秘力量附着在一块异石里———,女娲恐日后生出祸端,用天地至纯至净至善至爱的灵气将这股力量封印,不料异石还是落到了凡间……
  • 灵魂契约之邪王太宠妃

    灵魂契约之邪王太宠妃

    你相信世界上有灵魂感知、灵魂契约、灵魂交替吗?当来自不同时代的沐筱熙和凤筱熙在梦中相遇时又会怎样?当两人共同使用灵魂感知将灵魂使者召唤出来后,签订灵魂契约最后灵魂交换后又会怎样?当两人的爱情早已悄悄降临,而契约却已到期!当往事已成回忆!当契约再次启动!她们又会做何选择?
  • 军密逮捕潜逃妻

    军密逮捕潜逃妻

    一场小市井间的混混格斗,让毫不相关的两个人莫名的被月老搭上了红线。“你竟然用了潜逃令!”一道中性的声音响起,语气中满是不可置信。“我有,我用。”另一道磁性冰冷的声音响起,简单粗暴的四个字,无端透露出主人的霸道。“你,你–”男子上前一步,低头凑近被自己强大影子遮住的人影的耳朵,声音低沉性感:“该走了,小蛮牛,你觉得我该用什么方法好好~”“处罚,你呢?”这是一个霸道冰冷闷骚的少校与一个粗鲁野蛮EQ低的蛮牛在特种部队里发生的生死厮杀。本文一切军物名纯属虚构,如有雷同,纯属巧合。
  • 东方荒神

    东方荒神

    一个在荒废的岛屿中长大的少年,生活拮据而充满危险,每天只能在废墟中刨食……一枚遗落百年的神秘纸符,拥有着世界上最顶级的设计,最逆天的功能……他与它的相遇,是上天的安排,还是命运的巧合……请看《东方荒神》,为你演绎一段热血的温情的故事……
  • 愿为一见钟情

    愿为一见钟情

    锁链,束缚我与你的每一分每一秒。但我仍爱你。是偶然也是命中注定。向少主。————妨碍我爱你的规则,就由我来扭曲。如果和你在一起会贬入十八层地狱,也在所不惜。坏人就让我来当吧。我爱你。早在我们初遇的顷刻。安枫凯。
  • 王妃改嫁:王爷请小心

    王妃改嫁:王爷请小心

    穿越醒来,即让人五花大绑!什么?!她的夫君年仅十二岁,刚去世了?面前这个冷得跟冰块一样的男人,是她夫君的哥哥?!他带她回府做什么?照顾遗孀?!天啊,照顾就照顾,管吃管住就好,他吻她做什么?!【蓬莱岛作品】(情节虚构,切勿模仿)
  • 神魔殇之魔王攻略

    神魔殇之魔王攻略

    谁的穿越有她倒霉?刚来灵界的第一天殷紫月就不小心弄坏了魔王大人的宝物,随后她就成为了整个魔族追捕的目标。三十六计走为上计,斗智斗勇,最后她还是倒霉的落到了魔王大人的手里,谁能告诉她传闻中高贵冷艳的魔王大人为什么会是这么一副痞子的样子?什么,神族让她去继承天神的位置?还要她代表正义灭了邪恶的魔王大人?不不,她只是一个路人甲而已,绝对不是什么天神的继承人,跟前任天神大人长得像又不是她的错,再说了,魔王大人的强大之处可不是她一个小小的人类能对付了得……
  • 最初的故事

    最初的故事

    (新)简历:粉白:“可是那位店员小姐说这件衣服很适合你”店员小姐...原来你们刚刚在聊这个,话说起来你们俩聊一个男孩子穿什么女装真的好吗...真的好吗。未知:“她又不知道我的真实性别他一定以为我是女孩纸所以才这样说”......【PS:三章:希望与绝望、一切的开始、短暂的和平和一小段的番外都是第一人称(前面写的不好,见谅)】