| hypnotism |
the act of inducing hypnosis
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| hypnotism |
Hypnosis is a psychological state whose existence and effects are strongly debated. Some believe that it is a state under which the subject's mind becomes so suggestible that the hypnotist, the one who induces the state, can command behavior that the subject would not choose to perform in a conscious state (even behavior to be performed after the subject has left the hypnotic state, through post-hypnotic suggestion) or even behavior they would be incapable of in a conscious state, such as ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnotism
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| hypnotism |
A therapeutic technique in which the patient is placed in a trance. This places the patient in an extremely suggestive state in which false memories can be created.
Ãâó: www.religioustolerance.org/gl_h.htm
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| hypnotism |
An induced trance or sleep state. Ley Lines: Invisible lines that run between sacred objects or locations.
Ãâó: www.wrexhamparaskeptics.4t.com/definitions.htm
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| hypnotism |
"anempirical development of sleep (Myers); a peculiar state ofconsciousness, artificially induced, which liberates subconsciouspowers in the subject, puts him en rapport with thehypnotiser, makes him accept and meticulously execute any of hissuggestions, whether hypnotic or post-hypnotic, which do not conflictwith deeper instincts of self-preservation and morality, and producesstrange physiological effects as anaesthesia and the remarkablecontrol over organic processes of the body. ...
Ãâó: www.wholeagain.com/channelingglossary.html
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