Sunday, July 22, 2012
Suggestion.
I hold a newspaper in my hands and begin to roll it up ;
soon I find that my friend sitting opposite me rolled up his in a similar way.
This, we say, is a case of suggestion.
My friend Mr. A. is absent-minded; he sits near the
table, thinking of some abstruse mathematical problem that baffles all his
efforts to solve it. Absorbed in the solution of that intractable problem, he
is blind and deaf to what is going on around him. His eyes are directed on the
table, but he appears not to see any of the objects there. I put two glasses of
water on the table, and at short intervals make passes in the direction of the
glasses passes which he seems not to perceive; then I resolutely stretch out my
hand, take one of the glasses, and begin to drink. My friend follows suit
dreamily he raises his hand, takes the glass, and begins to sip, awakening
fully to consciousness when a good part of the tumbler is emptied.
***
" My friend P., a man no less absent-minded than he
is keen of intellect, was playing chess in a neighbouring room. Others of us
were talking near the door. I had made the remark that it was my friend's habit
when he paid the closest attention to the game to whistle an air from Madame
Angot. I was about to accompany him by beating time on the table. But this time
he whistled something else- a march from Le Prophete.
" 'Listen,' said I to my associates ; ' we are
going to play a trick upon P. We will (mentally) order him to pass from Le
Prophete to La Fille de Madame Angot.'
" First I began to drum the march ; then, profiting
by some notes common to both, I passed quickly to the quicker and more staccato
measure of my friend's favourite air. P. on his part suddenly changed the air and
began to whistle Madame Angot. Every one burst out laughing. My friend was too
much absorbed in a check to the queen to notice anything.
" ' Let us begin again,' said I, ' and go back to
Le Prophete.' And straightway we had Meyerbeer once more with a special fugue.
My friend knew that he had whistled something, but that was all he knew."
***
A huckster stations himself in
the middle of the street, on some public square, or on a sidewalk, and begins to
pour forth volumes of gibberish intended both as a compliment to the people and
a praise of his ware. The curiosity of the passers-by is awakened. They stop.
Soon our hero forms the centre of a crowd that stupidly gazes at the "wonderful"
objects held out to its view for admiration. A few moments more, and the crowd
begins to buy the things the huckster suggests as " grand, beautiful, and
cheap."
***
A stump orator mounts a log or a
car and begins to harangue the crowd. In the grossest way he praises the great
intelligence, the brave spirit of the people, the virtue of the citizens,
glibly telling his audience that with such genius as they possess they must
clearly see that the prosperity of the country depends on the politics he
favours, on the party whose valiant champion he now is. His argumentation is
absurd, his motive is contemptible, and still, as a rule, he carries the body
of the crowd, unless another stump orator interferes and turns the stream of
sentiment in another direction. The speech of Antony in Julius Caesar is an
excellent example of suggestion.
All these examples undoubtedly belong to the province of
suggestion. Now what are their characteristic traits ?
THE PSYCHOLOGY
OF SUGGESTION
A RESEARCH INTO THE SUBCONSCIOUS NATURE OF MAN AND
SOCIETY
BY
BORIS SIDIS, M. A., PH.D.
ASSOCIATE IN PSYCHOLOGY AT THE
PATHOLOGICAL INSTITUTE OF THE NEW YORK STATE HOSPITALS
1919
Boris Sidis, Ph.D., M.D. (
1867 - 1923) was an American psychologist,
physician, psychiatrist, and philosopher of education. Sidis founded the New York State
Psychopathic Institute and the Journal of Abnormal Psychology. He was the
father of the child prodigy William James Sidis[1]
[1]. William James Sidis
( 1898 – 1944)
was an American child
prodigy with exceptional mathematical and linguistic abilities. During his
life, his IQ was estimated to be between 250 and 300, making it one of the
highest ever recorded. He entered Harvard at age 11 and, as an adult, was
claimed to be conversant in over forty languages and dialects. It was later
acknowledged, however, that some of the claims made were exaggerations.
[2] Julian Leopold Ochorowicz (also known as Julien Ochorowitz; 1850 – 1917) was a
Polish philosopher, psychologist, inventor (precursor of radio and television),
poet, publicist and leading exponent of Polish
Positivism. Ochorowicz hosted Palladino
in Warsaw from November 1893
to January 1894. Regarding the phenomena demonstrated at Palladino's séances, he concluded against
the spirit hypothesis and for a hypothesis that these phenomena were caused by
a "fluidic action" and were performed at the expense of the medium's
own powers and those of the other participants in the séances.
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