Hypnosis and Suggestibility: An Experimental Approach

Author(s) : Clark L. Hull

Hypnosis and Suggestibility: An Experimental Approach

Book Details

  • Publisher : Crown House Publishing
  • Published : 2002
  • Cover : Hardback
  • Pages : 436
  • Category :
    Hypnotherapy
  • Catalogue No : 36584
  • ISBN 13 : 9781899836932
  • ISBN 10 : 1899836934
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Read the book by the man who taught Milton H. Erickson MD. In 1923, Erickson was a second year undergraduate student at the University of Wisconsin where his teacher, Clark L. Hull, was researching hypnosis and behaviourism: their encounter changed Erickson's life forever.

'This book explains Hull's experimental methods, results and the scientific approach to hypnosis, which, even today, are being integrated into clinical and therapeutic research. Long out of print, this seminal classic, has helped shape the evolution of hypnosis - as the first extensive systematic investigation of hypnosis using quantitative experimental methodology. Certainly today's clinicians and researchers owe much of what they currently do to the work of Clark Hull. He was a pioneer searching for the means to make behaviourism - and a behavioural view of hypnosis - an exact science. For a book to refer to regarding experimental proof of hypnotic phenomena, Hypnosis and Suggestibility is a 'non pareil' and a classic in its field.'
- The American Journal of Psychotherapy

About the Author(s)

Clark L. Hull PhD (1884-1952) was a psychologist and experimenter. He presented lectures and seminars on hypnosis at the University of Wisconsin, then later at Yale University. Hull's work Hypnosis and Suggestibility was first published in 1933. It was the first extensive systematic investigation of hypnosis using quantitative experimental methodology. In 1936 his contribution to the field of psychology was rewarded with his election as President of the American Psychological Association. His published contributions to the science of psychology include Principles of Behavior (1940), followed by a revision of his theories in Essentials of Behavior (1943). His last work, A Behavior System, was published shortly before his death in 1952.

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