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  1. Hippolyte Bernheim (17 April 1840, in Mulhouse – 2 February 1919, in Paris) was a French physician and neurologist. He is chiefly known for his theory of suggestibility in relation to hypnotism . [1]

  2. Jun 11, 2018 · BERNHEIM, HIPPOLYTE (18401919), French neurologist. Born in Alsace, he was appointed professor of internal medicine at Nancy University in 1878. In 1884 he began to devote himself to nervous and mental disease and was one of the first to concentrate systematically on the problems of psychotherapy.

  3. Joseph Delboeuf, in 1885, and Hippolyte Bernheim, in 1886, proposed an alternative solution, arguing that subjects occasionally drifted into a hypnotic state in which they were reminded of the...

  4. Oct 21, 2008 · Hippolyte Bernheim. Publication date 1903 Publisher O. Doin Collection americana Book from the collections of unknown library Language English.

  5. …techniques, drew the support of Hippolyte Bernheim, a professor of medicine at Strasbourg. Independently they had written that hypnosis involved no physical forces and no physiological processes but was a combination of psychologically mediated responses to suggestions.

  6. Sep 1, 1994 · The Nancy School, led by Hippolyte Bernheim (1840-1919), believed that hypnotic phenomena were not physiologically based as Charcot claimed, but were manifestations of the psychologic power of suggestion. Suggestion for Bernheim and his followers was not intrapsychic but interpersonal.

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  8. Hippolyte Bernheim was a French physician, neurologist, and a professor of ambulatory health care at the department of medicine in Nancy, France. Background. Hippolyte Bernheim was born on April 17, 1840, in Mulhouse, Alsace (now Grand Est), the son of Corneil Bernheim and Sara Lévy. Education.