Mind Control
What is theater but an exercise in mind control? Night after night, susceptible audiences succumb to the belief that a few chairs represent a car; that a brief pause indicates the passage of years; that the people onstage are actually other people, with other lives and other names. It's no surpri...
Tags: Audiences, Belief That, Chairs, Exercise, Mind Control, Mixed Signals, People, Seer
Choreographed by Mark Godden, the Royal Winnipeg Ballet’s Svengali features a mind-control master whose hypnotic powers are practically invisible in a production that’s strangely devoid of conflict
Tags: Charisma, Conflict, Hypnotic Powers, Mark Godden, Mind Control, Royal Ballet, Royal Winnipeg Ballet, Svengali
Okay, first things first, this post isnt really about hypnotism or mind control, but if youre interested to learn something with a similar effect so that you can leverage on local search, I highly suggest that you continue reading. Also, please be reminded that I will keep my case as thorough and open as possible [...] Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . Mind Control and ...
Tags: Control, Hypnotism, Journal Mind, Local Search, Mind Control, Search Engine, Seo Tools, Tools Guide
mind control Ever wondered what exactly is subconscious reprogramming? The term subconscious mind was coined by the late and famous mental scientist Pierre Janet, who after rigorous experimentation with the human mind and the nervous system, discovered that beneath the layers of critical thought functions and mental capacities of the conscious mind, lay a dormant yet powerful awareness he called the pre conscious mind. He found that there was a hidden and complex system of awareness and autom
Tags: Autom, Complex System, Conscious Mind, Critical Thought, Mental Capacities, Mind Control, Nervous System, Pierre Janet, Rigorous Experimentation, Scientist, Subconscious Mind
The 19th century French neurologist Georges Gilles de la Tourette is best known for Tourette's Syndrome, but a fascinating article in European Neurology traces his interest in the criminal uses of hypnosis. It is full of surprising facts, like that he was shot in the head by a delusional patient who believed that she had been hypnotised against her will, and that he eventually died in a Swiss asylum after developing psychosis caused by syphilis. We now know that hypnosis cannot be used
Tags: 1890s, 19th Century, Asylum, Control, France, Georges Gilles, Hypnosis, Mind Control, Neurologist, Neurology, Psychosis, Surprising Facts, Swiss