10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «AESTHESIOGEN»
Discover the use of
aesthesiogen in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
aesthesiogen and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Hysteria, Hypnosis and Healing: The Work of J.-M. Charcot
Charcot's favorite aesthesiogen was the magnet. In his lectures he remarked
sometimes of a patient that application of a magnet had produced a transfer and
that this was hopeful, because at the Salpetriere they had found that repeated ...
Alan Robert George Owen, 1971
2
Medicine, Mind, and the Double Brain: A Study in ...
... male doctors; doctors "both divine and satanic" (Foucault 1973, 275), whose
approval and attention they at once coveted and feared. Early it had been noticed
by investigators that, using the same subject and the same aesthesiogen, ...
3
The Chambers Dictionary
[Named by Leopold Gmelin ( 1 788-1853). proh from Ejsig vinegar, and A/her
ether] Esth. (Bihle) ahhrev: (the Book of) Esther. Esth. Esthonian. Sec Estonian.
esthesia. esthesiogen. etc. US spellings of aesthesia. aesthesiogen. etc.
estimable ...
4
Concise English Dictionary
aesthesia, in US es-, es-thez'i-a. e.s-. aesthesis ns. feeling: sensitivity. — n.
aesthes'iogen something producing sensation, esp. a stimulus or suggestion
producing a sensory effect on a subject under hypnosis. — adj. aesthesiogen'ic.
5
Apropos of spelling reform
Aesculapian M w с "s Aesculapius M w с s Aesculic Z w s Aesculin D M "7 w "с s
Aesopian w с s Aesopic w с s Aesthacyte w с G Aesthematology D w с "s G
Aesthesia D w С s G Aesthesiogen w с s G Aesthesiography w с s G
Aesthesiology D ...
Frederic Sturges Allen, 1906
6
Chambers English-Hindi Dictionary
^fîRr, «ткт (тяч^г); я. aesculine ^Çf ^R (qrfîR % гг?чт è STT4Î «KTÎ) aesthesia in
U.S. es-, àesthesis ns. ^Тя^яг- чГЬ1Я|, apprfo ns. aesthesiogen НяТ^г, ^tW4V (згп
%; гтг ^); аф aestn&! siogenic ff%?t, З^тчт; aesthetic (orig.) я"к>; -n^i'ifl, wm~r^;i ...
Sureśa Avasthī, Indujā Avasthī, 1981
7
Medical Muses: Hysteria in Nineteenth-Century Paris
Charcot added electricity and magnets to Burq's metals, and he gave these
healing agents the name “aesthesiogens.” Doctors soon began to notice a
bizarre phenomenon. When an aesthesiogen had restored sensation to one part
of the ...
on which the light falls, without taking note of the side in shadow. The course of
this work has repeatedly brought us in contact with paralysis by suggestion. We
have seen that when an aesthesiogen acts upon a bilateral hallucination, the
latter ...
Alfred Binet, Charles Samson Féré, 1905
9
Putnam's Word Book: A Practical Aid in Expressing Ideas ...
Associated words: aesthesiology. sensorium, sentient, sensific, sensory,
sentiency, insentient, sensifacient, sensiferous, sensificatory, sensitive,
aesthesi0m- eter, aesthesiogen, catalepsy, anaesthesia. sensational, a.
melodramatic, emotional, ...
Louis Andrew Flemming, 1913
10
Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology: S to Z