Toward a Relational Theory of Hypnosis
Douglas G. Flemons
Abstract
Despite ongoing efforts by clinicians, researchers, and theorists to resolve fundamental disagreements about what hypnosis is and how it works, a diversity of theories and approaches remains. For example, experts still disagree about whether hypnosis constitutes a special or altered state, whether hypnotizability is best conceived of as a stable trait, and whether the clinical application of hypnosis is appropriately conceptualized as hypnotherapy. Drawing on the ideas of Gregory Bateson, Daniel Siegel, and others, the author articulates a relational characterization of mind and self as a vantage from which to reexamine common assumptions about hypnosis and to reconsider several questions still animating the field.
Topics & Concepts
HypnosisPsychologyTraitField (mathematics)PsychotherapistEpistemologyCognitive psychologyPhilosophyComputer scienceMedicineAlternative medicineMathematicsProgramming languagePathologyPure mathematicsPain Management and Placebo EffectNeuroscience, Education and Cognitive FunctionAcademic and Historical Perspectives in Psychology