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mailing list archive - DIE SCHERE #47: Re: Franz Anton Mesmer and "animal magnetism"

DIE SCHERE #47: RE: Franz Anton Mesmer and "animal magnetism"

Mesmer, Franz Anton
 b. May 23, 1734, Iznang, Swabia [Germany]
 d. March 5, 1815, Meersburg, Swabia

German physician whose system of therapeutics, known as mesmerism, was the 
forerunner of the modern practice of hypnotism. 

Mesmer's dissertation at the University of Vienna (M.D., 1766), which borrowed 
heavily from the work of the British physician Richard Mead, suggested that the 
gravitational attraction of the planets affected human health by affecting an 
invisible fluid found in the human body and throughout nature. In 1775 Mesmer 
revised his theory of "animal gravitation" to one of "animal magnetism," wherein 
the invisible fluid in the body acted according to the laws of magnetism. 

According to Mesmer, "animal magnetism" could be activated by any magnetized 
object and manipulated by any trained person. Disease was the result of 
"obstacles" in the fluid's flow through the body, and these obstacles could be 
broken by "crises" (trance states often ending in delirium or convulsions) in 
order to restore the harmony of personal fluid flow. Mesmer devised various 
therapeutic treatments to achieve harmonious fluid flow, and in many of these 
treatments he was a forceful and rather dramatic personal participant. (See 
animal magnetism.) 

Accused by Viennese physicians of fraud, Mesmer left Austria and settled in Paris 
in 1778. There he continued to enjoy a highly lucrative practice but again 
attracted the antagonism of the medical profession, and in 1784 King Louis XVI 
appointed a commission of scientists and physicians to investigate Mesmer's 
methods; among the commission's members were the American inventor and statesman 
Benjamin Franklin and the French chemist Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier. They reported 
that Mesmer was unable to support his scientific claims, and the mesmerist 
movement thereafter declined. 

Whatever may be said about his therapeutic system, Mesmer did often achieve a 
close rapport with his patients and seems to have actually alleviated certain 
nervous disorders in them. More importantly, the further investigation of the 
trance state by his followers eventually led to the development of legitimate 
applications of hypnotism. 


Animal magnetism

A presumed intangible or mysterious force that is said to influence human beings. 
The term was applied by the German physician Franz Anton Mesmer to the hypnotism 
that he used in the treatment of patients. He believed that it was an occult 
force or invisible fluid emanating from his body and that, more generally, the 
force permeated the universe, deriving especially from the stars.

To cite this page: 
"Mesmer, Franz Anton" Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 
<http://members.eb.com/bol/topic?eu=53515&sctn=1&pm=1> 
Copyright © 1994-1999 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. 




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