SamSuka
The Caretaker
The Caretaker

patreon


Mesmer - 14/feb/2025

FRANZ ANTON MESMER and ANIMAL MAGNETISM

In 1774, a young woman named Fracisca Osterlin suffered from constant vomiting and irritation of the bowels. She came to see a doctor named Franz Anton Mesmer. He fed her a solution continuing high amounts of iron, and then passed powerful magnets over her body. Osterlin said she felt her symptoms instantly vanish, and that it felt as if a current of some mysterious energy were travelling through her. 

Mesmer believed that a “Impalpable fluid” permeates the entire universe. All maladies are the result of improper circulation of this fluid. All medicine is that which regulates the flow of this impalpable fluid. This fluid is magnetic, and thus Mesmer named his new theory of medicine Animal Magnetism. 

Mesmer himself was a medieval mind trapped in an increasingly modern world. Born in 1734 in the german town of Iznang, he would study theology, and in 1776, he would publish a thesis on the influence of the planets on medicine. After his apparent success with Osterlin, he would develop a schema of medicine based on the principles of Animal Magnetism. This usually involved staring directly into his patients eyes, massaging them, waving magnetized wands over their skin, resting their feet in magnetized water, until they had a ‘crisis’ of some sort, after which the patient was declared cured. 

Mesmer was explosively popular in Vienna. In 1775 Prince Elector Max Joseph of Bavaria would invite him to observe a priest performing healing via the laying of hands as part of a larger investigation of seances and exorcisms. Mesmer concluded that the priest was sincere, but didn’t realize that he was actually conducting the cosmic fluid. 

This is how the theory of Animal Magnetism was truly born, out of a desire to rationally study phenomena like exorcisms through the lens of newly discovered phenomena like electricity and magnetism. This will be a major theme throughout the rest of history. If a new scientific phenomena is discovered, someone, somewhere will posit “What if that’s how the soul works?” Humorously, if the phenomena of faith healing works by the mechanism of Animal Magnetism, that makes Mesmer a faith healer. A contradiction that was not lost on the Viennese public. Mesmer gained a reputation as a miraculous healer, and significant public scrutiny as a charlatan, and subsequently hightailed it to Paris in 1777. 

Parisians loved him. They loved him so much that Mesmer developed several methods of group cures in which several patients at once could stick their hands in a tub of magnetized water, hug a magnetized tree, or simply hold hands while one person was “mesmerized.” He was a sensation with the rich and well-to-do of France, and Mesmer charged prices to match. At one point, the brother of Louis XVI came to his clinic for treatment. 

He was so famous that a comitte was convened to test whether or not Animal Magnetism was legit. This committee included scientific powerhouses like Antoine Lavoisier, Jean-Sylvaine Bailly, and Benjamin Franklin.

Their initial findings were paradoxical. They couldn’t prove the existence of the cosmic fluid, but they also couldn’t disprove the existence of the cosmic fluid.  People seemed to be healed, but this was attributed to some “faculty of the imagination.” Mesmer was doing something, but the nature of that something was anyone’s guess. I will also mention that Mesmer’s cures could be dubiously sexual at some times, and this absolutely came up in the report. The committee issued a challenge to Mesmer. He was the one asserting the truth of the theory of Animal Magnetism, of course, surely he could produce some experimental proof?

1784 was peak mesmer. Challenged by the committee, and unable to properly respond, he eventually fell from grace. He died in seclusion in 1815. 

Mesmer’s students would immediately pick up the torch. Armand Marie Jacques Chastenet, the Marquis de Puységur, would carry on Mesmer’s healing practices after his death. He had to stop for a bit between 1789 and 1799, but after the revolution was finished he revived the practice, calling it “Magnetic somnambulism.” 

In 1837, the Frenchman Charles Poyen travelled to the good old USA, which had even less scrutiny in regards to medical practices compared to europe. Animal Magnetism was even more popular in the states. Many words have been written as to why, but I venture there are more material reasons for the popularity of Mesmerism. Medicine in 1837 sucked, and Americans love a con artist. 

When homeopathy was invented in 1796, the vast majority of doctors in Europe were still following medieval doctrines of medicine. For all the innovations made by our dear friend Paracelsus, doctors often caused more harm than good. Homeopathy has no effect whatsoever, and was therefore often preferable to bloodletting and induced vomiting. Mesmerism benefitted from a similar relationship. It was often more popular than institutional medicine, simply because it was not making the problem worse. That said, Mesmer wouldn’t give you cocaine. 

Experimented using magnets to treat diseases, a woman named Francisca Österlin said she felt her symptoms instantly vanish, and that it felt as if a current of something were traveling through her

“In 1843, James Braid, a Scottish doctor, proposed the term “hypnosis” to define a practice inspired by magnetism, but more limited in its effects and different in its conception.” hanegraaf 78

“After its English reform, a change of terminology, a selection of phenomena deemed acceptable, and a materialistic remodeling of its phenomenology, what was formerly known as magnetism was accepted by so-called official medicine.” Hanegraaf 79

“It was in 1878 that, under Charcot’s leadership, hypnotism rocketed to success. First considered a useful tool for studying hysterics, the practice posed so many questions to psychology and medicine that it became, in the space of a decade, one of the biggest areas of research in the sciences of the mind.” Hanegraaf 79


More Creators