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From Pat Deveney's database:
Practical Psychology. Barnes was one of the principal forerunners of what became the "practical psychology" trend in New Thought, which was based on the application of suggestion to the amelioration of the problems of daily life, manipulating the conscious mind and the body to influence the unconscious mind. He was the President of the
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| Harvard University; National Library of Medicine; BL; University of at Chapel Hill. | |
| Practical Psychology V1 N9 May-Jul 1902 | |
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Read from 1902, this Practical Psychology (Barnes) teaches hypnotic SUGGESTION and personal influence — how to read another's 'leading motives' and sway them, citing Braid and Charcot. It sits at the hypnotism-meets-New-Thought corner where the mesmeric tradition had become a self-help technology of influence and will. Thin holdings; the center of gravity is suggestion and personal magnetism. Generated by Claude from the periodical's digitized text; a thematic reading, not a bibliographic description. |
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| Hypnotism and Suggestion | Mesmerism and Animal Magnetism | New Thought |
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