«NEUROHYPNOLOGY» এর সঙ্গে সম্পর্কিত ইংরেজী বই
নিম্নলিখিত গ্রন্থপঞ্জী নির্বাচনে
neurohypnology শব্দটির ব্যবহার খুঁজুন। ইংরেজী সাহিত্যে
neurohypnology শব্দের ব্যবহারের প্রসঙ্গ সম্পর্কিত বই এবং তার থেকে সংক্ষিপ্তসার।
1
Hypnosis: A Brief History
Neurohypnology. James Braid was born in Fifeshire, Scotland in 1795. He had
studied medicine at Edinburgh University and became interested in mesmerism
after seeing a performance in Manchester on November 13, 1841.
Judith Pintar, Steven Jay Lynn,
2009
I by no means wish to land neurohypnology as an universal remed , but that it is a
means, when proper y applied, of rapidly curing many diseases which resisted all
other known remedies there can be no doubt, and, being a. law of the animal ...
3
Provincial Medical and Surgical Journal
... 215; Sir James Clark on medical reform, 232 ; medical reform, 274; interment of
the dead in cities — report of the parliamentary committee, 292 ; Mesmerism and
neurohypnology, 333 ; anniversary of the Provincial Association at Exeter, 334 ...
4
Nature Cures : The History of Alternative Medicine in ...
They called their method any number of names: mesmerism, animal magnetism,
electro-biology, electrical psychology, etherology, mental electricity, neurology,
neurohypnology, pathetism, psycheism, psychodunamy, therapeutic sarcognomy
, ...
School of Medicine James C. Whorton Professor of the History of Medicine University of Washington, Seattle,
2002
5
A History of Modern Psychology
... new name and greater credibility when the physician and surgeon James
Braid (1795–1860) called the trancelike state neurohypnology, from which the
term hypnosis was eventually derived. Braid's careful work and disdain for
exaggerated ...
Duane Schultz, Sydney Schultz,
2011
6
The Case and the Canon: Anomalies, Discontinuities, ...
The term “hypnosis” and “neurohypnology” was introduced by James Braid, a
Scottish surgeon, who, after watching the performance of a theatre magnetizer,
was persuaded that there was no “collusion” between the magnetizer and the ...
Alessandra Calanchi, Gastone Castellani, Gabriella Morisco,
2011
7
Elsevier's Dictionary of Psychological Theories
Neurohypnology, or the rationale of nervous sleep considered in relation with
animal magnetism. London: Redway. Elliotson, J. (1843). Numerous cases
ofsurgical operations without pain in the mesmeric state. Philadelphia: Lea &
Blanchard.
8
Shorter Oxford Textbook of Psychiatry
Neurohypnology: or the rationale of nervous sleep, considered in relation with
animal magnetism. Churchill, London. Bramble D (2011). Psychopharmacology
in children with intellectual disability. Advances in Psychiatric Treatment, 17, 32-
40.
Philip Cowen, Paul Harrison, Tom Burns,
2012
9
Hypnosis for Behavioral Health: A Guide to Expanding Your ...
In this booklet Braid uses the terms ”neurohypnotism,” ”hypnotic,” and ”
neurohypnology,” perhaps for the first time. However, he used the term neuro-
hypnotism in the title of an unpublished report rejected by the British Association,
and likely ...
10
The Discovery of Hypnosis: The Complete Writings of James ...
He prefers the term “neurohypnology 147, or the rationale of nervous sleep,” to
that of animal magnetism, and thinks that that term is more proper, inasmuch as
the effect is produced through the medium of the nervous system. Several ...
James Braid, Donald Robertson,
2008