Divided Consciousness: Multiple Controls in Human Thought and ActionA seminal work on the unconscious and its mechanisms. Examines the interaction between voluntary (conscious) and involuntary (unconscious) human control mechanisms in terms of dissociation of divided consciousness. Delineates a neodissociation interpretation that recognizes historical roots without requiring commitment. Presents a wide range of data on possession states, fugues, multiple personalities, amnesia, dreams, hallucinations, automatic writing, and aggressions. |
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Page 191
... pain reduction were shown in the data of Figure 19 , there may be two components to the process by which pain is reduced through suggestion . The lesser reduction , to the level of the overt pain , might possibly occur as a consequence ...
... pain reduction were shown in the data of Figure 19 , there may be two components to the process by which pain is reduced through suggestion . The lesser reduction , to the level of the overt pain , might possibly occur as a consequence ...
Page 202
... Pain Reduction Two components of pain reduction have also been recognized by McGlashan , Evans , and Orne ( 1969 ) , with the component available to both lows and highs identified by them as a placebo effect , and the second component ...
... Pain Reduction Two components of pain reduction have also been recognized by McGlashan , Evans , and Orne ( 1969 ) , with the component available to both lows and highs identified by them as a placebo effect , and the second component ...
Page 205
... pain reduction or hearing reduction following hypnot- ic induction and suggestions for analgesia or deafness are no guarantee of an experience of covert response reportable by the hidden observer method . Sec- ond , the method is ...
... pain reduction or hearing reduction following hypnot- ic induction and suggestions for analgesia or deafness are no guarantee of an experience of covert response reportable by the hidden observer method . Sec- ond , the method is ...
Contents
Movement | 115 |
The Hidden | 185 |
How the Hypnotized Person Perceives and Interprets | 204 |
Copyright | |
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active age regression amnesic anesthesia appears aspects attention automatic writing aware behavior biofeedback Bridey Murphy Chapter clinical cognitive cognitive psychology concept condition consciousness covert experience covert pain creativity depth described dissociation distortions dream earlier evidence experimental eyes F. W. H. Myers fantasy feel Fox sisters hallucination hand hearing hence hidden observer Hilgard hypnosis hypnotic analgesia hypnotic deafness hypnotic responsiveness hypnotic suggestion Hypnotic Susceptibility hypnotist hypnotized person hypnotized subject illustration imagery imagination indicated induction interpretation interviews involved Janet kind laboratory later memory method monitoring function multiple personality negative hallucinations normal NREM Orne pain reduction patient performance phenomena planchette possible posthypnotic amnesia present problems processes produced psychoanalytic psychology question reality recall relaxation reported role scores sensory simulators sleep source amnesia Stanford Profile Scales subconscious subsystems symptoms task theory therapy tion trance unconscious verbal waking words