Description:
Somogy 2007. hardcover with dusjacket, 120pp illustre !. ISBN 9782757200827. monografie, Edition bilingue francais-italien
Analyse Raisonnée des Rapports des Commissaires chargés par Le Roi de L'Examen du Magnétisme Animal. by Bonnefoy, Jean-Baptiste - 1784
by Bonnefoy, Jean-Baptiste
Analyse Raisonnée des Rapports des Commissaires chargés par Le Roi de L'Examen du Magnétisme Animal.
by Bonnefoy, Jean-Baptiste
- Used
8vo (18,7 x 11,7 cm). 98 pp. Modern marbled boards. In very good condition, last leaves slightly foxed.
A defence of mesmerism by the preeminent magnetizer of Lyon.
Franz Mesmer (1734-1815) formulated a theory of a universal magnetic fluidum ('animal magnetism') which permeated all things, including human beings. In Mesmer's view, disease is an obstruction of this fluidum and his task as a doctor was to remove this obstruction. His method became hugely popular in Europe.
Indeed, mesmerism was one of the greatest movements of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Although Mesmer was convinced that his method was purely scientific, many of his contemporaries regarded him as a charlatan.
In 1784 an appointed commission of the French Academy of Sciences investigated Mesmer's discovery. The commission, boasting such eminent members as Benjamin Franklin and Lavoisier, finally denied the existence of animal magnetism and, subsequently, it's supposed curing effect.
The present pamphlet was one of several texts written in response to the Academy's conclusion. Bonnefoy strongly defends mesmerism, "using, among other things, arguments drawn from the electrical science of the day" (Crabtree).
Caillet 1389 ("travail intéressant"); Crabtree 40; The Haskell F. Norman Library of Science and Medicine M-55; cf. Betsy van Schlun, Science and Imagination. Mesmerism, Media and the Mind (2007), pp. 27-49.
A defence of mesmerism by the preeminent magnetizer of Lyon.
Franz Mesmer (1734-1815) formulated a theory of a universal magnetic fluidum ('animal magnetism') which permeated all things, including human beings. In Mesmer's view, disease is an obstruction of this fluidum and his task as a doctor was to remove this obstruction. His method became hugely popular in Europe.
Indeed, mesmerism was one of the greatest movements of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Although Mesmer was convinced that his method was purely scientific, many of his contemporaries regarded him as a charlatan.
In 1784 an appointed commission of the French Academy of Sciences investigated Mesmer's discovery. The commission, boasting such eminent members as Benjamin Franklin and Lavoisier, finally denied the existence of animal magnetism and, subsequently, it's supposed curing effect.
The present pamphlet was one of several texts written in response to the Academy's conclusion. Bonnefoy strongly defends mesmerism, "using, among other things, arguments drawn from the electrical science of the day" (Crabtree).
Caillet 1389 ("travail intéressant"); Crabtree 40; The Haskell F. Norman Library of Science and Medicine M-55; cf. Betsy van Schlun, Science and Imagination. Mesmerism, Media and the Mind (2007), pp. 27-49.
- Bookseller Independent bookstores (NL)
- Book Condition Used
- Quantity Available 1
- Place of Publication [Lyon?]
- Date Published 1784