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| IV. | Hypnosis and the Influence of Charcot |
In 1885 Freud obtained a grant to visit the French neurologist Jean Charcot at the Salpêtrière hospital in Paris. Here he was to observe Charcot’s use of hypnotic suggestion to treat sufferers of nervous disorders. Fascinated by the apparent success of these treatments, Freud met and studied with several of the leading figures in the field, including Pierre Janet and Hippolyte Bernheim, whom he met in Nancy in 1889.
Charcot’s group had been tackling the problem of hysteria, a term derived from the Greek word hystera meaning “uterus“ (womb). Hysteria traditionally was seen as a condition of women and was characterized by unexplained faints, paralyses, loss of sensation, tics, and tremors. In time, Charcot came to see that men could also be so afflicted. Although the mechanism of hysteria was not understood, Charcot and his contemporaries showed that its symptoms could be cured by hypnosis.
During this period Freud returned to Vienna and in 1886 married Martha Bernays, to whom he had become engaged some four years earlier. The first of their six children was born the following year. Their family was complete with the birth of Anna in 1895, who herself would become an important psychoanalyst. In order to support his family, Freud set up in private neurological practice. In his own clinics he met many sufferers of nervous disorders where there was no apparent physical cause for the symptoms they were suffering. Cases of paralysed limbs, tics, tremors, losses of consciousness, impairment of memory, and numbness all seemed unexplained by the anatomy and physiology then studied in great depth by the medical graduates of the time. These unexplained cases were labelled as “neurotic”, meaning that they were similar to neurological conditions. In time they became known collectively as the “neuroses”.
Freud’s observation of Charcot’s use of hypnosis in the treatment of similar disorders led him to conclude that there could be powerful mental processes operating that remained hidden from conscious appreciation. He began to study and employ hypnosis in his own practice publishing his earliest psychological articles on the subject in 1892, including “A Case of Successful Treatment by Hypnotism: With Some Remarks on the Origin of Hysterical Symptoms Through ‘Counterwill’ “. He came to understand the formation of hysterical neurotic symptoms as the product of a conflict between opposing mental forces. Conscious forces representing “will” were balanced by unconscious opposing forces representing “counterwill”. He understood hypnosis to act on the side of will to subjugate the counterwill, thus obliterating the symptom. The idea of conflict proposed in this paper was to become a fundamental principle of psychoanalysis.