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  • Hypnosis: Trance as a Coping Mechanism

    Hypnosis by Frankel, Fred H.;

    Trance as a Coping Mechanism

    Sorozatcím: Topics in General Psychiatry;

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    A termék adatai:

    • Kiadó Springer Verlag
    • Megjelenés dátuma 1976. július 31.
    • Kötetek száma 1 pieces Book

    • ISBN 9780306309328
    • Kötéstípus Keménykötés
    • Terjedelem196 oldal
    • Méret 0x0 mm
    • Nyelv angol
    • 0

    Kategóriák

    Hosszú leírás:

    "Hypnotism," asserted Durand de Gros in 1860, "provides psychology with an experimental basis, from which point on it becomes a positive sci­ ence and takes its place in the larger sphere of animal physiology. " At the time it was written, this pronouncement was perhaps more wish than fact, but it was accurately prophetic of many of the developments in clinical psychiatry in the decades that lay ahead. Charcot was the pioneering pathfinder. With his colleagues at the Salpetriere in Paris, he employed hypnosis as an investigative tool to explore the psychology of patients with major hysteria. The discovery of the role of unconscious pathogenic ideas in the production of hysterical symptoms provided a basis for theoretical formulations that reached an apogee in the voluminous writings of Pierre Janet. For Janet, dissociation of mental functions became a central concept, and at the turn of the century, numerous clinical investigators in Europe and America were engaged in a study of its mechanisms and clinical mani­ festations. Among those early investigators was Sigmund Freud, who after a visit to Charcot's clinic, initially turned his attention to dissociative phenomena. His interest, however, was soon drawn to the nature and source of the dissociated (repressed) mental contents and away from the mechanism of dissociation itself.

    "Hypnotism," asserted Durand de Gros in 1860, "provides psychology with an experimental basis, from which point on it becomes a positive sci­ ence and takes its place in the larger sphere of animal physiology. " At the time it was written, this pronouncement was perhaps more wish than fact, but it was accurately prophetic of many of the developments in clinical psychiatry in the decades that lay ahead. Charcot was the pioneering pathfinder. With his colleagues at the Salpetriere in Paris, he employed hypnosis as an investigative tool to explore the psychology of patients with major hysteria. The discovery of the role of unconscious pathogenic ideas in the production of hysterical symptoms provided a basis for theoretical formulations that reached an apogee in the voluminous writings of Pierre Janet. For Janet, dissociation of mental functions became a central concept, and at the turn of the century, numerous clinical investigators in Europe and America were engaged in a study of its mechanisms and clinical mani­ festations. Among those early investigators was Sigmund Freud, who after a visit to Charcot's clinic, initially turned his attention to dissociative phenomena. His interest, however, was soon drawn to the nature and source of the dissociated (repressed) mental contents and away from the mechanism of dissociation itself.

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    Tartalomjegyzék:

    1 Landmarks in the History of Hypnosis: An Examination of the Concepts.- 2 Investigating the Phenomenon.- 3 Specific Theories.- 4 A Clinical Critique.- 5 Clinical Behavior and Hypnotizability: Part I.- 6 Clinical Behavior and Hypnotizability: Part II.- 7 Clinical Behavior and Hypnotizability: Part III.- 8 Hypnotizability and the Treatment of Phobic Behavior.- 9 Relationship of Phobic Behavior, Hypnotizability, and Conditioning.- 10 Therapeutic Failures.- 11 Hypnotizability and Related Physical Symptoms.- 12 Hypnotizability and Unrelated Physical Symptoms.- 13 An Unusual Trance.- 14 Summary and Conclusion.

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