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Science
and Health Chapter V
Animal
Magnetism Unmasked
For
out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders,
adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness,
blasphemies: these are the things which defile a
man. JESUS.
Mesmerism
or animal magnetism was first brought into notice
by Mesmer in Germany in 1775. According to the
American Cyclopaedia, he regarded this so-called
force, which he said could be exerted by one living
organism over another, as a means of alleviating
disease. His propositions were as follows: "There
exists a mutual influence between the celestial
bodies, the earth, and animated things. Animal
bodies are susceptible to the influence of this
agent, disseminating itself through the substance
of the nerves."
In
1784, the French government ordered the medical
faculty of Paris to investigate Mesmer's theory and
to report upon it. Under this order a commission
was appointed, and Benjamin Franklin was one of the
commissioners. This commission reported to the
government as follows: "In regard to the existence
and utility of animal magnetism, we have come to
the unanimous conclusions that there is no proof of
the existence of the animal magnetic fluid; that
the violent effects, which are observed in the
public practice of magnetism, are due to
manipulations, or to the excitement of the
imagination and the impressions made upon the
senses; and that there is one more fact to be
recorded in the history of the errors of the human
mind, and an important experiment upon the power of
the imagination."
In
1837, a committee of nine persons was appointed,
among whom were Roux, Bouillaud, and Cloquet, which
tested during several sessions the phenomena
exhibited by a reputed clairvoyant. Their report
stated the results as follows: "The facts which had
been promised by Monsieur Berna [the
magnetizer] as conclusive, and as adapted to
throw light on physiological and therapeutical
questions, are certainly not conclusive in favor of
the doctrine of animal magnetism, and have nothing
in common with either physiology or
therapeutics."
This
report was adopted by the Royal Academy of Medicine
in Paris.
The
author's own observations of the workings of animal
magnetism convince her that it is not a remedial
agent, and that its effects upon those who practise
it, and upon their subjects who do not resist it,
lead to moral and to physical death.
If
animal magnetism seems to alleviate or to cure
disease, this appearance is deceptive, since error
cannot remove the effects of error. Discomfort
under error is preferable to comfort. In no
instance is the effect of animal magnetism,
recently called hypnotism, other than the effect of
illusion. Any seeming benefit derived from it is
proportional to one's faith in esoteric
magic.
Animal
magnetism has no scientific foundation, for God
governs all that is real, harmonious, and eternal,
and His power is neither animal nor human. Its
basis being a belief and this belief animal, in
Science animal magnetism, mesmerism, or hypnotism
is a mere negation, possessing neither
intelligence, power, nor reality, and in sense it
is an unreal concept of the so-called mortal
mind.
There
is but one real attraction, that of Spirit. The
pointing of the needle to the pole symbolizes this
all-embracing power or the attraction of God,
divine Mind.
The
planets have no more power over man than over his
Maker, since God governs the universe; but man,
reflecting God's power, has dominion over all the
earth and its hosts.
The
mild forms of animal magnetism are disappearing,
and its aggressive features are coming to the
front. The looms of crime, hidden in the dark
recesses of mortal thought, are every hour weaving
webs more complicated and subtle. So secret are the
present methods of animal magnetism that they
ensnare the age into indolence, and produce the
very apathy on the subject which the criminal
desires. The following is an extract from the
Boston Herald: "Mesmerism is a problem not lending
itself to an easy explanation and development. It
implies the exercise of despotic control, and is
much more likely to be abused by its possessor,
than otherwise employed, for the individual or
society."
Mankind
must learn that evil is not power. Its so-called
despotism is but a phase of nothingness. Christian
Science despoils the kingdom of evil, and
pre-eminently promotes affection and virtue in
families and therefore in the community. The
Apostle Paul refers to the personification of evil
as "the god of this world," and further defines it
as dishonesty and craftiness. Sin was the Assyrian
moon-god.
The
destruction of the claims of mortal mind through
Science, by which man can escape from sin and
mortality, blesses the whole human family. As in
the beginning, however, this liberation does not
scientifically show itself in a knowledge of both
good and evil, for the latter is unreal.
On
the other hand, Mind-science is wholly separate
from any half-way impertinent knowledge, because
Mind-science is of God and demonstrates the divine
Principle, working out the purposes of good only.
The maximum of good is the infinite God and His
idea, the All-in-all. Evil is a suppositional
lie.
As
named in Christian Science, animal magnetism or
hypnotism is the specific term for error, or mortal
mind. It is the false belief that mind is in
matter, and is both evil and good; that evil is as
real as good and more powerful. This belief has not
one quality of Truth. It is either ignorant or
malicious. The malicious form of hypnotism
ultimates in moral idiocy. The truths of immortal
Mind sustain man, and they annihilate the fables of
mortal mind, whose flimsy and gaudy pretensions,
like silly moths, singe their own wings and fall
into dust.
In
reality there is no mortal mind, and
consequently no transference of mortal thought and
will-power. Life and being are of God. In Christian
Science, man can do no harm, for scientific
thoughts are true thoughts, passing from God to
man.
When
Christian Science and animal magnetism are both
comprehended, as they will be at no distant date,
it will be seen why the author of this book has
been so unjustly persecuted and belied by wolves in
sheep's clothing.
Agassiz,
the celebrated naturalist and author, has wisely
said: "Every great scientific truth goes through
three stages. First, people say it conflicts with
the Bible. Next, they say it has been discovered
before. Lastly, they say they have always believed
it."
Christian
Science goes to the bottom of mental action, and
reveals the theodicy which indicates the rightness
of all divine action, as the emanation of divine
Mind, and the consequent wrongness of the opposite
so-called action, evil, occultism,
necromancy, mesmerism, animal magnetism,
hypnotism.
The
medicine of Science is divine Mind; and dishonesty,
sensuality, falsehood, revenge, malice, are animal
propensities and by no means the mental qualities
which heal the sick. The hypnotizer employs one
error to destroy another. If he heals sickness
through a belief, and a belief originally caused
the sickness, it is a case of the greater error
overcoming the lesser. This greater error
thereafter occupies the ground, leaving the case
worse than before it was grasped by the stronger
error.
Our
courts recognize evidence to prove the motive as
well as the commission of a crime. Is it not clear
that the human mind must move the body to a wicked
act? Is not mortal mind the murderer? The hands,
without mortal mind to direct them, could not
commit a murder.
Courts
and juries judge and sentence mortals in order to
restrain crime, to prevent deeds of violence or to
punish them. To say that these tribunals have no
jurisdiction over the carnal or mortal mind, would
be to contradict precedent and to admit that the
power of human law is restricted to matter, while
mortal mind, evil, which is the real outlaw, defies
justice and is recommended to mercy. Can matter
commit a crime? Can matter be punished? Can you
separate the mentality from the body over which
courts hold jurisdiction? Mortal mind, not matter,
is the criminal in every case; and human law
rightly estimates crime, and courts reasonably pass
sentence, according to the motive.
When
our laws eventually take cognizance of mental crime
and no longer apply legal rulings wholly to
physical offences, these words of Judge Parmenter
of Boston will become historic: "I see no reason
why metaphysics is not as important to medicine as
to mechanics or mathematics."
Whoever
uses his developed mental powers like an escaped
felon to commit fresh atrocities as opportunity
occurs is never safe. God will arrest him. Divine
justice will manacle him. His sins will be
millstones about his neck, weighing him down to the
depths of ignominy and death. The aggravation of
error foretells its doom, and confirms the ancient
axiom: "Whom the gods would destroy, they first
make mad."
The
distance from ordinary medical practice to
Christian Science is full many a league in the line
of light; but to go in healing from the use of
inanimate drugs to the criminal misuse of human
will-power, is to drop from the platform of common
manhood into the very mire of iniquity, to work
against the free course of honesty and justice, and
to push vainly against the current running
heavenward.
Like
our nation, Christian Science has its Declaration
of Independence. God has endowed man with
inalienable rights, among which are
self-government, reason, and conscience. Man is
properly self-governed only when he is guided
rightly and governed by his Maker, divine Truth and
Love.
Man's
rights are invaded when the divine order is
interfered with, and the mental trespasser incurs
the divine penalty due this crime.
Let
this age, which sits in judgment on Christian
Science, sanction only such methods as are
demonstrable in Truth and known by their fruit, and
classify all others as did St. Paul in his great
epistle to the Galatians, when he wrote as follows:
"Now the works of the flesh are manifest, which are
these; Adultery, fornication, uncleanness,
lasciviousness, idolatry, witchcraft,
hatred, variance, emulations, wrath, strife,
seditions, heresies, envyings, murders,
drunkenness, revellings and such like: of the which
I tell you before, as I have also told you in time
past, that they which do such things shall not
inherit the kingdom of God. But the fruit of the
Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering,
gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance:
against such there is no law."
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