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778 views206 pages

Animal Magnetism PDF

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leustaquios
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Animlal

Magnetism
- Unmasked

Max Kappeler
Animal Magnetism
- U nlllasked

Max Kappeler

An analysis of the chapter


"Animal Magnetism Unmasked"
in the Christian Science textbook
Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures
by Mary Baker Eddy

Kappeler Institute Publishing


PO Box 99735, Seattle, WA 98139-0735
Translated from the original German, Tierischer
Magnetismus-entlarvt (Zurich 1974)
by Kathleen Lee

1975 Max Kappeler


2004 Kappeler Institute, second edition
All rights reserved

ISBN: 0-85241-097-2

Cover by:
Blueline Design
Seattle, WA

Kappeler Institute Publishing, USA


PO Box 99735, Seattle, WA 98139-0735
Tel: (206) 286-1617 FAX: (206) 286-1675
E-mail: [email protected]
Website: www.kappelerinstitute.org
Abbreviations
used to reference the works by and about Mary Baker Eddy

S&H Throughout this book, quotations from the Chris-


tian Science textbook, Science and Health with Key
to the Scriptures, will be noted with only a page and
line number, for example: (254:19). Quotations that
occur in this form will always be referencing the
1910 Textbook.
ColI. Course in Divinity and General Collectanea, pub-
lished by Richard F. Oakes, London, 1958 (also
known as the "blue book")
Journal The Christian Science Journal
Mis. Miscellaneous Writings
My. The First Church o/Christ, Scientist, and Miscellany
Ret. Retrospection and Introspection
Contents

Introduction .................................................................................. 1
Chapter 1: The History of Animal Magnetism ........................ 4
Franz Anton Mesmer .......................................................... 4
- Discovery of Animal Magnetism ................................. 5
- Mesmer's Work in Paris .............................................. 12
- A Short Appreciation of Mesmer's Work ................. 16
Later Development of Mesmerism ................................. 19
From Mesmerism to Christian Science ........................... 34
- Phineas Parkhurst Quimby ......................................... 35
- Mary Baker Eddy ......................................................... 38
Chapter 2: The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal
Magnetism in the Main Editions of the
Christian Science Textbook ................................................. 47
First Main Edition: Mind ................................................. 49
Second Main Edition: Spirit ............................................ 54
Third Main Edition: Soul ................................................. 60
Fourth Main Edition: Principle ....................................... 67
Fifth Main Edition: Life ................................................... 68
Sixth Main Edition: Truth ................................................ 75
Seventh Main Edition: Love ........................................... 78
General Summary ............................................................. 81
Chapter 3: Analysis of the Chapter "Animal Magnetism
Unmasked" ............................................................................ 85
Standpoint of the Chapter ................................................ 85
Biblical Scriptural Note .................................................... 89
Structure of the Chapter ................................................... 90
Mind .................................................................................... 92
Spirit .................................................................................. 100
Soul .................................................................................... 103
Principle ............................................................................ 107
Life .................................................................................... 112
Truth .................................................................................. 118
Love .................................................................................. 124
The Place Value of the Chapter "Animal Magnetism
Unmasked" in the Textbook ................................... 126
Chapter 4: The Prophet Joel's Method of Handling Animal
Magnetism ............................................................................ 135
Chapter 5: "Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves" .. 147
Need for divine laws ........................................................ 147
- Today's problems cannot be handled by yesterday's
methods ...................................................................... 147
Animal magnetism must now be handled
through laws ............................................................... 153
The law of Mind ............................................................... 156
The law of Spirit .............................................................. 162
The law of Soul ................................................................ 165
The law of Principle ........................................................ 169
The law of Life ................................................................. 172
The law of Truth ............................................................... 177
The law of Love ............................................................... 181
Chapter 6: The Science of Divine Mind as the Answer to
Animal Magnetism .............................................................. 184
Introduction

In 1958, in London, I gave a series of lectures on the


structure of the Christian Science textbook, "Science and
Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy.
These lectures included an analysis of the chapter "Ani-
mal Magnetism Unmasked" (Oct. 4 and 5), the tapes and
transcripts of which have been in constant demand ever
since. There have also been requests for the text to be made
available in book form. This is the book of that text. The
first chapter, however, has been expanded to cover those
new forms of animal magnetism with which we have to
deal today.
This book is thus meant primarily for students of Chris-
tian Science. It presupposes an acquaintance with "Science
and Health" (also referred to as "the Textbook"), as well
as some knowledge of the history of Christian Science and
the general outline of Mrs. Eddy'S life.
Experience shows that many Christian Scientists are
not only ill-informed on the subject of Dr. Franz Anton
Mesmer and animal magnetism, which he discovered, but
are also apt to form a very distorted image of both. It is
true that two centuries have elapsed since Mesmer's
discoveries, but the aftermath of mesmerism, with its magi-
cal, mythical, mystical, mental, and psychic elements, lives
on now more than ever. In bookshops nowadays one finds
shelves full of books on astrology, esoteric magic, psi and
psi cures, psychokinesis, spiritualism, reincarnation, and
many other occult subjects. Today one can truly speak of a
renaissance of occultism.

1
ANIMAL MAGNETISM UNMASKED

For a large part of the western world a materialistic


conception of science has become suspect. A reaction has
set in, with the short-cut remedy of "Back to the occult"! It
is all the more important that today the Christian Scientist
should counter this tendency to find the answer in the
occultism of the past with a new solution-namely, the
Science of Spirit. This Science is, moreover, the complete
answer to mesmerism.
Chapter 1 gives a brief account of Dr. Mesmer and his
discovery of animal magnetism, and traces the historical
development of animal magnetism from Mesmer to the
present day. It shows the progress from mesmeric magne-
tism through the magnetic trance, hypnotism, suggestion,
the exploration of the unconscious, right on to psychoso-
matics and parapsychology. Among the names in this line
of development is that of Phineas Parkhurst Quimby, with
whom Mrs. Eddy was associated for some years.
Chapter 2 looks at the various editions of the Textbook,
which appeared between 1875 and 1910, and shows that
changes were constantly being made by Mrs. Eddy in her
chapter on animal magnetism. These changes provide a
fascinating insight into how she investigated, step-by-step,
the beliefs and methods of animal magnetism and mental
malpractice, and altered her statements accordingly.
Chapter 3 analyzes the text of the chapter "Animal
Magnetism Unmasked" as it appears in the final edition of
the Textbook. The purpose of this analysis is to find its under-
lying structure and translate it into the language of the
synonymous terms for God.
Since Christian Science also acknowledges the Bible
as authority, Chapter 4 seeks to show from the book of

2
Introduction

Joel the correspondence between the Prophet's message


and that of the chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"
in the Textbook, thus establishing the fact that in both texts
the Principle for handling animal magnetism is the same.
After the symbolism of the Bible and the Textbook
have been translated into the higher symbolism of the 7
synonymous terms for God, we come in Chapter 5 to the
practical handling of animal magnetism through Christianly
scientific laws, based entirely on the new system of refer-
ence of the divine Being, as discovered by Mrs. Eddy. The
Christian Scientist is thereby given access to a method that
is both prophylactic (preventive) and therapeutic (heal-
ing), providing systematic mastery over the conscious and
unconscious claims of eviL
The final chapter goes to the root of the question of
animal magnetism. The whole complex problem can be
reduced to this common denominator: Do we think from
the basis of our finite, mortal, human mind,or do we acknowl-
edge the infinite, immortal, divine Mind as our basis-the
basis of all our deductions and actions? The former is animal
magnetism or anti-Christ, the latter is the healing, redeem-
ing Mind of Christ.

Max Kappeler
2001

3
Chapter 1

The History of Animal Magnetism

Franz Anton Mesmer (1734--1815)

Franz Anton Mesmer was born in the German village


of Iznang, near Radolfzell, on the shore of Lake Constance,
in 1734. He attended the local village school and later,
thanks to his multifaceted intellectual gifts, he was admit-
ted, in spite of his humble origin, to the Jesuit College of
Constance. From there he went to the Jesuit Theological
School in Dillingen, where he studied theology and after-
wards philosophy. From Dillingen he went to Ingoldstadt
University, where he obtained a doctorate of philosophy.
By the year 1759 he was in Vienna. There he first studied
law, but he soon turned to medicine, and became a doctor
of medicine in 1766. The title of his doctoral thesis is
significant: De planetarum influxu, to which he later added
in corpus humanum "Concerning the influence of the plan-
ets on the human body." In it he sought to prove that the
planets, particularly the sun and moon, influence our bodies
as much as they do the earth (in the ebb and flow oftides).
In 1768 Mesmer married a widow ten years older than
himself, as wealthy as she was extravagant, and with her
help he started a thriving practice in a luxurious villa on
the outskirts of Vienna. Besides medicine his interests now
included geology, physics, chemistry, mathematics, and art.
He played the cello and piano and was, up to an advanced
age, an enthusiastic performer on the glass harmonica. His

4
The History of Animal Magnetism

villa soon became a cultural center. The Mozart family


belonged to the circle of friends who gathered there; indeed,
the twelve-year-old Wolfgang Amadeus's one-act operetta
"Bastien and Bastienne" was composed specially for
Mesmer and first performed in his beautiful garden theater
in the year 1768.
Mesmer was striking in appearance, tall, and elegant.
He radiated serenity, cheerfulness, and inner composure.
A magnetic power is said to have shone from his eyes. Even
his critics always spoke of his perfect manners. His medical
practice attracted not only the higher ranks of society, but
also the lower, whom he often treated free of charge.

Discovery of Animal Magnetism


While Mesmer was still practicing orthodox medicine,
he made the acquaintance of Father Maximilian Hell (1720-
1792), the scholarly court astronomer. They had something
in common - Mesmer was experimenting, though unsuc-
cessfully, with the newly discovered electricity in the
treatment of nervous diseases, while Father Hell was manu-
facturing artificial magnets. The year 1774 marked the
turning point in Mesmer's fortunes. An English baroness,
staying at the Viennese court, was suffering from stomach
cramps and sent for Father Hell to treat her with magnets.
She had already heard in England of such illnesses being
cured by strong magnets and, remarkably, the magnets
worked. Father Hell duly reported the case to Mesmer. Now
Mesmer had for two years been treating a young woman
of 28, Franziska Oesterlin, who suffered from unusually
severe convulsions in all parts of her body, and was regarded
as incurable. Mesmer tried using the magnets and in three

5
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

weeks the patient was cured. From then on he devoted all


his energies to investigating the use of the magnetic cur-
rents in the human body for healing disease.
The novelty spread like wildfire in Austria and
throughout Europe. Patients flocked to Mesmer's salon in
droves. His villa became a clinic; his successful cures started
a huge cult.
Was the use of magnets in medicine a new discovery?
Today we know, as Mesmer could not, that the medical use
of magnets was widespread at an early date in China and
the Near East. In the West, one of the physicians to recom-
mend the use of magnets for the purpose of healing was
Paracelsus (1493-1541), who came from Einsiedeln in
Switzerland. An Englishman, William Gilbert (1540-
1603), physician to Queen Elizabeth I, was the first to write
a treatise on the therapeutic use of magnets; he even
believed that a universal principle could be formulated for
their action.
Theory. Mesmer had considerable successes in heal-
ing at home and abroad. These phenomena were objectively
verifiable and for him something quite new, but being a
scientist he could not rest until he had found an explana-
tion for them, a new theory. This he set forth in various
treatises, each time a little more modified, elaborated, cor-
rected. 1 He believed that he had discovered a completely
new natural system: The universally acting principle is
harmony; consequently illness is merely discord. The most

1 F. A. Mesmer, Dissertation on the Discovery of Animal Magne-


tism (Geneva, 1779, translated by V. R. Myers), as cited in
Mesmerism, by Doctor Mesmer, With an Introductory Mono-
graph by Gilbert Frankau (London, 1948).

6
The History of Animal Magnetism

important points of the "27 Propositions" of his theory are


as follows: A completely invisible, rarefied fluid is the con-
necting medium between the planets, the earth, and
animate bodies; also between human beings (1,2).2 This
mutual influence works according to hitherto unknown
laws (3) and results in alternate effects similar to ebb and
flow (4), which manifest themselves in the animal body
through properties similar to those of the magnet (9). The
property of the animal body that makes it susceptible to
this influence is termed animal magnetism (10). Every per-
son possesses a varying amount of animal magnetism. This
may be communicated to other animate and inanimate
bodies. It may be strengthened and propagated (11, 12),
stored up, concentrated, and transported (17). This principle
can cure nervous disorders directly and other disorders
indirectly (23). Through this method the "universal utility
of the principle" is demonstrated (25), and "the art of heal-
ing will thus reach its final stage of perfection" (27). Mesmer
was convinced that in animal magnetism he had discovered
no less than the perfect system of healing.
At first Mesmer treated his patients with magnets, but
he soon observed that he could get the same effects with-
out using mineral magnets at all. He saw in the person of
the magnetist the means of gathering and communicating
the magnetic forces for which one only had to become a
"conductor" in order to restore harmony. He named this
magnetism animal magnetism as distinct from mineral
magnetism. Though he turned aside from visible material

2 The numbers in parentheses refer to the "Proposition" number


from Mesmer's Dissertation (see footnote #1).

7
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

magnets toward invisible animal magnetism, he made no


progress from the material standpoint to the spiritual, let
alone to the divine. Until the end of his life, Mesmer believed
in a material, magnetic fluid, which was so rarefied as to be
totally invisible.
Therapy. How could animal magnetism be used for the
purpose of healing? Mesmer's thesis was this: As human
beings are formed from the same substance as the rest of
the universe, they are subject to the "forces" that fill all
space-an all-magnetic, universal current he called "all
magnetism." The organism receives from these forces,
through the nervous system, influences that produce alter-
nate effects (ebb and flow) in the human body and soul.
Magnetism is thus the link between the forces of nature
and the human frame. Health is maintained when the mag-
netic currents in the body flow harmoniously. If, however,
the regular distribution of the fluid in the body is inter-
fered with by unnatural stoppages, then the harmony is
disturbed and maladies ensue. Nature seeks to overcome
these disturbances in the body by means of the crisis. It is
the task of the magnetic doctor, therefore, to help promote
these crises, which must be fully effective if the ailment is
not to become chronic. Through the correct control of ani-
mal magnetism the mesmerist can restore harmony, and
the patient is healed.
At the onset of these crises patients would feel alter-
nately cold and hot currents passing through their bodies;
they would perspire profusely, suffer violent attacks of
pain, agitations, convulsions, and fainting fits. Often they
fell into a deep sleep or mesmeric trance. For Mesmer
these crises were not evil but, on the contrary, good

8
The History of Animal Magnetism

omens. The preparatory stage of a cure consisted precisely


in inducing crises in the diseased organism to stimulate and
assist nature's own healing method. These crises gradually
subsided, finally disappearing altogether; the patient was
then healed.
How is the power of animal magnetism communicated
from the magnetizer to the patient? Mesmer practiced
many different methods, such as making passes over the
diseased part of the body with the hand or with a magne-
tized glass or iron rod, by merely fixing the subject's gaze,
or by using willpower. Water proved to be a particularly
good conductor of magnetism. Through these magnetic
currents, vital power was directed to the required part of
the body and at the same time the pernicious influences
were extracted. Mesmer himself possessed a high degree
of "personal magnetism," an impressive mixture of charm
and authority.
Soon, however, Mesmer noticed that patients could
only be healed if they cooperated with the magnetist. He
discovered in this way the paramount necessity for rapport
between physician and patient in the successful treatment
of disease.
Mesmer's patrons are supposed to have been mainly
women, hysterics, or hypersensitive people-patients with
some kind of psychoneurosis. But only too often patients
who had seemed "cured" suffered a relapse as soon as they
were no longer under his care, that is to say, under his
influence. Mesmer realized that healthy people, on the
other hand, do not feel the influence of magnets or animal
magnetism. For this he gave the simple explanation that

9
ANIMAL MAGNETISM- UNMASKED

such people are, in fact, already in harmony with the "all-


magnetic" forces of nature.
All the elements that Mesmer combined to form a
system are summed up in the maxim: There is only one
illness and one healing. He maintained that medicine as
such had never cured a patient. Any apparent success in
healing was due to animal magnetism, even though the
physician was ignorant of its action.
Mesmer's tendency to explain animal magnetism as a
natural science was particularly important because the
exorcist Johann Joseph Gassner (1727-1779) was, at that
time, attracting a good deal of attention in Switzerland and
Germany with his successful cures. Gassner, who carne from
Austria, was a Catholic priest at KlOsterle, in Switzerland.
While celebrating mass, preaching, or hearing confession,
he became prone to increasingly frequent and violent pains
in his head and various other disorders, which led him to
suppose that he was possessed by the devil. He tried to
free himself by exorcism and prayer, and his torments did
in fact gradually decrease. He then began to use exorcism
to help the sick in his diocese, and indeed so successfully
that his fame spread quickly throughout all the German
regions. He performed in the presence of Catholic and
Protestant ecclesiastics, doctors, and noblemen of every
rank, who were equally divided between skepticism and
credulity. His teaching and his cures were recorded by a
notary. Even now he is regarded in the history of psychia-
try as the most famous healer of all time. Gassner, however,
was only prepared to heal those whose illnesses he consid-
ered to be the work of the devil; others he referred to the
doctors. Calling upon the name of the Lord, "In the name of

10
The History of Animal Magnetism

God, the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost," he contended
against the claims of hell, and commanded the devil to come
out from the soul and body.
Mesmer regarded Gassner as "a man of good faith
but excessive zeal." He did not attribute Gassner's miracle
cures to divine power, but regarded him as "nothing but a
tool of Nature" -as a mesmerist who, without knowing it,
healed by animal magnetism. To prove this, Mesmer dem-
onstrated his own healing methods at the invitation and in
the presence of the Elector of Bavaria at the Bavarian
Academy of Sciences, and performed cures as striking as
those of Gassner. This suggested that Gassner's healings
were not performed through the supernatural agency of
either God or the devil. Both the Catholic and Protestant
authorities were only too ready to concur, and exorcism
was forbidden forthwith. Mesmer was made a member of
the Academy.
All this encouraged Mesmer in his efforts to obtain
academic recognition for his discovery of animal magne-
tism, especially as on his return to Vienna crowds of patients
were flocking to him. But his plans misfired. Unfortunately,
he took on a certain case that was soon to become notori-
ous. There was, in Vienna, a well-known young singer and
pianist, a girl of 18, called Maria Theresa Paradis. Being
blind from the age of three, she received a pension from
her patroness, the Empress Maria Theresa. The court physi-
cians were unable to help her, but Mesmer restored her
sight. This attracted the antagonism of the physicians, and
earned little gratitude from the girl's father, who feared that
his daughter might lose her pension and fame, for as a sighted
pianist she was not particularly talented. A campaign was

11
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

mounted against Mesmer, which set all Vienna in an uproar.


Against the will of the patient herself, she was removed from
Mesmer's care. This brought on her fits again, and she
relapsed into her previous blind state. The Empress there-
upon appointed a Commission (1777), which was indeed
thoroughly prejudiced, to investigate the case. As was to
be expected, the Commission's verdict was unfavorable,
and Mesmer was ordered to "put an end to the imposture."
This bitter disappointment gave way to deep depression.
He was assailed by doubts as to whether he really had
discovered in animal magnetism the perfect system of heal-
ing. For months he took long walks in the woods around
Vienna, before finally deciding upon a new plan: His great
discovery should be made known to the world at large, and
the center of the world was Paris.

Mesmer's Work in Paris


Mesmer arrived in Paris in 1778. He was already well
known there, the fame of his earlier successes having pre-
ceded him. Although his debut was necessarily modest,
a great triumph lay not far ahead, and soon mesmerism
became the craze of Paris. This was largely due to the condi-
tions that prevailed in Europe at the time. Paris was in a
state of ferment. The Age of Enlightenment had a weak-
ened faith in religion and opened up the way for new ideas,
but science had not yet provided a reliable alternative. In
this period of transition, shortly before the French Revo-
lution, people were inclined toward mass hysteria and a
craving for ever new intellectual distractions.
The throng of patients soon became too great for
Mesmer to be able to treat each one separately. His patrons

12
The History of Animal Magnetism

included the most distinguished members of French soci-


ety. We learn from the letter of an English doctor, who
visited Mesmer in 1784, that there were never fewer than
200 patients being treated in his clinic at once. He was
forced to change to mass treatment-"group therapy"! For
this purpose he devised the famous baquet, a large vat filled
with water, with iron filings and broken glass in the bottom.
Gripping iron bars that projected from this vat, patients
became magnetized, lulled by soft music. When the crisis
set in, they could retire to a "crisis room" where, in the
safety of soft upholstery and cushions, they could work
themselves into a frenzy, screaming and shrieking, weep-
ing and sighing, until the crisis subsided and the illness
gradually abated.
It is not surprising that, in keeping with the spirit of
the time, it was mainly people suffering from nervous disor-
ders, neuroses, and hysteria, who instinctively sought out
Mesmer's clinic in order to find psychic release in the emo-
tionally charged, mysterious "baquets" and the entrancing
"chambres des crises." At that time, hysteria was far more
prevalent than it is today, and for ladies of rank it was quite
in "good form" to fall into a swoon on every suitable, and
unsuitable, occasion. In this way they worked off their neu-
roses, so fashionable in the second half of the 18th century.
The French had a special expression for such crises - they
called them "les vapeurs." But only a minority, after all, of
the sick in Paris were suffering from neuroses. The major-
ity were not, and these Mesmer scarcely ever set eyes on.
Mesmer took on students, mostly recruited from the
medical profession. These soon branched off and opened
salons of their own, with baquets. The medical faculty were

13
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

little pleased, and when one of their professors, Charles


d'Eslon, joined Mesmer's cause, there was a heated alter-
cation. For the sake of appearances, d'Eslon was allowed
to defend magnetism before a special meeting of the fac-
ulty. At this meeting Mesmer's entire doctrine was
repudiated en bloc. D'Eslon was threatened with expul-
sion from the faculty unless he renounced animal
magnetism. But how could mesmerism possibly be repudi-
ated without consulting its discoverer and leader? Mesmer
was outraged. He threatened to leave Paris. Once again,
his patients were in a panic. Marie-Antoinette, one of the
Empress Maria Theresa's 16 children, begged him, as a
fellow countryman, to stay in Paris. The self-willed Mesmer
refused to stay and left for Spa, in present-day Belgium.
But shortly he returned to Paris and founded the "Society
of Harmony," a kind of secret society, which soon had
branches all over France and even penetrated as far as San
Domingo (later known as Haiti).
In this confusion of activity and dispute, Mesmer's
fortunes suffered another serious setback from which he
never really recovered. One day in 1784, he was invited to
a concert and was dismayed to find that the pianist was his
former pupil, Maria Theresa Paradis, now totally blind.
The Establishment, at this point, wished to clear up
once and for all the question of mesmerism. They appointed
no fewer than three commissions: one consisting of five
members of the Academy of Sciences; a second consisting
of four members of the medical faculty; and a third consist-
ing of five members of the Royal Society of Medicine. But,
as before, the commissioners investigated not Mesmer but
d'Eslon. The extremely distinguished and highly skeptical

14
The History of Animal Magnetism

commissioners were indeed obliged to admit that nothing


could be more astonishing than the spectacle of the mes-
meric convulsions. Anyone first seeing the convulsions
could have no notion what they meant, yet could not help
but acknowledge the presence of some great power moving
and controlling the patients. On the other hand, one could
not acknowledge the existence of a magnetic fluid or any
specific force passing from the mesmerist because these
were not physically verifiable. Where nothing could be seen,
nothing could be there.
The commissioners made out the cause of convulsions
to be very simple: They were relegated to the sphere of the
patients' imagination, without investigating what imagina-
tion and its many possible phenomena might be. Today,
this conclusion appears especially unscholarly, as progress
in any science depends precisely on investigating ascer-
tained anomalies by means of a new thought-model and
finding a scientific interpretation for inexplicable phenom-
ena. Mesmer protested against the commissioners' method
of procedure. He proposed a strictly scientific inquiry,
under proper supervision, in which 24 patients treated by
his method should be set against an equal number of patients
treated by the orthodox methods of the time. His proposal
was declined.
Even before the outbreak of the French Revolution,
Mesmer again left Paris, in virtual disgrace. He traveled aim-
lessly from one country to another-England, Italy,
Germany. He stayed longer in Switzerland, and then returned
to Lake Constance to end his days at Meersburg (Germany),
not far from his old home. But before his death in 1815, he
was gratified to see that people were at least beginning to

15
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

take him seriously. Certain German doctors and profes-


sors, concerned to find out the truth about mesmerism,
thought the matter important enough to send their autho-
rized representative to see Mesmer. This was Prof Karl
Christian Wal/art (1778-1832), from the University of Ber-
lin, who visited Mesmer in the year 1812, and was soon to
be totally won over to animal magnetism. He published
Mesmer's book "Mesmerism or the System of Reciprocal
Action," in two volumes, which provides a complete sum-
mary of Mesmer's theory and practice of animal magnetism,
thus preserving it for posterity.

A Short Appreciation of Mesmer's Work


Since Mesmer's death, posterity has still not come to
terms with him. The phenomena that he discovered could
not be denied out of hand, not even by the medical profes-
sion. But it was not enough for Mesmer to have merely
discovered and practiced animal magnetism; he wanted to
see the principle behind it, the system and the laws of his
science, generally recognized as the perfect principle of
healing. Can anyone be blamed, however, for not correctly
interpreting the paranormal phenomena of his time?
Caught in the spirit of the period in which he lived, which
expected every kind of miracle from the newly discovered
natural forces-electricity, steam-power, and galvanism-
Mesmer's thought-model was trapped within pure
mechanistic materialism. He could not imagine anything
but a materially constituted fluid. Mesmer's tragedy was
that he remained ignorant all his life of his exceptional
powers as a psychotherapist, and it never occurred to him
to attribute the phenomena he observed to his own

16
The History of Animal Magnetism

psycho-genic abilities. But equally, the academic scientists


of that time missed their opportunity of looking more deeply
into the undeniable mesmeric phenomena and the so-called
"imagination." It was several generations before scientific re-
search was directed toward the psyche and the
unconscious - or indeed, the superconscious.
Mesmer has often been compared with Columbus:
Both discovered new worlds, both remained mistaken for
the rest of their lives about the true nature of their discov-
eries, and both died thoroughly disillusioned men.
Mesmer's theory was certainly false. But if that had
been all there was to him, he would long since have been
consigned to oblivion. Here we have an obvious example
of what the history of science so often has to record: that
great scientific discoveries and developments begin all too
frequently with completely false hypotheses. But they do
begin. And this is the important thing: The way then leads
from trial by error until it arrives at the truth. It is the long
road of reason and logic, in contrast to the spontaneity of
true intuition and revelation.
The prejudiced and the ignorant sought to write
Mesmer off as a charlatan. But his whole character belied
such an assessment- his whole intellectual make-up, which
earnestly sought scientific discussion and, of course, scien-
tific recognition. Had he been a charlatan, so many great
thinkers during his lifetime, and after his death, would not
have taken him so seriously. Besides numerous famous
doctors and natural scientists of the 19th century, the great
philosophers and writers also argued his theories with him
(Lavater, Kant, Fichte, Hegel, Schleiermacher, L. Oken,
Schelling, Schopenhauer, as well as Goethe, Schiller, and

17
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Kleist). The 20 th century was more than ever interested in


"Dr. Mesmer." This is clear from the fact that new biogra-
phies and lengthy treatises appeared on the subject of
Mesmer and animal magnetism. From the modern point
of view, Mesmer's contribution lies in the new impetus he
gave to the subject of thought, which led, after many gen-
erations, to new insights that he himself could not foresee.
The fate of a pioneer!
To explain the phenomena of animal magnetism a new
frame of reference has to be found, one that breaks through
and enlarges the purely materialistic, mechanistic concep-
tion of the universe. As Thomas Kuhn points out in his book
"The Structure of Scientific Revolutions" (Chicago, 1970),
it needs "outsiders," thinkers beyond the pale of accepted
science, to establish a new paradigm. Freed from Mesmer's
rigid adherence to his physical fluid theory, his disciples
and followers developed in all directions. Over many gen-
erations the "wheat" of a better scientific interpretation
has been slowly separated from the "chaff" of speculation.
The many-sided developments have led to the most diverse
frontiers of medicine. Today, specialists regard Mesmer as
the "father of modern psychotherapy." Biogenesists are
doing research into the effects of magnetic fields and the
"laying on of hands" on the action of enzymes. Historians
of psychiatry show that Mesmer's teachings contain the
seed of various fundamental modern psychiatric theories
and that posterity has not given him sufficient credit. They
regard Mesmer's clash with Gassner in 1775 as the birth of
dynamic psychiatry. Gassner, as the last great exorcist,
embodied the forces of tradition. In the name of religion
he mastered an age-old technique of casting out devils and

18
The History of Animal Magnetism

diseases, as originally practiced by primitive peoples.


Mesmer, a son of the Enlightenment, who gave reason
primacy over ignorance and superstition, served as a tool
of the scientific revolution that was to see a breakthrough
into those realms of the psyche and the unconscious that
had so far eluded scientific analysis.
It seems strangely tragic that nearly 200 years were to
elapse between the discovery of mesmerism - or hypnotism-
and its official recognition in 1955 by the British Medical
Association and other scientific bodies, before the motto
that Mesmer had put at the head of his dissertation could be
fulfilled: "Much will appear again, that has been long bur-
ied, and much will be forgotten, that is now held in esteem."

Later Developments of Mesmerism

In the year of Mesmer's death, Czar Alexander I


appointed a committee of investigation to look into the
question of animal magnetism. The fact that this commit-
tee came to a positive verdict greatly furthered the cause
of mesmerism.
In Germany, animal magnetism soon found its way
into the universities. Chairs were set up at Berlin, Bonn,
Halle, Giessen, and lena. The Scientific Society of Berlin
did not miss the opportunity of honoring Mesmer by erect-
ing a triangular memorial stone on his grave.
The most vital new mental stimulus, however, came
from scientists unrecognized by the academicians. One of
these was Armand-Maria-Jacques de Chastenet, Marquis
de Puysegur (1751-1825), a disciple of Mesmer, who in his
master's lifetime had stumbled upon a new phenomenon.

19
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

In the year 1784 he noticed, while magnetizing a certain


Victor Race, that the patient fell asleep without experi-
encing the mesmeric crisis. In this unusual state of sleep he
answered questions, changed the subject at the will of the
Marquis, and obeyed his commands. Artificially induced
somnambulism (a trance, a form of sleepwalking)-called
"magnetic sleep," and later "hypnosis" - had been discov-
ered. There was now no further use for baquets, crises, and
crisis rooms. The technique of mesmerization was simpli-
fied and became available at once to a greater number of
magnetizers, poor as well as rich. Thus, in the hands of
Puysegur, animal magnetism became hypnosis.
The somnambulist sees and hears better than a per-
son fully awake. He obeys the mesmerist's will, can read
thoughts, and is clairvoyant. He can detect internal mala-
dies in himself and others; he can also diagnose them and
prescribe suitable therapeutic remedies. He can speak
articulately and has the gift of precognition (the ability to
foretell future events). Being restored to his normal con-
dition, he remembers nothing. It was now clear that what
produced the healing was not Mesmer's theoretical "physi-
cal fluid" but the will of the mesmerist. A new regime had
been ushered in, namely faith in will-power and the power
of thought. Puysegur's doctrine was, "Believe and want"
("Croyez et veuillez"): "I believe that I have the power to
set into action the vital principle of my fellowmen; I want
to make use of it; this is all my science and all my means."3

3 A. M. 1. Chastenet de Puysegur, Du magnetisme animal, Paris


1807.

20
The History of Animal Magnetism

Mesmer himself, who knew about somnambulism,


regarded it as something quite apart from animal magne-
tism. He was not prepared to change his opinion on the
subject because he saw in it a dangerous phenomenon that
could be exploited by charlatans. Later, this was indeed
the case, as can be seen from the holding of public exhibi-
tions for private gain. The highly esteemed Joseph-
Philippe-Fram;ois Deleuze (1753-1835), who became an
expert in Puysegur's method of hypnosis, but who also
feared moral abuses through its misuse, warned that a
mesmerist, "when employing somnambulism, must have an
active will for good, a firm belief in ... the power of good,
and perfect confidence."4
The question naturally followed - although its practi-
cal significance was not seen for about another 100
years-as to whether severe mental illnesses were really
abnormal somnambular conditions and whether magne-
tism could, therefore, be used in mental hospitals. For the
French, being disciples of the Enlightenment, the main
function of hypnosis was as a therapeutic remedy in the
practice of medicine, while for the German Romantics it
produced quite a different reaction. They hoped to find in
the clairvoyant possibilities of somnambulism a means of
aiding the human mind to get in touch with the cosmic
spirit, the so-called World Soul. Today, it would be called
"expansion of consciousness."
Meanwhile, in about 1813, there came to Paris from
Goa a Portuguese-Indian abbot named Jose Custodio de

4 J. P. F. Deleuze, Histoire critique du magnt!tisme animal, Paris


1810.

21
ANIMAL MAGNETISM- UNMASKED

Faria (1756-1819), who gave public demonstrations of the


clairvoyant trance. Unlike Puysegur, he maintained that
the magnetization process belonged essentially not to the
magnetizer but to the magnetized patient, and that certain
people were more susceptible to magnetization than others.
Faria demonstrated this by ordering subjects to fix their
gaze on his raised hand. Upon the command, "Sleep!" the
subjects fell into a magnetic sleep.
Somnambulism thus revived interest in animal magne-
tism and won the favor of leading physicians. In 1825, Dr.
Pierre Foissac, of the Academy of Medicine in Paris, called
upon academicians to make animal magnetism once again
the object of their serious inquiry. The request was com-
plied with, and a commission of nine was appointed without,
as it turned out, any sense of urgency. Not until six years
later, in 1831, did Henri-Marie Husson produce his report:
that in certain cases the effects of animal magnetism were
nil; in other cases they were due to the influence of the
imagination, to the monotonous stroking movements, or
to boredom; on the other hand, the fact of somnambulism
was genuine beyond all doubt. He concluded by calling
upon the Academy to encourage further investigation into
animal magnetism. This last request was distinctly embar-
rassing, and the suggestion was passed over in silence.
Soon after this, the idea was conceived of using som-
nambulism to prevent pain during surgical operations.
In 1836, Dr. Jean- Victor Oudet (1788-1868) successfully
carried out a painless operation on the tooth of a
somnambulized patient. In the 1840s, the English surgeon
James Esdaile (1808-1859) performed 345 painless opera-

22
The History of Animal Magnetism

tions in Calcutta, although it is true his methods were far


more effective in India than in England.
As Oudet was a member of the French Academy of
Medicine, there followed a stormy meeting and the subse-
quent appointment of yet another commission in 1837. But
the members were prejudiced against animal magnetism,
and its results, based on the work of the mesmerist Dider
Jules Berna, were equally negative. The Academy decided
to have nothing more to do with animal magnetism. The
scene was certainly to change very much later on!
A further development was meanwhile under way in
England. James Braid (1795-1860), a Manchester surgeon
who practiced animal magnetism extensively, was using a
method similar to that of Faria. He fixed the patient's gaze
on some object (usually a shiny, round object) until the
patient fell into a "magnetic sleep." Braid renamed this
condition hypnosis (Gr. hypnos = sleep), a term that was
acceptable to the academics, and published his "Neur-
hypnology" in 1843. With his theory of neuro-physiological
hypnosis the fluid doctrine was finally laid to rest. The real
cause of hypnotic effects remained a mystery, but academic
science could no longer dismiss the hypnotic trance as
"humbug." Many of those whom Braid hypnotized were
healed. But after the discovery of the anaesthetizing action
of ether by William T. G. Morton in Boston in 1846, and its
immediate promotion by Professor H. Jacob Bigelow of
Harvard University, and then of the more powerful anaes-
thetic agent chloroform by James Young Simpson,
Professor of Midwifery at the University of Edinburgh in
1847, hypnosis was rapidly replaced by chemical narcotics
for surgical operations.

23
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Could hypnosis be put to medical use? The Medical


Schools were strenuously opposed to it. But an outsider,
Auguste Ambroise Liebeault (1823-1904), a country doc-
tor in Nancy, was highly successful with his own brand of
mesmerism. Together with Bernheim, who later became
his disciple, Liebeault founded the school at Nancy in
1860, and there he demonstrated that "hypnotic sleep"
was almost identical with natural sleep, the only difference
being that the first was mediated through suggestion, with
the patient concentrating on the idea of "sleep." The patient
had to fix his gaze on the eyes of the doctor, who kept on
repeating the suggestion that he was growing more sleepy.
As soon as the patient fell into a light trance, Liebeault
assured him that all symptoms of his disease had left him.
Prof. Hippolyte Bernheim (1840-1919) was so convinced
by the suggestion method that he introduced it into his
clinic at Strasbourg University. He had the greatest suc-
cess with passive patients, who were used to doing what
they were told. On the publication of his book" De la Sugges-
tion" in 1884, he became the acknowledged leader of the
Medical School at Nancy. He held that hypnosis worked
through suggestion and that everyone possessed suggest-
ibility to a greater or lesser degree. Bernheim used it himself
in the treatment of various organic diseases. Yet he made
less and less use of suggestive hypnosis because he soon
observed that he could achieve the same effects by sugges-
tion when the patient was fully awake-a method that the
Nancy School, from 1891 on, termed psychotherapeutics.
Whereas with Liebeault and Bernheim successful
hypnosis required a hypnotist (mesmerist or suggestionist),
one of his disciples, Emile Coue (1857-1926), a pharmacist,

24
The History of Animal Magnetism

discovered that every patient could arouse and produce in


himself the necessary response through auto-suggestion,
without the assistance of another person. Coue had remark-
able success as a healer. Popular coueism had as its motto:
"Every day and in every way I am getting better and better."
This made it possible for everyone-without calling in a
doctor, simply through auto-suggestion-to mobilize his
best mental energies for the purpose of overcoming the
opposite suggestions of sickness and to heal himself.
Also at that time Dr. lohannes Heinrich Schultz (1884-
1970) was developing the now internationally known
method of autogenous training. His standard work appeared
in 1932. In contrast to the previous practice of hypnotism,
autogenous training rejected the mediation of the human
will and, instead, required the patient to concentrate on
relaxation from all tension. Being a form of therapeutic
hypnosis by which the patient heals himself, this method
of auto-suggestion works toward a change of consciousness
in the patient, penetrating deep into the different levels of
consciousness to deal with false suppositions at each level.
Autogenous training aims at a kind of hyper-alertness.
Let us return however to Nancy, which in the 1880s
clashed with another school, the Charcot at the Salpetriere
in Paris. lean-Martin Charcot (1835-1893) was known as
the foremost neurologist of his time, or the "Napoleon of
neuroses." His special study was hysteria, and he did not
turn his interest to hypnotism until fairly late in his career,
in 1878. He chose for his investigations some of the most
suitably hysterical patients out of the four or five thou-
sand inmates of the vast labyrinths of the old Salpetriere.
He came to the conclusion that hypnosis was a diseased

25
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

condition, peculiar to hysterics. Charcot's experiments with


a handful of test cases who were natural mediums became
the talk of Paris. Here everyone (including Freud) could see
with his own eyes how Charcot could, through hypnosis,
both induce a paralytic state in well-selected subjects and
also remove it. In 1882, he laid the results of his research
into hypnotism before the Academy of Sciences in Paris,
which had-as we have seen-already turned down hyp-
notism, under the name of animal magnetism, three times
within a century. This time it was recognized; hypnotism
came into favor, and Charcot won enormous prestige. Was
it justified? In the same year that Bernheim published his
book on "suggestion," (De La Suggestion, 1884) he mounted
a fierce attack against Charcot's theory of the "hysterical
crisis" ("la grande hysterie"), and accused Charcot of artifi-
cially contrived deception. Eventually Charcot had to
capitulate to the School of Nancy. After this his luck
changed, and at the end of his life he resorted to faith heal-
ing. He came to believe that a wider knowledge of the laws
of faith healing would lead to a great advance in therapeu-
tics. In 1893, the year of his death, he wrote an article on
"The Faith Which Heals" ("La Foi qui guerit").
The observation that often long forgotten details
surfaced with surprising accuracy in the minds of hypno-
tized people led to the scientific investigation of the
unconscious. From the pen of CarL Gustav Carus (1789-
1869), a well-known doctor, painter, and philosopher, there
appeared a book with the title "Psyche." In it, he dealt with
the unconscious as the realm of magic, the "night side" of
the soul. Shortly after this, in 1868, Eduard von Hartmann
(1842-1906) published his famous work "Philosophy of the

26
The History of Animal Magnetism

Unconscious." To these must be added the name of


Schopenhauer, the German philosopher, who opened the
eyes of philosophy to the dark depths that lie beneath the
surface of consciousness. It was he who paved the way for
a philosophy and psychology of the unconscious.
Toward the end of the 19 th century, the subject of the
unconscious was attracting more and more interest. In the
United States, Thomas Jay Hudson, as early as 1893, for-
mulated his hypothesis that the human mind is of two kinds,
one open to inductive reasoning, the other completely
closed to it. s At the turn of the century, it was becoming
increasingly clear that a distinction must be made between
the conscious and unconscious elements of the human
mind. So began the great adventure of exploring scientifi-
cally the vast regions of the unconscious. Within a
generation, four of the "great names" were making their
special contributions to this new field of knowledge-Janet,
Freud, Adler, and Jung.
Pierre Janet (1859-1947), Professor of Philosophy in
Paris and long interested in psychology, took up the study
of medicine. His investigation was directed mainly toward
psychopa ths under the influence of hypnosis. It was he who
first developed the method of psychological analysis, the
object of which was to "remove unconscious fixed ideas"
from hypnotized patients. Janet strongly influenced Freud,
Adler, Jung, and others.
Sigmund Freud (1856-1939), a Viennese neurologist,
studied Charcot and Bernheim. Gradually he changed from

5 T. 1. Hudson, The Law of Psychic Phenomena. A Working Hy-


pothesis, 1893.

27
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

somatologist to psychotherapist. In the place of Janet's "psy-


chological analysis," he developed, at the turn of the century,
his own system for which he coined the term psychoanalysis.
Within a decade, his psychoanalytical movement had won
international acclaim. His doctrine teaches the autonomy
of the working of the unconscious, especially in the opera-
tion of the instinct. It starts from the hypothesis that human
beings are inclined to thrust aside certain painful thoughts,
particularly of a sexual nature, from their conscious minds-
not realizing that these thoughts go on working in the
unconscious mind, only to appear again at the conscious
level in the guise of various physical disorders. Freud assigned
the central role in his psychoanalysis to the sexual instinct
(the so-called "libido"), as he believed that the whole per-
sonality was controlled by greater or lesser sexual impulses.
Alfred Adler of Vienna (1870-1937) did not become a
nerve specialist until 1910. In 1902 he joined Freud's group
of psychoanalysts. As he could not accept Freud's concept
of the libido, he broke away and founded a society of his
own for individual psychology. For the sex-urge he substi-
tuted the aggression-urge. This he based on the hypothesis
that all human behavior can be explained by the "will to
power" and the urge to superiority. At the same time, unde-
fined inferiority complexes arise that manifest themselves
either as a superiority drive or as a "retreat into sickness."
To heal such cases, Adler developed his compensation
theory - the method of using encouragement to compen-
sate for the feeling of inferiority.
Carl Gustav lung (1875-1961), the Swiss psychothera-
pist, at first collaborated closely with Freud, but he too
broke away because he could not accept either the libido

28
The History of Animal Magnetism

concept or the Oedipus complex. He then began, step-by-


step, to develop his own great system called analytical
psychology. His main ideas are as follows: The unconscious
is the creative matrix of consciousness and its content is
both individual and collective. It is in the collective sub-
conscious that the archetypes occur. He took the word
"archetype" from the Greek: It means "original pattern,
prototype, original form, mode1." The archetypes, accord-
ing to lung, are the elements of the unconscious psychic
structure; they are chiefly responsible for the process of
individuation (the development of the "total psychic per-
sonality"). The conscious mind has to contend with these
archetypes. Thus, the psyche is a self-regulating, energetic
(cybernetic) system in which consciousness and the uncon-
scious counterbalance each other. Because archetypes are
not subject to time and space, lung discarded the principle
of causality in favor of synchronicity, an a-causal explana-
tion for the connection between interior and exterior
events. In this, lung's views are reminiscent of Leibnitz's
philosophy of "monads" and "pre-stabilized harmony."
Viktor E. Frankl, (1905-1997), professor of neurology
and psychiatry at Vienna and originally a disciple of Freud,
goes an essential step further with his "Third Vienna School
of Psychotherapy" (following the first and second schools
founded by Freud and Adler, repectively). He differentiates
between psychogenic neuroses and noogenic neuroses (noo
= thought; genic = produced, formed). The psychogenic neu-
rosis comes from conflicts on the level of the instincts; the
noogenic neurosis, on the other hand, develops from frus-
tration of the "spiritual center" of man, from an existential
vacuum in which so many people find themselves today.

29
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

His logo therapy works through the "will to meaning," bid-


ding us to activate the spiritual dimensions of human
existence, recognize the true meaning of life, and act accord-
ingly. Instead of unearthing mistakes from the past,
searching through them, exploring the internal chaos, and
passing judgment on the patient, Frankl's logotheraphy
looks to the future and aims at transcending self. In self-
transcendence we reap the rich reward of self-realization.
It is interesting that logo therapy does not set out to tran-
scend the neurosis so much as the level on which the
neurOSlS occurs.
Abraham H. Maslow (1908-1970) of the United States
went in a similar direction with his psychology of being.
Instead of analyzing sick people, we should ask ourselves
the opposite question: What makes a healthy person? What
is health? Science knows scarcely anything about it. Instead
of a "psychology of illness," we need a "psychology of
health." He regarded his "humanist psychology" as a revo-
lution in the truest sense, for it requires a new intellectual
method, a new image of mankind, and new objectives that
consider man not only as an individual, but also as a mem-
ber of society. And yet even this is only a transitional stage,
a preparation for a "higher" psychology, which must be
supra-personal, supra-human, and having its center in the
All, and not in human needs and interests. Mankind needs
something "greater than ourselves."
The scientific investigation of the unconscious also
overlaps with parapsychology. Patients in trance show para-
normal abilities, such as clairvoyance and precognition. To
subject these phenomena to scientific examination, the
Society of Psychical Research was founded in London, in

30
The History of Animal Magnetism

1882, as a highly respected scientific institution of leading


men from different branches of science. All paranormal
phenomena were submitted to the most rigorous scientific
investigation: clairvoyance, telepathy, precognition,
retrocognition, psychokinesis, psychography, psychometry,
autoscopy, bilocation, cryptomnesia, levitation, materializa-
tion, radiaesthesis, and more. Meanwhile, parapsychology
has become a recognized science and has been introduced
into numerous universities and other academic institutions.
The essential characteristic of paranormal phenomena
is their freedom from the classical scientific system of refer-
ence - based on matter, gravity, time, space, and causality - to
which we have become accustomed to think of as normal-
ity. As a "periscope of the subconscious," however,
paranormal phenomena afford us knowledge of the exist-
ence of a quite differently constituted world, an infinitely
larger sphere of being. But a "theory of the immaterial"
cannot rely on physics to fathom a metaphysical world.
Hence the failure of all theories put forward by the most
progressive physicists (a number of Nobel prize winners
among them) to find a scientific explanation for paranor-
mal phenomena. Even the collaboration of two giants, C.
G. lung and the Nobel prize winner for physics Prof. Pauli
of Zurich, brought us no nearer to a solution to this prob-
lem. To physics, paranormal phenomena are anomalies; but
anomalies can only be explained when a new system of
reference is found, adapted to the new field of research in
which they are not anomalous but normal. "Miracles" are
never true miracles; they are manifestations of laws belong-
ing to a higher system of reference, or structural framework,
not yet understood. Such a system has not yet been found

31
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

in parapsychology, which can still merely ascertain the exist-


ence of the phenomena, as was the case in Mesmer's time.
The exploration of the unconscious has naturally
had its repercussions in medicine, which could no longer
ignore the soul-body relationship in the treatment of the
sick. More and more attention has been given, especially
since the 1940s, to psychosomatics (psyche = soul, soma =
body), which has found its proper place in universities and
medical schools, at first chiefly in America and later also in
Europe. Since the mid-20 th century, one has seen an increas-
ing proportion of all illnesses gradually being attributed to
psychic and not to somatic causes. This change was notice-
able at first only in the treatment of functional disorders,
but has later been extended to organic diseases. Today,
psychosomatic theorists take the view that 100% of all
illnesses, including accidents, have a psychic cause.
A healthy psyche is essential for a healthy body. Thus
Arthur Jores,professor of psychosomatics at the Hamburg
University Clinic, asserted that anyone who lives at odds
with his conscience becomes ill, for there is a connection
between falling out-of-order and being ill. Dr. P. Tournier
of Geneva, whose therapy centered on the treatment of
the "whole man" (La medecine de la personne), went even
further by calling illness a "falling-out -of-the-divine-order."
Therefore, man also needs a conscious awareness of his
divinity. For Mesmer, too, illness was only disharmony.
Thus, a broad span of two centuries connects modern psy-
chologists with Mesmer, but a great deal of rethinking has
been done in the meantime.
With Frankl, Maslow, and others, we see dynamic psy-
chiatry taking a completely different direction from the way

32
The History of Animal Magnetism

it was going up to the middle of the 20th century. The atti-


tude toward the unconscious psyche, the seat of discord, has
made a complete about-face, and with it, the type and
method of research into the mysterious mechanics of sick-
ness and healing, including the development and
application of suitable therapeutic treatment.
Many signs point to the fact that we are now turning
away from a material, psychic, or mental standpoint toward
a supra-human or purely spiritual standpoint in the study
of being. The question: "What is man?" is no longer the
central question, but rather the question: "What comes
after man"? That which has a beginning must also have an
end. Mortal man's evolution had a beginning; he is only
another link in a long chain. It is therefore reasonable to
predict that a new link of quite a different sort from his
present image will evolve. Is there not, besides the waking
consciousness, the subconscious, and the unconscious, yet
another consciousness-supra-consciousness? This ques-
tion is now being seriously discussed. Is man the ultimate
goal of evolution? Aren't there dimensions that go beyond
limited human consciousness? Aren't these dimensions
spiritual, pure Spirit? Doesn't this unlimited world of Spirit
break the confines of limited human powers of concep-
tion? And in such a world, couldn't completely new
methods come to light that would approach the still impen-
etrable soul-body problem from a much higher standpoint?
Isn't the soul-body relationship far more a Spirit-soul-body
relationship? And isn't the Spirit-soul-body relationship
less a unity on an equal plane than a hierarchic structure
of consciousness in which the divine Spirit is the only real
foundation of being and operates as the great regulator of

33
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

the soul-body mechanism? Wouldn't this remove from


animal magnetism its whole psychosomatic foundation?
And wouldn't its spectacular but always mysterious phe-
nomena burst like bubbles-the problem of their
explanation having become completely obsolete?
Historically, this is the direction animal magnetism
took in the course of a quite different development, namely
that which led to the discovery of Christian Science.

From Mesmerism to Christian Science

Animal magnetism was introduced to North America


when Mesmer was still alive. A Mesmer Society soon flour-
ished, especially in New Orleans, which at that time was
French. In other regions of the United States, it developed
rather slowly at first until, kindled by spiritualism in the
1840s, it suddenly began to spread with great rapidity.
Between 1845 and 1847 ,Andrew Jackson Davis (1826-
1910), who was in the habit of mesmerizing himself daily,
dictated while in trance detailed revelations from the world
of spirits, shortly followed by other books. Thus, he became
the pioneer of spiritualism. In 1847, spiritualism swept like
a prairie fire through America, and shortly afterwards, in
1852, through Europe as well. It started a psychological
epidemic of unforeseen proportions. In the hands of medi-
ums, hypnotism became a means of artificially producing
all sorts of paranormal phenomena. Spiritualism has never
been short on appeal. Moreover for psychiatrists (espe-
cially C. G. Jung) it opened up a new possibility of furthering
their scientific research into the realm of the unconscious
with the help of mediums.

34
The History of Animal Magnetism

Phineas Parkhurst Quimby


In the motley crowd of mesmerists, however, there is
one who stands out as more interesting than the rest-
namely, Phineas Parkhurst Quimby (1802-1866). Much has
already been written about Quimby and his influence on
the discovery of Christian Science, some of it so compe-
tently that there is no need to attempt to elucidate the
subject any further. 6 Only a few fundamental questions
need to be considered here.
After watching a public exhibition by a popular mes-
merist in the year 1838, Quimby discovered that he too
possessed unusual magnetic powers. He could induce "mag-
netic sleep" at will. He, like the others, at first worked in
pUblic. Having put his assistant into a deep trance, he would
cause him to become clairvoyant. In this condition, the
young man could, amongst other things, diagnose disease
and prescribe the proper treatment. After a time, however,
Quimby realized that his assistant was prescribing only
those remedies the patient or he himself believed in, from
which he made the deduction that every recommended
remedy heals as long as one has faith in it. He recognized
the fact that it is not really medicine that heals, but the
belief in it-or in the doctor. Later it dawned on him that
he did not even have to put the patient into a trance to

6 See the particularly excellent account by Robert Peel, Mary


Baker Eddy. The Years of Discovery, (New York. 1966) Chapter
V; see also Hugh A. Studden Kennedy, Mrs. Eddy, (San Fran-
cisco, 1947). For a theological point of view, see Hans-Diether
Reimer, Metaphysisches Heilen. Eine kritische Darstellung der
'Christlichen Wissenschaft' (Christian Science), (Stuttgart, 1966).

35
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

heal him; it was sufficient to guide the patient's thoughts


in the right direction with suggestions of health.
Quimby also came to quite new conclusions as to the
origin of disease: Disease has its cause in the mind of the
patient; it is not something self-existent. He declared, "I
deny disease as a truth, but admit it as a deception." The
human state of consciousness is externalized in the body.
All the discords surrounding us in daily life (such as con-
versations about illnesses, accidents, fears, superstitions)
mesmerize us. Thus, the mind is led in the direction of
error, and to the extent that it is accepted by the patient,
so disease develops; this inharmonious state of mind-
through the nervous system - affects the whole body. If the
patient is then cured by medicine, it is again his faith in the
medicine, and not the medicine itself, that produces the
result. Since, however, the general attitude of the patient has
not improved, such a cure cannot be seen as a true healing
(here views were already being expressed that a century later
were to become common property in psychosomatics).
What was Quimby'S method of healing? Quimby
regarded himself as a medium, but he kept himself con-
sciously awake while taking in the emotional and mental
state of the patient. Tn doing this he found-as exorcists
like Gassner had always done-that he could feel the
patient's disease in his own body. Then he would explain
to the patient how the disease had been able to develop
and show itself physically, a therapeutic task that involved
"declaring the truth" to the patient in order to free him
from his false way of thinking. By accepting the truth, the
patient is healed of the disease, which he has imposed upon
himself through his erroneous thinking. For Quimby, these

36
The History of Animal Magnetism

"logical" conclusions about the interaction of error and


disease and truth and health caused him to regard his heal-
ing method as an exact science (Quimby's therapy actually
anticipated a good deal of Frankl's logotherapy).
What was going on while the truth was being declared
to the patient? Quimby moistened his hands with water
(water had already been used by Mesmer as a particularly
good conductor of animal magnetism), manipulated the
patient's head with his sympathetic magnetic touch, and
used "laying on of hands" or made passes with his hand
over the diseased part of the body, inaudibly declaring the
truth about the particular case. Meanwhile, patients had to
stare into his eyes, fixing their full concentration on him.
But Quimby was also able to treat patients at a distance
through mental concentration. During this contact, known
as rapport, Quimby's higher "wisdom" was communicated
to the patient, whose belief in error, as well as the suffer-
ing caused by it, were cast out. "The Truth is the Cure," he
wrote in his prospectus. Briefly stated, he manipulated
matter in order to convince the patient's mind of his truth.
How did Quimby explain his healing power? To this
question he repeatedly replied that he did not understand
it himself, in spite of his claim to scientific method. He had,
in effect, no hard and fast, infallible theory. In considering
his account of the healing procedure, one must understand
what he really meant by the terms he used as key concepts.
When he spoke of "mind," he meant "spiritual matter" or
"material spirit"; the "wisdom," with which he drove out
the patient's false beliefs, was in fact his own wisdom and
not divine wisdom. When he spoke of "Christ," he referred
not exactly to "Jesus," but more mistakenly to the power

37
-----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-

ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

of clairvoyance or thought-reading. When he spoke of the


"Truth," which is the cure, it was for him a "material truth"
that heals "material error"; it was not absolute Truth itself.
"Mind," which he conveyed to the body by manipulation,
was not only "bathed in water" but was also communicated
through the hands because they supplied "electricity."
Quimby was a natural mesmeric healer with many
good human qualities. People who knew him described him
as "a sincere and honest man, who never feared to speak
the truth as far as he understood it," a "deeply religious
man without being pious." Mrs. Eddy wrote of him, "On
his rare humanity and sympathy one could write a sonnet"
(Mis. 379:17).

Mary Baker Eddy


Mary Baker Eddy (1821-1910), during Quimby's time
still Mrs. Patterson, had to contend with both spiritualism
and animal magnetism. She was from the beginning totally
opposed to spiritualism, but not to animal magnetism and,
specifically, "quimbyism." Quite the reverse. In the year
1862, having suffered from a severe illness for six years,
she went to Quimby for treatment, and in a short space
of time experienced a remarkable improvement in her
condition. She became a great admirer of his, speaking and
writing strongly in his support. She herself healed some
cases at that time (1864). But she had previously healed
several incurable patients with unmedicated pills (placebos).
Indeed, from the middle of the 1840s, she had become con-
vinced that all physical effects can be traced back to a
mental cause (see Ret. p. 24), and so she declared to Quimby
that "back of his magnetic treatment ... there was a science,

38
The History of Animal Magnetism

and it was the science of mind, which had nothing to do


with matter, electricity, or physics" (My. 307:5). At first she
believed that Quimby had the right answer because he
healed without material aids and termed his mental therapy
an exact science. Yet, to Mrs. Eddy's great disappointment,
he could not explain his science, for in fact he did not have
one. Moreover, when she found that she suffered a relapse
as soon as she was removed from his influence, her convic-
tion grew that the true solution lay elsewhere. And so she
told him one day that God alone was the healer and not
mesmerism, manipulation, or Quimby himself. After her
initial enthusiasm for Quimby, she was later to realize and
bitterly regret her mistake-through experiencing in full
measure in her own life the harmful mental and physical
influence of such confused human concepts. 7
The years of association with Quimby were years of
intellectual and spiritual challenge for Mrs. Eddy. In the
first edition of her Textbook (1875), and even for some
years after this, she cited the year 1864 (and not, as she did
later, the year 1866) as the year in which she discovered
Christian Science. Her constantly recurring doubts about
Quimby's method and his contradictory "theory" on the
one hand, and her trust in his help upon which she so fre-
quently had to call, on the other hand, contributed to a
great inner disquiet-a disquiet that is often felt when
something new is about to be brought forth. As with other
pioneers in the spiritual sphere, including Freud and lung,
so too with Mrs. Eddy, this inner conflict led to that well-
known phenomenon of "creative sickness," during which a

7 See Journal, June 1887.

39
- - - - - - - - - - -

ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

new model of consciousness takes over from the old.


Quimby was dead and, because he had no successor,
quimbyism was also dead. As the result of an accident, Mrs.
Eddy felt that she, too, was "already within the shadow of
the death-valley" (108:20) when, in the absence of a mag-
netic doctor, she took up her Bible and read the story of the
healing of the paralyzed man in Matthew 9.And as she read
she received that revelation of "Life in and of Spirit" which
she named Christian Science. This was in February, 1866.
The Divine System of Reference. This is not the place
to attempt a general presentation of the revelation of Chris-
tian Science. Some knowledge of the teachings of Christian
Science and of its history is assumed in the reader of this
book. Our object here is merely to trace the line from mes-
merism to Christian Science.
What had happened? Man had always felt exposed to
so-called negative forces and evil influences, which robbed
him of harmony and made him aware of his impotence.
How could he banish these forces? In primitive times, he
took refuge in magic, keeping away the "evil spirits" with
all sorts of rites and shamanistic practices. The exorcists
did it through formulas, calling upon certain names to cast
out devils. With the corning of the Enlightenment, these
esoteric methods had to give way to scientific ones. To
suit the times, Mesmer gave his discovery a new name-
animal magnetism - and he tried to explain the old esoteric
phenomenon in materialistic, mechanistic terms. He put
new wine into old bottles, and the bottles broke. A psy-
chogenic process can only be explained within a
psychological theory and not in the framework of natural
science. Modern dynamic psychiatry attempts to fathom

40
- - - - - - - -

The History of Animal Magnetism

the conscious and unconscious psyche with various theo-


ries and therapies in order to bring the psyche back to
normality - without ever having defined scientifically what
"normal" means. What is the norm of health? Without
objective, absolute norms we are moving as before in the
sphere of mysticism and that means: to everyone his own
norm! Quimby healed with "his" truth, and so do thousands
of metaphysical schools of a mental, mystic, or charismatic
nature. They all "heal" through the power of mind over
matter. They all point to their results and quote Jesus'
words, "By their fruits ye shall know them," to confirm their
divine authority. They seldom realize, however, that what
is at work is merely the old phenomenon of animal mag-
netism wearing a new mask. Every mental and psychic
belief shows itself sooner or later in human experience.
This is true in the positive as well as in the negative sense.
What distinguishes Mrs. Eddy's discovery of Christian
Science fundamentally from all other metaphysical doctrines,
however, is the fact that she substitutes a purely spiritual,
divine system of reference and values for a material, human
system. She abandons the magical, mystical, and mental
view of existence. She abandons the primarily human stand-
point with its spheres of the conscious and the unconscious,
and in its place she puts God as the absolute foundation.
From this immutable, divinely objective norm she derives
the whole Science of being and its system of ideas.
The following four points are fundamental:
1. "God" is a collective concept, or super-symbol, for
defining the nature, essence, and wholeness of Being
as "Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle, Life, Truth, Love"
(465:10). The divine All-Mind replaces human thinking

41
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

and mortal mind; Spirit replaces matter; Soul replaces


the psyche or human soul; divine Principle replaces
human theories; Life (in Spirit) replaces material,
mortal life; Truth (as such) replaces the human con-
cept of truth; Love replaces human love. This is the
Word a/God.
2. God, divine Being, manifests itself only through its own
ideas. "Idea" denotes God's primeval conception,
Being's consciousness of its own self-manifestation.
Only the idea of Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle, Life,
Truth, Love is forever going on. Instincts, appetites,
willpower, human thoughts, desires, and aspirations are
not ideas and, from God's standpoint, must be regarded
as illusions. Therefore, the whole realm of the human
"conscious" and "unconscious" can be relegated to
the sphere of unreality. Thus, so-called animal mag-
netism becomes not a something but a nothing. This
is the Christ.
3. That which makes man human is his ability to tran-
scend his own consciousness, to raise himself above
animality; therefore spiritual therapy for us does not
consist primarily in healing disease and other discor-
dant conditions, but in freeing ourselves from believing
in a false system of reference, in finding our inner unity
with the divine system of reference and adhering to it.
Thereby we lose our animal consciousness and, as a
result, become free from all inharmonious effects of
this finite, mortal, erroneous consciousness. We then
live from and through and as super-consciousness, as
the consciousness of God. Our standard as "man," our

42
The History of Animal Magnetism

health, is the compound idea, the sum of all divine


ideas. This is spiritual Christianity.
4. This oneness with God is not, however, mystic. God is
not inexplicable and incomprehensible. As the Prin-
ciple of being, it interprets itself as a Science of being,
through a system of divine ideas. Through divine con-
sciousness man can understand scientifically the
Principle of being (its laws, orders, rules, system,
method, structure, and teleology). Spiritual under-
standing takes the place of the false consciousness, or
erroneous beliefs-individual, collective, universal,
conscious, and unconscious beliefs. Thus, animal mag-
netism in all its disguises is reduced to a false belief,
to a non-understanding of the Principle of being. All
influences of a magical, mythical, psychical, mental,
or material nature belong (from the divine standpoint)
to the realm of beliefs and take effect there, until
replaced by a scientific understanding of the divine
system of reference. This is the Science aspect.
The Investigation of Truth. In the "peak-experience,"
which Mrs. Eddy had in February 1866, she received indeed
a great revelation, but to fathom its meaning took her the
rest of her life. What happened at the moment of reading
the story of the paralytic in Ma tthew's Gospel, she describes
as follows: "As I read, the healing Truth dawned upon my
sense; and the result was that I rose, dressed myself, and
ever after was in better health than I had before enjoyed.
That short experience included a glimpse of the great fact
that I have since tried to make plain to others, namely, Life
in and of Spirit; this Life being the sole reality of existence.

43
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

1 learned that mortal thought evolves a subjective state


which it names matter, thereby shutting out the true sense
of Spirit" (Mis. 24:11). First, the healing Truth "dawned"
upon her, including merely "a glimpse" of the great Truth.
Nevertheless, she was convinced that divine Spirit had
brought about the healing: "I had learned that Mind recon-
structed the body, and that nothing else could. How it was
done, the spiritual Science of Mind must reveal. It was a
mystery to me then, but 1 have since understood it. All
Science is a revelation" (Ret. 28:22). Year by year, she
learned how to penetrate more deeply into the "mystery."
The search for the new therapy took many years. She
writes: "For three years after my discovery, 1 sought the
solution of this problem of Mind-healing, searched the
Scriptures and read little else, kept aloof from society, and
devoted time and energies to discovering a positive rule
... 1 knew the Principle of all harmonious Mind-action to
be God, and that cures were produced in primitive Chris-
tian healing by holy, uplifting faith; but 1 must know the
Science of this healing, and 1 won my way to absolute
conclusions through divine revelation, reason, and dem-
onstration" (109:11).
Nine years passed before the new discovery was suffi-
ciently crystallized in Mrs. Eddy's thought for her to begin
to write her first Textbook in 1875. She says about this
period of searching: "From 1866 to 1875, I myself was learn-
ing Christian Science step by step - gradually developing
the wonderful germ I had discovered as an honest investi-
gator. It was practical evolution. 1 was reaching by
experience and demonstration the scientific proof, and
scientific statement, of what I had already discovered. My

44
The History of Animal Magnetism

later teachings and writings show the steady growth of my


spiritual ideal during those pregnant years."8 Also in the
matter of teaching Christian Science, finding the right
method was a gradual process. "As former beliefs were
gradually expelled from her thought, the teaching became
clearer, until finally the shadow of old errors was no longer
cast upon divine Science" (460:29).
Mrs. Eddy published her Textbook, "Science and
Health" in 1875, but she constantly revised it until 1910.
She listened more and more to Being to learn divine Science
and its laws, orders, rules, system, methods, structure, and
its framework of meaning. The crystal-clear presentation
of the Science of being unfolded by degrees in a continu-
ing spiritual evolution. It is not, therefore, surprising that
the 1910 final edition of the Textbook bears little resem-
blance to the 1875 first edition.
The Investigation of Error. Parallel with the develop-
ment of the revelation of Truth was the step-by-step
research into the nature and essence of error, or animal
magnetism. True, Mrs. Eddy had received an instantaneous
healing through the revelation of Christian Science in the
year 1866, when she was healed of what was thought to be a
fatal condition. Yet, the struggle to understand the essen-
tial nature of animal magnetism, in the form of mesmerism,
hypnotism, and mental malpractice, was to occupy her
profoundly until the end of her life. The divine influx of
Truth, through which she henceforth healed, so imbued her
with the consciousness that God, Love, can bring forth only
good, health, and harmony, that it did not seem to her at

8 Quoted in: Robert Peel, ibid, p.291.

45
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

first logical or necessary to concern herself with the unre-


ality of evil and explain it to others. But bitter experiences
soon taught her otherwise. She wrote in 1888: "I shall not
forget the cost of investigating, for this age, the methods
and power of error. While the ways, means, and potency of
Truth had flowed into my consciousness as easily as dawns
the morning light and shadows flee, the metaphysical mys-
tery of error - its hidden paths, purpose, and fruits - at first
defied me. 1 was saying all the time, 'Come not thou into
the secret' - but at length took up the research according
to God's command" (Mis. 222:29).
The gradual progress of this research, which contin-
ued for decades, is traced briefly in the following chapter,
in the light of the various main editions of the Textbook.

46
Chapter 2

The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal


Magnetism in the Main Editions of the Textbook

The last edition of the Textbook is the only authorita-


tive one for the Christian Scientist. In this 1910 edition,
the chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked" contains only
seven pages. The statement is clear and simple, and pre-
sents Mrs. Eddy's final conclusions. These are, however,
quite different from those given in the first edition of 1875.
A comparison of the texts shows that virtually nothing that
she wrote on the subject of animal magnetism in the first
edition is to be found in the last edition. A great change
took place in Mrs. Eddy between 1875 and 1910. It is fasci-
nating to see how this transformation came about in gradual
stages over the years. To understand her development is
important for two reasons: First, one knows from other
branches of science that when a certain stage of develop-
ment is reached, it is more easily understood if one is aware
of the line of research that led to this particular result; sec-
ondly, change is always gradual, not sudden, precisely in
those subjects that are not merely theoretical and intellec-
tual, but of concern to each of us in our inmost being,
demanding from us a radical transformation - and lifting
us out of our archaic, magical, mythical, and false way of
thinking into the realm of pure Spirit.
Those who come into contact with Christian Science
find that they, too, have to deal with the problems of animal
magnetism by gradual progress, exactly as Mrs. Eddy did
47
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

in the successive editions of the Textbook and, indeed, in


the same order of unfoldment. If one is familiar with the
story of this development, one is prevented from repeat-
ing earlier mistakes and saved much suffering, as well as
the trouble of having to go back to the beginning each time
to discover the source of one's mistakes.
The advantage of being acquainted with the history
of the development of Christian Science was pointed out
more than once by Mrs. Eddy herself. In an article written
or inspired by her, on the occasion of a new edition of the
Textbook, which appeared in 1891 (the 50th edition), we
read in the "Journal" for April 1891: "Fortunate is he who
has all former revisions, together with the original edition
of 1875! They are indicators of successive stages of growth
in Christian Science ... keep them all; they will prove a
treasure trove ... Again: let the new volume be studied in
connection with earlier editions. The very contrasts help
to see how the thoughts have arisen only as we have been
able to receive them."
When we follow the subject of animal magnetism
through the various editions of the Textbook in chrono-
logical order, we find that with each new revision the
thought became clearer and clearer, until finally, in the last
edition, it becomes completely transparent. We also real-
ize that each new revision examines the subject from a
different standpoint, and that the order of these standpoints
is that of the definition for God as "Mind, Spirit, Soul, Prin-
ciple, Life, Truth, Love" (465:10). This is not surprising, for
an understanding of the nature, essence, and wholeness of
God is the true answer to animal magnetism, and this alone
can unmask it.

48
The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

The following is a list of the editions of the Textbook.


Each one contains alterations to the text that are impor-
tant for our subject:
1st Main Edition: 1st Edition 1875
2nd Main Edition: 2nd Edition 1878
yd Main Edition: yd _ 5 th Editions 1881-1882
4th Main Edition: 6th - 15 th Editions 1883-1885
5th Main Edition: 16th - 49 th Editions 1886-1890
6th Main Edition: 50th - 225 th Editions 1891-1901
7th Main Edition: 226 th - last Edition 1902-1910

First Main Edition (1875) - Mind

It was not originally Mrs. Eddy's intention to deal with


the subject of animal magnetism in her first edition, but
she was compelled to do so at God's behest. In her own
words: "My reluctance to give the public, in my first edition
of Science and Health, the chapter on Animal Magnetism,
and the divine purpose that this should be done, may have
an interest for the reader, and will be seen in the following
circumstances. I had finished that edition as far as that chap-
ter, when the printer informed me that he could not go on
with my work. I had already paid him seven hundred dol-
lars, and yet he stopped my work. All efforts to persuade
him to finish my book were in vain."
"After months had passed, I yielded to a constant con-
viction that I must insert in my last chapter a partial history
of what I had already observed of mental malpractice.
Accordingly, I set to work, contrary to my inclination, to
fulfill this painful task, and finished my copy for the book.

49
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

As it afterwards appeared, although I had not thought of


such a result, my printer resumed his work at the same
time ... " (Ret. 38:7). Her treatise on the subject, however,
did appear as a separate chapter, but formed the first part
of her chapter "Healing the Sick." She felt impelled not
only to explain the right practice of Christian Science, but
also to expose malpractice as the malicious falsification of
her teaching.

Summary of the Chapter - First Main Edition


Adulteration of the healing method. Mrs. Eddy had to
let it be known that her mental method of healing had been
secretly adulterated. "We commenced our labours in the
simple faith that all whom we healed would acknowledge
it, and those we taught would live up to our teachings ...
but this has not always been the case."
Teaching is a more difficult task than healing. "Healing
in science has its reward even here, but the task of teach-
ing the science of being is quite another thing. Pains of
personal sense often make the sick willing to part with its
errors, but those in health and at ease in their possessions
are reluctant to change masters, hence the more thankless
and toilsome task of teaching, compared with healing. We
instruct students to recommend their patients to avoid, as
much as possible, contact with minds filled with opposite
physics, hygiene, etc.... that hinder their advancement."
The power of healing can be lost. "Students may dwarf,
or destroy for the present, their position in scientific heal-
ing through error, with falsehood, dishonesty, or sensuality;
in which case their demonstration ... and their practice ...
become mesmerism and no longer science. Such students

50
The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

can never reinstate themselves aright except through repen-


tance, reformation and restitution."
The best and worst things are hidden. "The wickedest
or the best man is not understood by the age in which he
lives; both are beyond its appreciation. The wickedest man
commits his sins knowingly and in secret ... he hides his
evil ... and the best man is hidden from the present age in
the Wisdom of future ages."
What is mesmerism? "There is but one possible way
of doing wrong with a mental method of healing, and this
is mesmerism, whereby the minds of the sick may be con-
trolled with error instead of Truth ... Whispering into the
minds of the sick falsehoods, will do their bodies harm ...
[prevent] their recovery, and [visit] the sins of the doctor
on the patients ...."
Mrs. Eddy was not at first aware of the method of mental
malpractice. "[We] knew no opposite chance for doing evil
through a mental method of healing until we saw it traduced
by an erring student and made the medium of error." Many
patients died instead of being healed. This gave her the
opportunity of learning the cause and discovering the mal-
practice. "Such a practitioner putting aside our moral
precepts retains that portion only of our teachings which
relates to the patient's belief of disease and the method of
destroying this belief by the doctor's opposite, verbal, and
mental argument."
How does malpractice operate? "If [the doctor] can
change [the patients'] belief relative to sickness, he can
also change it with regard to an individual, or upon any
subject." "The patients have no recognition of how much
error he may also mingle with this argument of Truth."

51
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Thus malpractice has "the power and opportunity to do


evil ... Worse than poisonous drugs is the mental evil
im parted through inoculation of mind. Such a practitioner is
the most effectual circulator of error on earth." But it is
important to remember that "only the manipulator and
malpractitioner ... can do this, and not those who heal with
the Truth of Science." Quimby himself could not do it. "He
was a good man, a law to himself; when we knew him he
was growing out of mesmerism."
What is the purpose of malpractice? It is used "as a
weapon of revenge." While the malpractitioner speaks Truth
to his patients, "he takes this opportunity to introduce into
their minds side-issues, such as suit his sinister purpose,
imparting his own likes and dislikes to the patients, either
from vengeance or ambition." Such practice is "mesmer-
ism demoralized," "dishonest mesmerism." "Through the
control this gives the practitioner over patients, he readily
reaches the mind of the community to injure another or
promote himself." Meanwhile the malpractice remains
undiscovered. "Controlled by his will, patients haste to do
his bidding, and become involuntary agents of his schemes,
while honestly attesting their faith in him and his moral
character ... You will find the more honest and confiding
the individual, the more she is governed by the mind of
the operator."
What hinders us from becoming malpractitioners? If
we "learn the lessons of the science of Life," we shall find
it impossible to malpractice. Even if we had "the power
that mesmerism gives to influence minds wrong as well as
right," this science "would take it away."

52
The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

How can we protect ourselves against malpractice? To


prevent the evil of malpractice, the community should
understand it, for it is able "secretly to work out a hidden
wrong against humanity, justice and Truth." "The commu-
nity must understand the science of being to appreciate it,
and they must detect the wicked malpractice to appreciate
that." "We thank Wisdom, that revealed this great error to
us before these pages went to press, that the years we have
labored to bless our fellow-beings be not wholly lost
through this trespass upon the blessing of mental healing."
Mental assassination. In contrast to the "exhibitor of
mesmerism," whose experiments are "honorable, being
open," "the dishonest mesmerist ... is the malpractitioner,
who ... sinks to a secret assassin in society ... then who
shall say which effect is strongest, the good he says, or the
evil behind it that he imparts." He may say mentally, "Be
healed!" and the patient recovers. But suppose he tells her
mentally "something wrong to do, or believe, and desig-
nates this wrong ... and she unconsciously obeys him ...
Through this medium the doctor holds more direct influ-
ence over [the patients'] minds than the united power of
education and public sentiment. Mesmeric power is stron-
ger for evil, than good .... " "Scientific treatment fills the
mind with Truth that heals the sick; but the malpractitioner
impregnates it with error that produces new disease."
End of Summary

Anyone who is familiar with the text of the 1910 final


edition of the Textbook will realize at once that it bears
virtually no resemblance to that of the 1875 first edition.
When the first edition was written, the all-important

53
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

consideration was that the ordinary Christian Science prac-


titioner knew nothing about the practice of mesmerism and,
therefore, was unaware that it was now being uncovered.
To protect students and society in general, Mrs. Eddy had
to inform them of the danger and open their eyes through
her own experiences and investigations.
Yet readers cannot avoid the impression that they
appear to be at the mercy of two opposing powers-one
good and the other evil. They know that fundamentally
God is the healing power, but they also read that they are
prey to negative forces, until they have sufficient scientific
understanding of Truth. Even today, most students of Chris-
tian Science still believe that they have too little
understanding, and therefore feel threatened by mesmer-
ism. False suggestions oppress them, so that they live in
perpetual fear of animal magnetism, which seems to lie in
wait round every corner. Everything that does not fit in
with their expectations they put down to mesmerism and
malpractice. Thus, the notion of transferring thought and
willpower from the practitioner to the patient still forms
the basis for the operation of benevolent as well as demor-
alizing mesmerism. The first edition of the Textbook does
not, at this point, declare that the All-Mind is the only power
and the only influence in healing-that nothing is operat-
ing except the divine Mind and its idea.

Second Main Edition (1878) - Spirit

In the midst of Mrs. Eddy's efforts to save her discov-


ery from being submerged in mesmerism, a second edition
of "Science and Health" was planned, in two volumes, a

54
The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

book of over 500 pages. But the excessive number of mis-


takes in the printer's proofs of the first volume made its
publication impossible. It did not, in fact, ever appear. Only
Vol. II was published - in spite of its many printer's errors-
as a short abridgement of the intended work (see 1878
edition, p.5). It contains only a few chapters, including one
entitled "Mesmerism." For the first time, the topic of animal
magnetism is discussed in a chapter of its own. Fifteen pages
are devoted to the subject-about the same as in the first
edition. Much is repeated, but from quite new angles. The
line of argument that covers 15 pages in the first edition is
reduced to seven pages in the second edition (pp.130-136);
the former account of the harmful influence of the mal-
practitioner on the patient is now much curtailed. The new
material, based on observations made in the interim, makes
up a further eight pages (pp.136-144). In the following
synopsis, therefore, only those points are mentioned that
show the difference between the two editions.

Summary of the Chapter - Second Main Edition


Metaphysics versus mesmerism: Mrs. Eddy is ready to
accept the challenge of mesmerism and to meet it with
metaphysics. The word "Metaphysics" (at that time capi-
talized) is used a great deal, often in places where "Science"
appears in the first edition (and also in later editions). It is
significant that the chapter "Mesmerism" is followed by
the newly conceived chapter "Metaphysics" (consisting of
seven pages), in which the 19 statements are already recog-
nizable as the basis of the 32 subjects in the "Platform" of
"divine metaphysics" in the last edition of "Science and
Health" (pp.330-340). In the second edition, there is a

55
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

clearer intention than before to stress the obvious differ-


ence between metaphysics and mesmerism, and to warn
against calling metaphysical science "mesmerism" or call-
ing mesmerism "science." Because mesmerism can bring
about so-called healings as well as causing sickness-and
so be used for both good and evil-it is dualistic. Meta-
physics, on the other hand, can accomplish only good.
Mesmerism is the illegitimate action of metaphysics. When
the best method is perverted to the worst, it becomes fatal
mesmerism, or malpractice. Even when the mesmerist
brings relief to the suffering, he still "has not the power to
destroy error with Truth and heal the sick scientifically ...
[he] can only depend on the power of his will to treat his
patients ... [he] cannot avail himself of Truth to heal the
sick, as in Metaphysics."
Malpractice must be exposed. In the first edition, there
is already a demand for informing the community of the
phenomenon of malpractice, and helping it to recognize
the danger. In the second edition, there is the additional
warning that malpractice must be uncovered and unmasked,
because "the community, ignorant of its silent workings,
will be slow to acknowledge its crimes." Metaphysics has
"furnished the cue to stop this trespass on the blessing of
mental healing." Outlawry must be held in check by meta-
physical discovery.
Silent malpractice. "Mesmerism is practised through
manipulation-and without it. And we have learned, by
new observation, [that the malpractitioner] attempts more
evil without a sign than with it." This new mesmeric out-
lawry has appeared in various forms since the first
publication of the Textbook. Until that time, there was no

56
The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

clear evidence that it was possible to malpractice even with-


out manipulation; it was simply taken for granted that such
a thing was out of the question. Now, however, it has been
recognized that this can also happen. Mrs. Eddy calls this
type of mental malpractice "silent malpractice," that is,
secret malpractice, without word or manipulation, which
is "criminal in the extreme." Such a mesmerist she names a
"mental malpractitioner." Through his subtle methods he
escapes detection; everything goes on in secret. His efforts
can only be "exposed by the metaphysical experts that can
find him out."
The fate of the mental malpractitioner. The picture
painted by Mrs. Eddy is extremely sinister: "He would pay
the penalty on a gallows, were his efforts understood by
the public ... He holds high carnival '" regardless ... of
the bottomless pit to which his cherished sins are sinking
him," and regardless of "the tortures that will come to him
on account of this sin against the Holy Ghost, that is not
forgiven. It is enough to say that the measure he metes
shall be measured to him again, full and running over .... "
But "[he] is already manacled by Justice; God hath laid his
hand heavily upon [him]." "Hailstones of doom" will pour
down upon the guilty head. Such a mind "will find [its]
mistake when it is too late, and to-day should be confined
to a prison cell to limit its observations, or make shorter
shrift to the hangman." "The best mode of self-protection
from this mental outlaw is to understand Metaphysics."
Then his "malevolent attempts to harm you, are futile."
Metaphysics cannot be held responsible for malpractice.
"Because we have taught, at this period, the modus of doing
good through a mental process, and how one mind acting

57
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

upon another mind can benefit both that mind and body,
the malpractice cannot be charged to us; neither can the
malpractitioner say he learned of us how to malpractise,
when the fact remains that we never knew how this abuse
of Metaphysics was done until we saw that it was done ...
seven years after our metaphysical discovery." "He who
practises our teachings and follows our example is incapable
of this foul malpractice."
Metaphysics uncovers malpractice. In this year (1878),
Mrs. Eddy made a new discovery-that this "loathsome
mystery" of silent, hidden, inaudible malpractice can be
unearthed by metaphysics.
It is important, at this point, to recall that in the first
edition of the Textbook, Mrs. Eddy does not use the term
Mind as a synonym for God; hence the great misunder-
standing in her pupils, who healed through mind. Since no
clear distinction was made between divine Mind and mind,
the student could think of "mind" as merely human mind,
which has that very possibility of being either good or bad.
Not until the second edition do we begin to find the occa-
sional use of Mind as a synonym for God, especially in
the chapter "Metaphysics," but not at all in the chapter
"Mesmerism," where it would have been particularly appro-
priate for clarifying the difference between metaphysics
and mesmerism. It was just this lack of clarity that lay at
the root of the misunderstanding.
Only once in the chapter "Mesmerism" does Mrs. Eddy
describe more closely the mind that is meant in her meta-
physics: "Whoever would practise metaphysical healing as
we have taught them, through which the Divine mind pours
in upon the age light and healing, cannot mal practise ...

58
The Evolution o/the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

As Metaphysics becomes better understood, the thoughts,


the motives, and the fears that mortal mind embrace, will
become as apparent to mind as a material object is to per-
sonal sense. When this phenomenon is established, the
malice that goes forth on its errand of evil ... can no longer
do it without detection ... When the ability of mind to detect
what mind is doing becomes more general, it will be all
that is required for self-protection. After this manner, the
mental mediaeval age that has to conflict with this demon-
ology will find its remedy, and can deprive it of all power."
Divine Mind-reading versus clairvoyance: The ability
to read the thoughts of others through the "Divine mind"
is not to be confused with clairvoyance. "Clairvoyance rests
on the groundwork of mortal mind, and gathers its conclu-
sions from the opinions this mind entertains. The thought
in one mind presents the image of this thought to another
mind; and the clairvoyant may mistake the mental picture
for the material act, and the mistaken report may after-
wards beget an opinion that is incorrect."
Mind, and not matter, is the criminal: "Can matter com-
mit a crime? Can matter without mind be punished? Mind,
and not matter, is the criminal in every case; and our courts
sentence, and law defines crime, according to the motive
and not the act."
Thereafter, the text is similar to the edition of 1910
(pp.l 04-106).
End of Summary

On the cover of the second edition there is a picture


of Noah's Ark, and for this reason it is also known as the
"Noah's Ark Edition." It symbolizes the flood of experiences

59
ANIMAL MAGNETISM- UNMASKED

that engulfed Mrs. Eddy during those years. Part of her


definition of "Ark" reads: " ... the understanding of Spirit,
destroying belief in matter" (581:9). Spirit, never mixes with
its opposite, evil or error.
The second edition shows how Mrs. Eddy challenges
error's threat to "traduce" her "moral cause." Metaphysics
and mesmerism are diametrically opposed to each other.
A clear dividing line is drawn between them, like the firma-
ment in the second day of creation (Spirit), which stands
for "the line of demarcation between the real and unreal"
(505:21). How can the "Ark" be "pitched within and without"
against the penetration of mesmeric beliefs? God, Spirit,
admits of no mingling. The difference between metaphys-
ics and mesmerism has to be set forth as clearly as possible,
so that students can no longer confuse the two. It must be
made quite clear what a mesmerist is and what a metaphy-
sician is; and it must also be made clear that the Divine
mind and the human mind are two completely different
things and that, therefore, the power of this "Divine mind"
has nothing to do with willpower. The practice of meta-
physics is solely good, in contrast to mesmerism, which is
always bad. In addition, she points out the great difference
between clairvoyance and what she later calls "divine Mind-
reading." Not until later, however, was she to declare in
exact terms that the only basis of Mind-healing is that Mind
that is also Spirit.

Third Main Edition (1881-1882) - Soul

In the third to fifth editions of "Science and Health"


(Vol. II), the subject of animal magnetism is expanded,

60
The Evolution a/the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

under the title of "Demonology," to 46 pages, whereas


previously it covered only 15. The chapter reads almost
like a detective story. This may be the reason why three
editions soon sold out.

Summary of the Chapter - Third Main Edition


Judas-character of the malpractitioner. "The history of
the harmless features of mesmerism is yielding to the
history of its aggressive forms. Mesmerism has its defini-
tion today in demonology ... It implies the exercise of
despotic control and is much more likely to be abused by
its possessor than employed otherwise for the individual
or society."The malpractitioner is characterized by "a stolid
moral sense, great want of spiritual sentiment, restless
ambition, and envy ... the desire to sUbjugate ... carefully
veiling his character, through unsurpassed secretiveness," -
and being "a marvellous plotter," he avows "his intention
to do whatever he chooses with his mental power." Finally,
all this becomes "a secret passion" until his power to heal
fails; if he manages "with the power of will to remove one
disease, it is succeeded by a more malignant one."The mal-
practitioner in the end becomes a "moral leper."
What are the evil results of mental malpractice? Patients
who have been healed through metaphysics become ill
again when later treated by a malpractitioner and may even
die; friends become enemies; patients being malpracticed
feel ill at ease and suffer in the presence of the metaphysi-
cian, whom they blame for their relapses; if the attack upon
the victim fails, then the patient's families and those around
them are set against him; addictions, such as alcoholism,
once cured, return; the happiness of family life is destroyed,

61
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

the affections of husband and wife alienated; under the


control of the mesmerist, witnesses testify falsely; patients,
who have received only good from the metaphysician, turn
against their benefactor and abuse him. The moral stan-
dards of victims decline; they sink to blackmail and threaten
to ruin the good cause of metaphysical healing.
These demonic results are illustrated in detail by
numerous cases, referring mainly to Kennedy, a mesmerist
who at one time had been Mrs. Eddy's most promising
student. She devotes twelve pages to a detailed "sketch of
one of the most diabolical conspiracies ever ... carried on
by the hidden influences employed in [Kennedy's] plots."
The rumor had been spread that Dr. Asa Gilbert Eddy,
Mrs. Eddy's husband, had murdered someone. The charge
was widely reported in the press; but when the case was
called, the guilty complicity of the conspirators was unmasked,
for "the principal witness for the prosecution were convicts
and inmates of houses of ill-fame in Boston."
What are the indications of this demonology? This type
of mesmerism works insidiously. "We have known this
mesmerist try to sour the disposition, excite the passions
and appetites, induce disease, bring back old complaints,
and scare and torture the minds of people." Such mesmer-
ism creates enmity or indifference toward former friends;
it produces hatred. It tricks victims into supposing that
someone else, wholly innocent, is malpracticing them; it
causes them to believe a lie, and to "perform certain acts
at stated times."
How can we guard against becoming demonic practi-
tioners ourselves? The two earlier editions have already
indicated how we can protect ourselves from malpractice.

62
The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

But now, special emphasis is laid on guarding against using


malpractice ourselves. "Nothing but a knowledge of the
mesmeric cause producing these abnormal results, and the
metaphysical understanding how to meet them and despoil
demonology of its reign of terror, renders it safe for the
individual or the community at the present period." There
is one cardinal point of metaphysics, namely "never to
encroach on the rights of mind, never to think to trespass
in metaphysics ... never to enter another's thoughts more
unceremoniously than his dwelling ... It becomes impos-
sible for you to produce disease or to injure another with
your mind, and you become a law to yourself never to
infringe on the privacy of thought, and to read mind only
when it appeals to you for help." In this way, "metaphysics
promotes affection, virtue, and peace in families, with
individuals, and in the community ... Metaphysics meets
all these emergencies, and governs and restores the bal-
ance of being to its normal standard." "Abiding by the rules
of metaphysics prevents any results from the attacks of the
mesmerist."
Demonology is animal in nature. "Moral and spiritual
qualifications" are the student's "seal of metaphysics." Not
so for the malevolent malpractitioner. His subtle purposes
are accomplished not only through malicious thinking, and
influencing the victim through mental arguments or
thought-transference. Something more than this lies at the
root of demonology. "Sensuality, envy, malice, hatred, and
revenge must co-operate in the individual mind that can
carry out demonology."
Until the summer of 1880, Mrs. Eddy was not fully
able to fathom the workings of demonology. But then, 14

63
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

years after the discovery of Christian Science, she "found


the facts of immortal Mind more than equal to meet the
fables of mortal mind" - here for the first time in her treat-
ment of the subject of animal magnetism, she uses Mind as
a synonym for God, and in so doing she has struck to the
heart of mental practice. True metaphysics, based on this
immortal Mind, "can destroy disease but it cannot create
it." Armed with the necessary moral and spiritual qualities
and with self-sacrificing love, "even if we should argue
against the recovery of the sick, or for the healthy to
become sick, after the method of the malpractitioner, we
could not produce their results."9 Mrs. Eddy taught few stu-
dents the metaphysical science of healing because she had
gained "so clear a sense of its moral obligations." She chose
them with extreme care, "because of the great danger there
is in promiscuously teaching metaphysics, or the power of
mind to do good, lest it abuse that trust."
Even "the good" that the mesmerist does is bad. "The
mesmerist employs one belief to destroy another belief;
therefore, if he heals the sick according to belief, it is the
bigger error healing the lesser ... leaving the case worse
than he found it." Treatment through the power of the will
can only produce a bad effect. "Without doubt there are

9 Richard F. Oakes, ed., Course in Divinity and General


Collectanea (South Africa: Rustica Press, 1958), p. 17. "Notes
on the Course in Divinity," recorded by Lida Fitzpatrick, C.S.D.:
"I cannot produce sickness. I experimented one time; a student
went into another room and I argued sickness for him as hard
as I could; he said he kept feeling better and better. Then he
argued for me and I began to feel pain right away. I am working
now to overcome sin and not feel others' thoughts. You can see
by the above I cannot be a malpractitioner."

64
The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

honest individuals practising mesmerism, not knowing their


method is unsafe." But the "malicious mesmerist ... avails
himself of a secret method," of which he is perfectly aware.
Demonology compels mankind to take refuge in meta-
physics. Although the courts judge and sentence crime
according to the motive, yet a higher authority is needed.
If a crime is committed under the influence of mental mal-
practice and the malpractitioner goes undetected, then it
is possible for the court to sentence an innocent man instead
of the secret culprit. "Demonology, or the unlicensed cruelty
of mortal mind" will thus "compel mankind to learn meta-
physics for a refuge and defence," and to sanction only the
methods of "the occult science of Mind." As for the mal-
practitioner, "God hath laid his hand upon him."
End of Summary

Mrs. Eddy devotes more space to dealing with animal


magnetism in this edition than in any previous or subse-
quent editions. Why? These were her crucial years of trials,
of warfare, and of being "put to the proof." The enemy who
confronted her had to be taken seriously, constantly surpris-
ing her, as she often declared, with new cunning ways,
always plotting to injure her cause. She found herself assailed
not only by unconscious mesmerism but by "Satan let
loose" - the malevolent, subtle, sinful, intentionally demonic
use of the power of mind, the result of which is human
suffering. The culprits at this point are specific people, called
by name. The demonic influence is personified. The "mali-
cious mesmerist" carries the whole blame. But he works in
secret and so escapes human punishment. Sin, the oppo-
site of Soul, holds its "witches' Sabbath."

65
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

We can protect ourselves from this attack of the mes-


merist if we abide by the "rules of metaphysics." She does
not yet term them rules of Soul, but she now, for the first
time, makes the step from the "Divine mind" (as in the
second main edition) to the "divine Mind," thereby identi-
fying the Mind of metaphysics with the Mind that is God.
So far there are only these isolated pointers to the solution
of the whole problem through the spiritual understanding
of Mind, God. Do these tentative steps also explain why
she still calls her discovery "the occult science of Mind"?
The question, as to how society can be protected from
the demoralizing effects of mesmerism, occupied her from
the start. In the first edition the solution was to be found in
informing the public of the dangers of mesmerism, in not
leaving them in the dark (Mind); in the second edition she
concentrates on teaching the community how to detect
malpractice, and how not to confuse it with metaphysical
practice (Spirit); and now, in the third edition, she explains
that society is only safe when it understands the rules of
metaphysics, and she exhorts it to abide by these rules (Soul).
Already, then, we can see that it is not what we say
and think that has the healing effect, but rather our inner
spirituality. The power of the spoken word or silent thought
belongs to the era of magic, and takes effect within a realm
of consciousness still stamped with magic. But those who
identify themselves with God, Mind, heal through Soul-
sense; they could bid the sick "go to the devil" and the sick
would, even so, recover. God, Soul, is sinless, but words or
arguments are not. Thus, the step is already being taken
out of a mental science into a spiritual Science. We can
begin to see the unscientific nature of many things we

66
The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

say, such as, "Think rightly for me" or, "Help me with
your thoughts" -as if doing this could have a healing or
beneficial effect.

Fourth Main Edition (1883-1885) - Principle

In the fourth main edition (6 th _15 th editions) the chap-


ter in question appears once again under the title
"Demonology."The novelty of this edition lies not so much
in what has been added to the third main edition as in what
has been left out. Instead of the 46 pages of the previous
edition, the chapter now has only 12. The text of these 12
pages is taken almost word for word from the earlier text
and contains no new material.
But what is omitted from the text? The accounts of
cases of malpractice observed by Mrs. Eddy, in particular
those giving the details of charges of murder brought
against Dr. Eddy and the direct allusions to diabolical
intrigues-all of these are left out. In brief, "the demonic"
is depersonalized: No names are given any more.
Even the earlier statements about the Judas-nature
of malpractitioners and the evil they perpetrate (see p. 60)
are missing or milder in tone. Readers no longer find horror
of the malpractitioner so strongly expressed. Malpractice
and its effects are now dealt with impersonally.
One begins to see that malpractice has to do less with
a person than with misunderstanding a divine Principle.
Even if it is not explicitly stated, the idea is already implied
that a clear understanding of divine Principle can master
the whole problem.

67
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Fifth Main Edition (1886-1890) - Life

In 1886 there appeared a 16 th edition of "Science and


Health" (in one volume), and this text was to continue
virtually unchanged until the 49 th edition in 1890. But this
fifth main edition differs so greatly from the fourth main
edition that it is scarcely recognizable. Even the title of
the chapter is changed- to "Animal Magnetism." The
number of pages in the chapter is reduced to 13, and there
is already a certain similarity between this and the final
text of 1910. The essential material of the fourth main
edition appears again in very condensed form, but new
aspects are added. In fact, the subject is approached from
a totally different angle.

Summary of the Chapter - Fifth Main Edition


The dragon wars against the woman: The new treat-
ment of the subject is based on three notes at the
beginning of the chapter, which set the tone of the chap-
ter. It is in this fifth main edition (16 th edition) of the
Textbook that the chapter "The Apocalypse" appears for
the first time, containing an interpretation of the 12th chap-
ter only of the Revelation of John. This is the chapter in
which Mrs. Eddy describes the warfare between the
dragon and the woman as "the divine method of warfare
in Science, and the glorious results of this warfare" (568:6).
The first scriptural note, at the beginning of the chapter
"Animal Magnetism," is taken from Revelation 12: "And
the dragon was enraged at the woman, and went away to
make war with the rest of her offspring, who keep the
commandments of God and maintain the testimony of

68
The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

Jesus." The second note is a poem, an exhortation never


to retreat from the battle:

He has sounded forth the trumpet that shall


never call retreat;

"He is sifting out the hearts of men before His


judgement-seat;

Oh be swift my Soul to answer Him, be jubilant


my feet."

Julia Ward Howe

The fighting note can be heard throughout the chapter.


But it is no longer strife between persons, between metaphy-
sician and malpractitioner; it is warfare between the dragon
and the woman-between animal magnetism and the
spiritual idea. Impersonal animal magnetism does not war
against persons, but against the development of the idea.
Here Mrs. Eddy sounds the battle cry: A brave fight
must be fought against sin. Since the conflict cannot be
avoided, erroneous mentality must be handled and over-
come. It is best to confront it as early as possible - to attack
and conquer. There is no running away from it. The age
must take up arms against mental malpractice.
Knowledge of good and evil is necessary. The dragon
must be recognized and exposed, irrespective of how
unpleasant this may be. "To deny the existence of evil, or
to flee before it, will involve you in hopeless error." Deliver-
ance from the forces of mortal mind "shows itself in a
knowledge of good and evil." Mrs. Eddy also writes on
the subject of animal magnetism in the chapter "The

69
ANIMAL MAGNETISM- UNMASKED

Apocalypse": "A denial of the existence of this error pre-


vents your victory over it."lOThis view, which she ceased to
hold later on, explains why she could still write at that time:
"The maximum of good is to-day met by the maximum of
evil." But then, six pages farther on, animal magnetism is
portrayed as devoid of all power and intelligence. If we
know this, we need not fear animal magnetism; if we are
ignorant of it, we allow error to continue, and work all the
more mischief. This is illustrated by the third scriptural note:
"If the light that is in thee be darkness, how great is that
darkness! (Jesus)." It becomes clearer, as the chapter goes
on, that an understanding of the Word of God, the living
light, puts an end to the darkness of animal magnetism.
Evil practice means "handling the Word of God deceit-
fully"; right practice means living the Word of Life.
Animal magnetism. The realization that, in this false
life-practice, what was at work was more than just rational
and intellectual, led her to start the chapter with a short
introductory analysis of "animal" magnetism, similar to
that which appears in the last edition of 1910. The all-
pervading life-stream of divine Being finds its counterfeit
in Mesmer's proposition that "there exists a mutual influ-
ence between the celestial bodies, the earth, and animated
things. Animal bodies are susceptible to the influence of
this agent, disseminating itself through the substance of
the nerves." Mrs. Eddy's own observations convinced her
that the effect of animal magnetism is only the effect of
illusion, and that any seeming benefit derived from it is
proportional to the patient's faith in error.

10 S&H, 16th Edition, p. 520

70
The Evolution o/the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

There is but one real attraction. After refuting as


mere illusion the mesmeric notion of the reciprocal action
between the planets and animate bodies, which is supposed
to be mediated through a material fluid, Mrs. Eddy now,
for the first time, makes unequivocal, clear-cut statements
about the real, the only true, influence. God is the Principle
of all and governs all that is real, harmonious, and eternal.
God's power is divine, not animal or human. There is but
one attraction, the all-embracing power of the Mind, which
is Spirit. By reflecting this power, man has dominion.
Mesmer's "all-magnetism" has now been replaced by
Mrs. Eddy's "magnetism of Mind." And thus, the long
awaited step has been taken: She shows that all rests under
one influence, that of Mind, and that this Mind, being Spirit,
is in reality the only Mind there is. In the fifth main edition,
we have arrived at a significant turning point in settling the
question as to how animal magnetism should be handled.
This new introduction is followed by a much curtailed
version of the material contained in the previous main edition.
End of Summary

The years 1886-1891 were exceptionally active ones


for Mrs. Eddy. She published several shorter works: "No
and Yes" (1887), "Rudimental Divine Science" (1887), and
"Unity of Good" (1888). She held numerous classes, but
then closed the Metaphysical College and dissolved the
organized Church. She also wrote many articles for the
"Journal." During 1887 and 1888, the "Journal" carried a
special section on animal magnetism. Many further articles
on this subject continued to appear regularly, until 1891,
for the purpose of making Christian Scientists aware of the

71
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

hidden methods of malpractice and giving them the oppor-


tunity of hearing each other's observations and experiences.
One of the earliest articles comes from Mrs. Eddy's
own hand. It is entitled "Ways that are Vain."ll A clear,
sevenfold layout can be discerned in this analysis of the
basic nature of animal magnetism, as far as it was then
understood, which brings out the opposite nature of Mind,
Spirit, Soul, Principle, Life, Truth, Love:
1. Animal magnetism thrives on the ignorance that
would handle error only in general, not in particular.
"All that error asks is to be let alone." (The intelli-
gence of Mind brings error out into the light.)
2. Animal magnetism seeks to reverse the methods of
good. It entices the victim to "the committal of acts
foreign to the natural inclinations." (Spirit is the only
good and cannot be perverted.)
3. "Other minds are made dormant by it, and the victim
is in a state of semi-individuality, with a mental hazi-
ness which ... is a species of intoxication." It is "the
sum total of sin." (Soul is sinless and gives man his
true identity.)
4. Animal magnetism sows dissension among mental prac-
titioners. (Principle establishes unity and harmony.)
5. Mental mal practitioners try to compensate and pro-
mote themselves by hindering the success of others.
(Life maintains and furthers good.)

11 Journal, May 1887, published in Miscellany, pp. 210-213. [Post-


humously added by the directors of the Christian Science
Church]

72
The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

6. Animal magnetism tries to paralyze the conscientious


activity of doing right and to give activity to evil. (Truth
can only do right.)
7. Animal magnetism works so subtly "that we mistake its
suggestions for the impulses of our own thought," and
allow ourselves "to drift in the wrong direction without
knowing it." (Love only ever wants to redeem us.)
If this article reminds us of the earlier approach to
the subject, familiar from previous main editions, then Mrs.
Eddy's later article, entitled "Malicious Animal Magne-
tism,"12 does so even more. There, she states that mind is
capable of perverting the power to do good to the point of
"total moral depravity," which leads to "mental assassina-
tion." "Long acquaintance, tried fidelity, experiences that
have knit hearts together, all becomes as nothing before
these endeavours." The criminal is not detected. "He sits
at the friendly board and fireside; he goes to their places
of worship; he takes his victims by the hand, and all the
time claims the power and carries the will to stab to the
heart ... to alienate friends, to divide households." Silently
influencing their thoughts, he brings about mental death.
"When the work of the mental assassin culminates, and
the victim falls, the doctors are consulted, and call it heart
disease or some other 'visitation of God.'" These
malpractitioners mark their victims like sharpshooters.
Since secret mental methods are now recognized, it is our
duty no longer to conceal them. "God has bidden me to
uncover this wickedness and I follow his voice. Let all

12 Journal, February 1889; reproduced in Collectanea, pp. 149- 152.

73
ANIMAL MAGNETISM- UNMASKED

Scientists aid in this work, first, by bringing out in their


reports on the practice of healing, careful statements of
the facts of malicious animal magnetism that are daily
passing before their eyes."
During this period articles similar to this appeared in
the "Journal" every month. No wonder the readers became
scared. The best of friends no longer trusted each other;
the most harmless incidents were put down to "criminal
magnetism." People lived in constant fear of being mal-
practiced. The saving, healing message of divine Science,
impartial love to all men, paled beside it. It was time to call
a halt. This Mrs. Eddy did in a short notice in the "Journal"
for August 1890:
"A Card"

"Also, the discussion of malicious animal mag-


netism had better be dropped until Scientists
understand clearly how to handle this error-
until they are not in danger of dwarfing their
growth in love, by falling into this lamentable
practice in their attempts to meet it. Only patient,
unceasing love to all mankind,-love that can-
not mistake Love's aid,-can determine this
question on the Principle of Christian Science."

The tone of this article brings the period of struggle


to an end. Instead of being on the watch for malpractice,
which has after all been shown up as mere illusion, atten-
tion is now turned in the opposite direction, toward a
positive activity of love to all mankind, a love which lays
down its own life in order to gain true Life. Life is not
exposed to persecution or malpractice. The method or prac-
tice of Life is wholly constructive - to promote, to sustain,

74
The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

to bless. Using the analogy from Revelation 12, the


"woman" is capable of practicing this method, so the dragon
cannot harm her.

Sixth Main Edition (1891-1901) - Truth

In the year 1891-much heralded in the April "Jour-


nal" - the 50 th edition of the Textbook appeared. It contains,
for the first time, all the chapters that make up the last
edition of 1910, with the exception of "Fruitage." Mrs. Eddy
had, before this, withdrawn from her work in Boston, at
the height of its prosperity, "and sought in solitude and
silence a higher understanding of the absolute scientific
unity which must exist between the teaching and letter of
Christianity and the spirit of Christianity, dwelling forever
in the divine Mind or Principle of man's being and revealed
through the human character" (My.246:13). The result was
an entirely new Textbook, which continued, with certain
amendments, right up to the 225 th edition in the year 1901.
The chapter "Animal Magnetism" is now reduced from 16
pages to seven; and in text and layout it closely resembles
the final version. (As this will be treated more thoroughly
in the next chapter, no summary of the text is necessary
here; it is sufficient to point out the most significant changes
that have taken place since the fifth main edition.)

Summary of the Chapter - Sixth Main Edition


In the sixth main edition, all statements having to do
with the dragon and the militant attitude towards malprac-
tice have been eliminated. Therefore, the two scriptural
notes and poem of the fifth main edition have disappeared

75
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

from the front of the chapter. Also missing are nearly all
the references to malicious magnetism, its effects and how
to combat them. The statement that "mesmerism has its
definition in demonology" is likewise omitted. Little of the
first four main editions has come through to the sixth.
Everything has been made clearer, plainer. The standpoint
has changed still more from that of the practitioner to that
of divine Principle. The paramount question is now more
clearly this:
What is true and real? Is animal magnetism, or evil, true
and real, or is Truth alone true and real? The new accentua-
tion is only expressed in occasional short paragraphs, single
sentences, or even just in newly inserted words. Previously
Mrs. Eddy had written that there is but one attraction, that
of Spirit; now, however, she says that there is but one "real"
attraction. This accentuation - that Mind, Spirit, is alone true
and real-shows itself also very clearly in the fact that those
statements that stress the unreality of evil, or animal mag-
netism, are new to the text, as, for instance:" Evil is not power.
Its seeming despotism is but a belief in evil"; or "In reality
there is no mortal mind, and consequently no transference
of mortal thought and will-power."
Animal magnetism is defined. Animal magnetism is the
specific term for the general concept of error, or mortal
mind (marginal heading: "The genus of error"). It is now
formulated in a new way. Animal magnetism is:
a false belief that mind is material,
a belief that mind is both evil and good,
a belief that "evil is as real as goodness, and more
powerful," a belief which "has not one quality of Truth
or Good," and is "either ignorant or malicious."

76
The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

Animal magnetism has not one quality of Truth. All


questions concerning animal magnetism belong fundamen-
tally to the realm of belief, which is devoid of all truth.
Where the previous edition reads: "The maximum of good
is to-day met by the maximum of evil" (which could seem
to imply that evil is indeed a real power), the new sentence
reads: "The maximum of good is always met by the maxi-
mum of suppositional evil." Evil is merely "suppositional,"
possessing neither reality nor truth. There is no transfer-
ence of mortal thought and willpower.
End of Summary

The chapter stresses the standpoint of Truth. Accord-


ingly, a new scriptural note has been chosen for it: "And
have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness,
but rather reprove them (Paul)." What is now required for
handling animal magnetism is to know the truth, and do it.
Mrs. Eddy writes to this effect in the "Journal" for April
1895, during that period when special emphasis was being
laid on the standpoint of Truth: "They [teachers of Christian
Science] shall teach their students how to defend them-
selves against mental malpractice, but never to return evil
for evil; never to attack the malpractitioner, but to know
the truth that makes free,-and so to be a law not unto
others, but themselves" (Mis. 315:32). One must be, there-
fore, a law of Truth unto oneself. It is also significant that
Mrs. Eddy, formerly in this chapter, called her Science an
"occult science of Mind": not until the 50th edition does
she name it in this chapter "Christian Science." Truth has
nothing occult about it.

77
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Seventh Main Edition (1902-1910) - Love

By the 226 th edition, which appeared in 1902, the Text-


book more closely assumed its final form. For the first time
all its chapters are arranged in the order in which they
appear today - the only order, as we now know, which cor-
responds with the spiritually scientific ordeL l3
Various changes have also been made in the text of
the chapter "Animal Magnetism." Most of them have been
introduced with the single aim of making the subject so
transparent that nothing dualistic, hidden, obscure, or mys-
terious any longer remains. During the year 1910, as this
process was reaching completion, Mrs. Eddy changed the
title of the chapter to: "Animal Magnetism Uncovered,"
and then, a few months later, to the present wording: "Ani-
mal Magnetism Unmasked."
This development, which took place between 1902 and
1910 and led up to the final version, had already been fore-
shadowed in the years immediately preceding. Mrs. Eddy's
article "What Our Leader Says," in the" Journal" for March
1899 (My. 210:1), illustrates the great change. Whereas in
the sixth main edition the emphasis is still on Truth, now in
the seventh main edition it is on Love. This article reads:

What Our Leader Says


Beloved Christian Scientists, keep your minds
so filled with Truth and Love, that sin, disease,
and death cannot enter them. It is plain that

13 For more on this subject, see Max Kappeler, The Structure of


the Christian Science Textbook - Our Way of Life (Seattle:
Kappeler Institute Publishing USA, 1954).

78
The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

nothing can be added to the mind already full.


There is no door through which evil can enter,
and no space for evil to fill in a mind filled with
goodness. Good thoughts are an impervious
armor; clad therewith you are completely
shielded from the attacks of error of every sort.
And not only yourselves are safe, but all whom
your thoughts rest upon are thereby benefited.

The self-seeking pride of the evil thinker injures


him when he would harm others. Goodness in-
voluntarily resists evil. The evil thinker is the
proud talker and doer. The right thinker abides
under the shadow of the Almighty. His thoughts
can only reflect peace, good will towards men,
health, and holiness.

A quite different method for handling evil now comes


to the fore. Consciousness must be so filled with God's
nature that anything ungodlike simply cannot enter or find
room there. The allness of Love, in which "Love never loses
sight of loveliness" (248:3), no longer has any need to
grapple with error, or eviL It is so all embracing that animal
magnetism is reduced to its native nothingness.
The unreality of evil. Through a number of deceptively
small changes, the unreality and nothingness of animal
magnetism is stressed even more clearly and unequivocally
in this final edition. Whereas, before, animal magnetism
has "neither intelligence nor power," now it is described as
"possessing neither intelligence, power, nor reality, and in
sense it is an unreal concept of the so-called mortal mind."
Earlier she had written that for liberation from the powers
of mortal mind "a knowledge of good and evil" is required.
Now, however, she states the exact opposite-that "this

79
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

liberation does not scientifically show itself in a knowl-


edge of both good and evil, for the latter is unreal."
Another sentence from the sixth main edition that now
undergoes necessary correction is this: "The maximum of
good is always met by the maximum of suppositional evil."
In 1902, this sentence still reads: "The maximum of good,
however, is met by the maximum of suppositional evil,
hence the fight to crush Science." But in 1909, this last con-
cession to a suppositional opposite power is dropped, and
the statement turns wholly in the direction of Love, which
knows only its own idea: "The maximum of good is the
infinite God and His idea, the All-in-all. Evil is a supposi-
tional lie." There is no longer any fight to crush Science.
Here is the answer at last: All that is ever going on is only
"God and His idea, the All-in-all."
Animal magnetism is gradually being stripped of any
semblance of reality. All that it supposedly has is prefixed
by "so-called": it has only "so-called force," it is a belief of
"so-called mortal mind," its "so-called despotism" is but
nothingness, and its "so-called action" is untrue. Animal
magnetism is not only a lie, it is a mere "suppositional lie."
Love is the unity of God, divine Being, and its idea; it
fills all space. Since Love is the All-in-all, animal magne-
tism must be nothingness. Nothingness has no intelligence,
power, substance, identity, authority, vitality, or justice; it
receives no divine sanction and is, therefore, not to be
feared. But whoever, in spite of this, would assign these
qualities to the suppositional existence of evil, practices
animal magnetism and is, within the realm of their own
beliefs, also their own victim. Animal magnetism has not
one iota more power than we attribute to it.

80
The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

General Summary

A comparison of the texts shows quite clearly that


when Christian Science was first revealed to Mrs. Eddy,
she could not, in the beginning, fathom completely "the
metaphysical mystery of error" (Mis. 223:1). Being con-
stantly surprised by new manifestations of evil, she was
also incessantly driven toward solving the question of how
to handle evil from a new and higher standpoint. With each
consecutive edition, therefore, the standpoint changes-in
every case widening the previous one, correcting it in cer-
tain aspects, or dropping it completely as obsolete. Looking
back over this process, we can discern a line of develop-
ment that follows the same order as that of the synonymous
terms in the definition of God, which Mrs. Eddy finally
established in 1907 as: Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle, Life,
Truth, Love.
This is just one indication - among many others - that
Mrs. Eddy let herself be led forward gradually, a step at a
time, by the creative order of Being, and that the course of
her spiritual development was not premeditated and, there-
fore, not humanly devised. The divine idea guided her in
an ordered way, for Being has an immutable and irresist-
ible law of creation, and whoever submits to it constantly
and unconditionally is led in accordance with this law of
creative order, in all situations, toward the highest goal.
What signs of this order can we find in each main edition?
The first main edition (1875) introduces the reader to
Mrs. Eddy's observations and discoveries concerning the
abuse of the mental healing method that she taught. She
thanks "Wisdom" for revealing this hidden mental influence

81
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

and for uncovering the mesmerist's method of gaining


control over his patients. God, Mind, is wisdom, intelligence,
which is able to discern a situation rightly and analyze and
uncover the error. Mind is also the only true influence and
controls the universe including man.
The second main edition (1878) lays special emphasis
on the great difference between mesmerism and metaphys-
ics, the difference between the "Divine mind" and the
human mind, between clairvoyance and divine Mind-
reading. It shows that mental practice, as taught by
metaphysics, is always good, whereas mesmerism can be
used for good or evil. Metaphysics must not be confused
with mesmerism or adulterated by it. Mrs. Eddy points out
the clear line of demarcation between metaphysics and
mesmerism. Spirit is the synonym for God that portrays
the divine as the only, the only reality, and therefore the
wholly good, and draws a clear dividing line between Spirit
and matter, good and evil. Spirit, symbolized by the firma-
ment of the second day of creation, is the understanding
that draws the "line of demarcation between the real and
unreal" - "dividing the waters from the waters" -and admits
of no duality of good and evil.
The third main edition (1881-1882) deals with the
malicious, diabolical misuse of mesmerism - with "demon-
ology." This satanic practice is "the sin against the Holy
Ghost, which shall not be forgiven." I t is only possible when
the basest animal instincts predominate in the character.
The only protection from falling oneself into this lamen-
table practice is to hold fast to the rules of metaphysics.
Only thus can man's true sinless identity be saved from
degradation and degeneration; and, ultimately, it cannot

82
The Evolution of the Chapter on Animal Magnetism

be lost. Soul denotes the sinless nature of God, the unchang-


ing, unassailable identity of Being. The rules of Soul protect
man from the loss of his God-given identity, which is for-
ever sinless, and which cannot be controlled by sin, or lapse
into sin. God's man possesses only sinless qualities, and
only these can produce effects.
The fourth main edition (1883-1885) renders demon-
ology impersonal and treats it as a general belief that, as
error, has nothing whatsoever to do with a specific group of
mortals - malpractitioners. God, Principle, is impersonal and
also operates impersonally. It cannot abuse persons.
The fifth main edition (1886-1890) brings into the fore-
ground the warfare between animal magnetism (the red
dragon) and the idea (the woman). Animal magnetism is
now seen by Mrs. Eddy chiefly as the design of evil to hinder
the progress of the divine idea, to persecute the idea. For
this purpose, the pioneer is hounded and belied. If animal
magnetism is not opposed, but simply let alone, it can multi-
ply without hindrance. Life is the synonym for God that
represents, among other ideas, the multiplication of good;
Life sustains good and maintains it; Life supplies every-
thing with nothing but good. Life's method does not consist
in bringing the bad to everyone's notice, but in "patient,
unceasing love to all mankind, -love that cannot mistake
Love's aid." Life is the love that gives all good, projecting
it onto every situation.
The sixth main edition (1891-1901) emphasizes the
standpoint Truth. Animal magnetism is deprived of every
claim to truth or reality; it has in it no single element of
Truth. It is imperative to do what is true, what is right; there-
fore, "have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of

83
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

darkness" (scriptural note). Truth leads out of the "occult


science of Mind" into "Christian Science," where man can
do no harm, because scientific thoughts come to man from
God (and not from men). Truth symbolizes the nature of
God as that action whose effects are always true and right.
I t does not operate through false beliefs, nor through "right
beliefs," but only from God - from God's consciousness of
itself. This Truth-consciousness cannot be influenced by any
mental practice, either benevolent or malicious.
The seventh main edition (1902-1910) brings us to the
climax, where the "maximum of good" finds its true defi-
nition as "God and His idea," as the "All-in-all." God fills
all space. Into a consciousness filled with Truth and Love
no animal magnetism can enter; it can find no space there
to fill. The standpoint now is the allness of God and the
nothingness of evil, or the "so-called" mortal mind. Ques-
tions about evil are seen to be wrong questions because
there is no such thing as evil. Animal magnetism is unmasked;
behind the mask there has always been a bottomless void.
Love is the synonym for God that represents the insepa-
rable unity of God and its infinite expression; for the exalted
fact that God always has an idea of itself, which is expressed
as the All-in-all. Love is the law of total self-fulfilled Being;
it knows no accuser.

84
Chapter 3

Analysis of the Chapter "Animal Magnetism


Unmasked"

Standpoint of the Chapter

The step from metaphysics to Science. The radical


change that led to the scientific handling of animal magne-
tism began to take place, as we have seen, from 1891
onward, with the sixth main edition (Truth) and the seventh
main edition (Love). In these two editions, many themes
from the earlier main editions are either completely omit-
ted or only briefly touched upon. This is apparent in the
reduction of the number of pages from 46 in the third main
edition to only seven in the last two main editions. The
following material has been discarded: long accounts of
how the false practice of mental healing arose, the methods
used in malpractice, its symptoms and effects, and the pos-
sible protective measures that could be taken against it;
copious illustrations of the difference between metaphys-
ics and mesmerism (second main edition); evidence of the
scare caused by sinful, intentional, malicious malpractice
in the form of personal and impersonal demonology (third
and fourth main editions); descriptions of the warfare
against the dragon, or animal magnetism (fifth main edi-
tion). All these subjects, which gripped the interest of the
human mind and in particular excited the imagination, were
thrust far into the background in the sixth and seventh main

85
------ - -~-------------

ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

editions-diminished to nonessentials. What new insight


was responsible for this change?
At that time, Mrs. Eddy took the great step leading
from the standpoint of metaphysics to that of Science, which
includes metaphysics. The standpoint of metaphysics means
that we look beyond human, material beliefs to contem-
plate the truths of divine being; the standpoint of Science,
on the other hand, is that of the infinite One, which contem-
plates its own idea and embraces it. The metaphysical
approach is thinking about God, Truth; in the scientific
approach God, Truth, is conscious only of itself. The
metaphysical mode of operation starts from the problem-
analyzing it, uncovering the belief that lies behind it, and
correcting that belief by substituting for it the specific truth
to counteract it. The scientific method is quite different. It
puts the problem aside and starts from God, who is con-
scious only of itself and its idea. This divine consciousness,
or divine Mind-reading, allows the very truth to appear
that will, through the law of opposites, uncover the specific
error lying at the root of the problem. Whereas the meta-
physical approach starts with the problem, the scientific
approach goes out from God.
This change from a metaphysical approach (first to
fifth main editions) to a scientific approach (sixth to sev-
enth main editions) shows itself very clearly in the chapter
"Animal Magnetism Unmasked." It is found for the first
time in the sixth main edition (Truth), where the direction
is now "from God to man": "In Christian Science, man can
do no harm, for his thoughts are true thoughts, passing from
God to man." Later "his thoughts" was changed to "scien-
tific thoughts," doing away with the last vestige of the belief

86
Analysis afthe Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

that man can have true thoughts of his own. When thoughts
pass from God to man, they are no longer his own, but
"scientific" thoughts. Now, also for the first time, in the
chapter "Science, Theology, Medicine," Mrs. Eddy includes
the "Scientific translation of immortal Mind,"14 where trans-
lation from "God" to "idea" is again emphasized as the
standpoint of the scientific method of solving problems.
But not until 1909 is there a crystal-clear, unequivocal
statement of the standpoint of Science, from which animal
magnetism must also be handled. This standpoint, referred
to as "the maximum of good," is "the infinite God and His
idea, the All-in-all." Only shortly before, in the year 1907,
Mrs. Eddy had attained the highest point of her understand-
ing, when she declared in the chapter "Recapitulation" that
"Principle and its idea is one" (465:17), whereas earlier, in
the "Journal" for December 1886, she had written, "He
[God] elucidates His own idea, wherein Principle and idea,
God and man, are not one, but are inseparable as cause
and effect. If one, who could say which that 'one' was?"
(Mis. 361:28).
The standpoint of Truth and Love. The final text of the
chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked" is written from
this high standpoint of absolute Christian Science. It is the
standpoint of Truth and Love. Already in 1899 Mrs. Eddy
writes:" ... keep your minds so filled with Truth and Love,
that sin, disease, and death cannot enter them" (ibid.), and
then in 1902, in the chapter "Animal Magnetism," she
expands the key sentence on the proper self-government
of man from "Man is properly self-governed only when he

14 First termed the "Scientific definition of immortal Mind."

87
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

is guided rightly and governed by his Maker," to "Man is


properly self-governed only when he is guided rightly and
governed by his Maker, divine Truth and Love" (106:9).
Truth says: Whatever comes from Truth is right, true, real;
everything else is untrue, unreal. Love adds: Truth is all,
error is nothing. As seen from Truth, animal magnetism is
nothing but a false belief, possessing not a single quality of
Truth. From the standpoint of Love, Truth is the allness of
good; therefore, animal magnetism is a mere nothing.
The allness of good and the nothingness of evil. This is
brought out very clearly in the text. It is often helpful to
write down relevant statements side by side and study their
joint effect in order to catch the fundamental tone. The fol-
lowing passages are taken from the chapter (author's italics):
The allness of God, good. "God governs all that is real,
harmonious, and eternal" (102:2); "His power is neither
animal nor human" (102:3); "There is but one real attrac-
tion, that of Spirit" (102:9); "The pointing of the needle to
the pole symbolizes all-embracing power or the attraction
of God, divine Mind" (102:9); "Mind-science is wholly
separate from any half-way impertinent knowledge"
(103:12); "divine Principle, working out the purposes of
good only" (103:14); "The maximum of good is the infinite
God and His idea, the All-in-all" (103:15); "In Christian
Science, man can do no harm" (103:32); "Christian Science
... indicates the rightness of all divine action" (104:13); "Let
this age ... sanction only such methods as are demonstrable
in Truth" (106:15).
The nothingness of evil. "There is no proof of the exist-
ence of the animal magnetic fluid" (100:20); animal
magnetism "is not a remedial agent" (101:22); "In no instance

88
Analysis of the Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

is the effect of animal magnetism ... other than the effect


of illusion" (101:29); "Animal magnetism has no scientific
foundation" (102:1); animal magnetism possesses "neither
intelligence, power, nor reality" (102:6); "The planets have
no more power over man than over his Maker" (102:12);
"evil is not power" (102:30); animal magnetism "has not
one quality of Truth" (103:22); "In reality there is no mortal
mind" (103:29); there is "no transference of mortal thought
and will-power" (103:30).
When we hold the standpoint of absolute Christian
Science in consciousness and acknowledge that Truth and
Love are all and that evil is nothing, then every mental
argument between metaphysics and mesmerism becomes
irrelevant. Thus, none of the many questions and prob-
lems arising from the subject need be either posed or
answered. This is why the subject and the text could be so
greatly reduced.

Biblical Scriptural Note


"For out of the heart proceed evil thoughts,
murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false
witness, blasphemies: these are the things which
defile a man." - Jesus
The above quotation, from Matthew 15, replaces the
one from Paul in the sixth main edition ("And have no
fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather
reprove them. (Paul)"). The earlier quotation was an exhor-
tation to do right, to work in accordance with Truth. But in
the later quotation the emphasis is on the source of true as
against false works - the heart of Love versus the heart of
animal qualities. "Out of the heart proceed evil thoughts";

89
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

the cause of animal magnetism lies in the hearts of mortals.


Even evil thoughts are effect, not cause. As we have already
seen in the third main edition (p. 63), evil thoughts can do
no harm without an evil heart (without sensuality, envy,
malice, hatred, revenge, and so forth).
It is not "wrong thinking" that gives animal magnetism
so-called power, but rather the animal nature of man-
animal qualities and propensities. These work against
mortals until they are willing to be born again in Science.
It is not enough simply to change one's thoughts. That
would be very easy. Anyone can think one thing at one
moment and something quite different the next. But this
would not mean a change of outlook, a change of moral
character, a rebirth. We can change our thoughts at will, in
a moment; but changing our disposition is not so quick.
Indeed, we are not dealing with a "mental" or "thought"
magnetism, but with an animal magnetism. This is why
metaphysics, which operates in the mental realm, can be
misused by animality; the Science of Spirit, however, can-
not be so misused. Science, in contrast to metaphysics,
proceeds from God, not from people and their thoughts.
Animal magnetism, therefore, loses its supposed power in
proportion as we give up our own ego - as we think, feel,
and act from the "I AM "outwards.

Structure of the Chapter

The creative Word, or Logos, manifests itself in a lawful


order: Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle, Life, Truth, Love. Simi-
larly, Mrs. Eddy's understanding of the nature of animal
magnetism unfolded through the seven main editions in

90
Analysis afthe Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

the same order. The final text also follows this order in its
treatment of the subject. It examines animal magnetism
from the standpoint of Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle, Life,
Truth, Love and, because it goes out from the whole nature
of God, it gives a complete answer.
The chapter contains seven main themes, each of which
accentuates a different synonym for God. Because, however,
each of these synonyms reflects the other six, each main
theme is also presented in the light of the other synonyms
in different variations. Still greater clarity results from this
refinement. These combinations are characterized in the
text that follows by shortened forms. For example, instead
of "Mind reflecting Spirit," the form "Mind as Spirit" is
used. In these expressions, the synonym first mentioned is
always the dominant theme, the second synonym the subor-
dinate theme. "Truth as Love" would therefore be: "Truth
reflecting Love." Through the so-called law of opposites
each synonym uncovers its specific counterfeit. This direct
counterfeit must also be briefly symbolized. This is done
by prefixing "vs." for "versus" to the synonym, which is
written in parentheses. For example, (vs. Mind) denotes
"the counterfeit of Mind."
We have tried to summarize the essence of each domi-
nant and secondary theme in a short epitome. This epitome
is then further reduced to the corresponding synonymous
term for God or a synonym combination. The construc-
tion of the chapter is thus brought out more clearly.
The following exposition, therefore, is intended not
so much to interpret the text and illustrate it with examples
and experiences, as to show that the text itself is an inter-
pretation of the seven synonymous terms for God-exactly

91
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

suited to presenting this specific subject. Our task is to take


the text back to the synonyms and synonym-combinations.
Since these define the standpoint of God and its nature, it
is by them alone that we can gauge what is true and what is
false, what is real and what is unreal. Thus, the main object
of our investigation is to determine the exact use of these
synonyms and synonym combinations. This presupposes,
naturally, that the reader is well acquainted with the spiri-
tual meaning of the 7 synonymous terms for God and the
specific ideas that characterize each synonym. IS
In a later chapter it will be shown how this scientific
method of analysis enables us to arrive at fundamental laws
by which the problem of so-called evil can be handled in
an infinite way from the highest standpoint.

Mind
(100:1-101:32)

MIND: The effects of animal magnetism are due to the


influence of the imagination-to illusion.
Divine Mind is the basis, cause, origin, power of all
real manifestations. Everything is under the influence of
the divine Mind. That which does not stem from this Mind
is illusory. Animal magnetism, which is based on mortal
mind, cannot therefore exert any int1uence.

15 See Max Kappeler and co-authors, Compendium for the Study of


Christian Science #1-10 (Seattle: Kappeler Institute Publishing
USA, 1951-1953); also Max Kappeler, The Seven Synonyms for
God (Seattle: Kappeler Institute Publishing USA, 1984), and
Peggy M. Brook and co-authors, The Fundamentals of Christian
Science (London: Foundational Book Company, 1949).

92
Analysis of the Chapter ''Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

This fundamental theme of Mind is developed through


the reflection of all the 7 synonymous terms for God, bring-
ing out-according to the subject-the opposite of each
synonymous term.

Mind as Mind: Animal magnetism is regarded as a so- called


force, which can be exerted by one living organism on
another.

"Mesmerism or animal magnetism was first


brought into notice by Mesmer in GermanyI6 in
1775. According to the American Cyclopaedia,
he regarded this so-called force, which he said
could be exerted by one living organism over
another, as a means of alleviating disease." (Mar-
ginal heading: "Earliest investigations, 100:1).
Mesmer's contribution as a scientist was this: He ascer-
tained empirically the operation of a hitherto unknown
force, which he called animal magnetism. But instead of
drawing the hypothesis for a new theory by induction, from
the phenomena observed in his experiments, he tried to
make these phenomena fit a theory that he derived by
deduction, from a hypothetical universal principle. This was
a confusion of two methods; the development of a correct
theory thus became impossible.
For Mesmer, hypothetically deduced animal magne-
tism was an empirically discernible force, which he could
utilize for healing purposes. Christian Science teaches that
divine Mind is the only power and that this power alone
heals. Mind as Mind operates, therefore, as healing power.

16 Animal magnetism was in fact introduced in 1775 in Austria


(Vienna).

93
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Since animal magnetism is regarded as an additional force,


which can be exercised by one living organism over another,
it follows that it does not originate from the divine Mind.
It is therefore only a "so-called" force-indeed, its healing
effect must be hypothetical.

Mind as Spirit: The influence of this force works through


the substance of the nerves.
"His propositions were as follows: 'There exists
a mutual influence between the celestial bodies,
the earth, and animated things. Animal bodies
are susceptible to the influence of this agent, dis-
seminating itself through the substance of the
nerves"'17 (100:6).
The power of divine Mind operates only through the
substance of Spirit, not through matter or nerves. The influ-
ence of divine Mind communicates itself only spiritually; it
needs no material channels for its universal communication.
Mesmer believed that the magnetic healing power
worked through a rarefied fluid; Quimby also used mate-
rial means (especially water and manipulation) for
transmitting the "truth" to the patient. Nerves are supposed
to be the material medium for animal magnetism, which
explains why Mesmer was particularly successful with pa-
tients suffering from nervous disorders-neuroses and
hysteria. True information, however, is communicated spiri-
tually through the intelligence of the divine Mind, and not
through nerves.

17 These
propositions constitute only a small part of Mesmer's 27
"Propositions." See p. 7.

94
Analysis afthe Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

Mind as Spirit, spiritual Mind-power, refutes the belief


that material forces can in reality heal.

Mind as Soul: The observable effects of magnetic forces


are due to the excitement of the imagination and to
sense impressions.
"In 1784, the French government ordered the
medical faculty of Paris to investigate Mesmer's
theory and to report upon it. Under this order a
commission was appointed, and Benjamin
Franklin was one of the commissioners. This com-
mission reported to the government as follows:
'''In regard to the existence and utility of animal
magnetism, we have come to the unanimous
conclusions that there is no proof of the exist-
ence of the animal magnetic fluid; that the
violent effects, which are observed in the public
practice of magnetism, are due to manipulations,
or to the excitement of the imagination and the
impressions made upon the senses; and that there
is one more fact to be recorded in the history of
the errors of the human mind, and an important
experiment upon the power of the imagination'"
(100:12).
The French government appointed three commissions
(see p. 14) who all came to much the same conclusions.
Only one of the commissioners, de Jussien, did not subscribe
to the verdict of the Royal Society of Medicine. He insisted
that something more than imagination was involved. But
more than a century was to pass before this "imagination"
was more clearly analyzed, before it was recognized that
the psyche is a phenomenon that has many levels including
the unconscious, and before it was understood what role the
psyche plays in the origin of illnesses as well as of healing.

95
ANIMAL MAGNETISM- UNMASKED

Every belief has its objectification that can be observed


through the testimony of the senses. Mortal mind and body
are one. Matter and body are subjective as well as objective
conditions of mortal mind. Imagination and sense impres-
sions are externalized in the body. Since imagination stems
from the human mind and not from the divine Mind, its
physical manifestations are not true identities. Divine Mind
manifests all identities of being as the unchangeable ideas
of Soul (Mind as Soul).

Mind as Principle: The assertions of animal magnetism


do not stand up to scientific investigation.
"In 1837, a committee of nine persons was appointed,
among whom were Roux, Bouillaud, and Cloquet,
which tested during several sessions the phenom-
ena exhibited by a reputed clairvoyant. Their
report stated the results as follows:
'''The facts which had been promised by Monsieur
Berna [the magnetizer] as conclusive, and as
adapted to throw light on physiological and thera-
peutical questions, are certainly not conclusive in
favor of the doctrine of animal magnetism, and
have nothing in common with either physiology
or therapeutics.' This report was adopted by the
Royal Academy of Medicine in Paris" (Marginal
heading: "Clairvoyance, magnetism," 101:8).
This commission was appointed after somnambulism
had produced the phenomenon of artificially induced
clairvoyance (see p. 20). For want of sufficient proof, the
use of animal magnetism for therapeutic purposes was
dismissed as unscientific. Yet only a few years later, hypno-
tism was successfully used by some doctors in both surgery
and medicine.

96
Analysis a/the Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

From the standpoint of Christian Science, however,


mesmerism and hypnotism must be regarded as unscien-
tific healing methods. Only that which stems from divine
Principle is scientific and truly capable of healing. Mind is
the scientific Principle of healing (Mind as Principle).
Mind as Principle also manifests itself as divine Mind
interpreting Principle through the ideas of Principle, which
is called divine Mind-reading. The interpretations of divine
Mind uncover its opposite, clairvoyance (which is induced
through magnetism and hypnotism), as a faculty of mortal
mind and not of divine Mind. Since mortal mind can take
cognizance only of the beliefs belonging to its own realm,
it cannot discern through clairvoyance the realities of being.
Clairvoyance, or mortal thought -reading, cannot therefore
be a proper therapeutic remedy.

Mind as Life: Animal magnetism's influence is never con-


structive: it is destructive for both patient and
practitioner.
"The author's own observations of the workings
of animal magnetism convince her that it is not a
remedial agent, and that its effects upon those who
practise it, and upon their subjects who do not
resist it, lead to moral and to physical death" (Mar-
ginal heading: "Personal conclusions," 101:21).
Divine Life alone is constructive and uplifting. There-
fore, divine Mind as Life operates as a power that is forever
providing and maintaining life. Every other so-called power
(vs. Mind) must therefore operate destructively (vs. Life)
and "lead to moral and to physical death." Whoever does
not resist the claims of animal magnetism becomes its vic-
tim. If we believe that we are influenced by the world, and

97
ANIMAL MAGNETISM- UNMASKED

therefore by the stars, astrology, magic, occultism, hypno-


tism, spiritualism, the weather, sick beliefs, accidents,
heredity, politics, mass media, anxiety, doubt, frustration,
or present world conditions- then we experience for our-
selves destructive mental, physical, and physiological effects.
Not that these influences have power in themselves, but we
ascribe effective power to them. Our protection against them
is to harbor no such beliefs in consciousness, but rather to
fill our consciousness completely with divine Truth and Love,
so that Mind alone can exert its healing influence.

Mind as Truth: The healing effects of animal magnetism


are deceptive and illusory.
"If animal magnetism seems to alleviate or to
cure disease, this appearance is deceptive, since
error cannot remove the effects of error. Dis-
comfort under error is preferable to comfort. In
no instance is the effect of animal magnetism,
recently called hypnotism, other than the effect
of illusion" (101 :26).
Only Truth can destroy error. Mind as Truth is that
divine power that alone can annul error and bring to light
the true facts of being. Only Mind as Truth heals errone-
ous conditions. Therefore, when animal magnetism, with
all its countless shades of mental therapy, succeeds in bring-
ing about changes in the body, which appear as healings,
then this evidence is deceptive. Healing the symptoms is
not the same as healing the error that lies at the root of the
symptoms. Mesmer healed continuously, but so did exorcists
like Gassner, magnetizers of all types, charismatic healers,
and all the rest. Today the world is full of such mental and
psychical healing methods, all of which produce results.

98
Analysis of the Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

They all say: "By their fruits ye shall know them." All of
them believe that they have found the true therapy because
their works appear to bear them witness. But it is important
to realize that every belief takes effect within the realm of
the belief itself. Christian Science differs completely from
all other mental healing methods in that its healing is based
on the divine Mind, which manifests itself as Spirit, Soul,
Principle, Life, Truth, Love. Other methods spring from the
human, mortal mind, from human willpower and the power
of human thought. They are based on beliefs, not on an
understanding of God.
Even the psychosomaticians take the view that those
cured in the body are far from being healed, far from being
whole or holy. In such cases, one belief drives out another
belief; belief in the efficacy of the remedy drives out belief
in the disease. Thus the healing is "deceptive, since error
cannot remove the effects of error." Christian Science does
not try to remove the effects of error, but it removes the
error behind the effects. For this it must rest on Mind as
Truth, on Mind as the cause of all effects, which through
Truth destroys the beliefs that cause the error. The evidence
of animal magnetism is, therefore, nothing but the "effect
of illusion."

Mind as Love: The seeming benefit derived from animal


magnetism is in proportion to the belief in esoteric magic.
"Any seeming benefit derived from it is propor-
tional to one's faith in esoteric magic" (101:31).
Magic means control by secret forces. The mysterious
use of secret power (esoteric magic), which lies behind all
forms of animal magnetism and hypnotism, brings no real

99
----------

ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

benefit. Only the power of divine Mind, which is available


to all and can be understood by all, bears within itself, as
Love, complete fulfillment. Mind never manifests itself
im perfectl y.
End of Analysis

Christian Science starts from the basis that there is


only one Mind, the divine Mind, which is also the only true
power and the only true influence. From this standpoint,
animal magnetism is seen to be illusion, for:
it is merely a "so-called" healing power (vs. Mind),
that employs material methods (vs. Spirit),
and whose manifestations are merely due to the
excitement of the imagination and sense impres-
sions (vs. Soul),
it cannot be proved scientifically (vs. Principle),
its effect is always destructive (vs. Life),
its healings are deceptive (vs. Truth),
its benefit is only "seeming" (vs. Love).
Thus, through the truth of immortal Mind, the supposed
power of mortal mind is unmasked - as nothingness.

Spirit
(102:1-15)

SPIRIT: Animal magnetism is a mere negation of the


allness of the one God, Spirit.
Spirit is the only reality. Since animal magnetism -as
the first theme of Mind has shown-is only an illusory
power, the second theme of Spirit seeks to show that this

100
Analysis of the Chapter ''Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

illusory power, therefore, possesses no reality and must be


relegated to the realm of nothingness. Spirit is positive.
Spirit is the only; it admits of nothing besides itself. Spirit
knows no dualism.

Spirit as Mind: The only basis of reality is Mind; animal


magnetism has its basis in the unreality of mortal mind.
"Animal magnetism has no scientific foundation,
for God governs all that is real, harmonious, and
eternal, and His power is neither animal nor
human. Its basis being a belief and this belief
animal, in Science animal magnetism, mesmer-
ism, or hypnotism is a mere negation, possessing
neither intelligence, power, nor reality, and in
sense it is an unreal concept of the so-called
mortal mind" (Marginal heading: "Mere nega-
tion," 102:1).
Mind is the basis and Spirit is the reality of all being.
Spirit as Mind is the basis of reality. The basis of animal
magnetism, on the other hand, is a mere belief of so-called
mortal mind and, as such, is unreal. God's power is real;
animal or human power is therefore a negation of reality,
the opposite of Spirit as Mind.

Spirit as Spirit: God, Spirit, is the only reality.


"There is but one real attraction, that of Spirit.
The pointing of the needle to the pole symbol-
izes this all-embracing power or the attraction
of God, divine Mind" (102:9).
Spirit as the only, knowing no dualism, is also the only
true reality. Spirit as Spirit signifies that the only reality is
spiritual. Then the only true or real attraction is that of Spirit.

101
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Spirit as Soul: Spiritual reality controls the material, not


the other way round.
"The planets have no more power over man than
over his Maker, since God governs the universe;
but man, reflecting God's power, has dominion
over all the earth and its hosts" (102:12).
Soul is supreme. The rule of Soul, by which the greater
controls the lesser, cannot be inverted. Spiritual reality
cannot be subject to the material universe, the planets, the
earth and its hosts. Since Spirit operates as Soul, the spiri-
tual controls the material and temporaL If our consciousness
is one with Spirit, it has dominion over the world; if it is
not, then the world has dominion over us and in that case
we are subject to animal magnetism. But in reality we can
be ruled by no other attraction than that of Spirit.
End of Analysis

Whereas the first main theme (Mind) analyzes animal


magnetism not as a real power, but as a so-called force, the
second main theme (Spirit) goes a step further and shows
that there is only one power- the spirituaL God, Spirit, alone
is reality. Animal magnetism, the negating spirit that will not
accept the allness of divine Spirit, can have no reality.
Animal magnetism is a mere negation of the fact:
that Mind, God, is the basis (vs. Mind),
that this basis alone is the basis of reality (vs. Spirit),
and
that God, Spirit, has supremacy over the whole
universe and controls it (vs. Soul).

102
Analysis of the Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

Soul
(102:16-103:11)

SOUL: Spiritual understanding frees us from the mental


despotism of animal magnetism.
In this theme, animal magnetism is handled in its mali-
cious form as malpractice. In contrast to the detailed
accounts in the third main edition, covering 46 pages, and
the numerous articles that appeared in the "Journal" between
1888 and 1889, the whole problem is now reduced to one
brief page. Animal magnetism loses its sting as soon as we
meet it with spiritual understanding. Only Soul, being
sinless, can handle this sinful form of mental practice. Soul
always leads from sense to Soul; animal magnetism on the
other hand would drag everything down to the level of sin,
sensuality, and mortality. Soul discerns through spiritual
sense and spiritual understanding, whereas malpractice
works in secret, using dark and hidden paths. Soul-sense
remains wholly untouched by all the intrigues of sinful
mental practice. When we are armed with Soul, the most
poisonous arrows cannot reach us because we are no longer
a target for them.

Soul as Mind: Aggressive animal magnetism tries to exert


its influence in secret.
"The mild forms of animal magnetism are dis-
appearing, and its aggressive features are coming
to the front. The looms of crime, hidden in the
dark recesses of mortal thought, are every hour
weaving webs more complicated and subtle. So
secret are the present methods of animal mag-
netism that they ensnare the age into indolence,

103
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

and produce the very apathy on the subject


which the criminal desires" (Marginal heading:
"Hidden agents," 102:16).
Only those who are indifferent and apathetic toward
the claims of animal magnetism can fall under its tyranny
and become its victims. Ignorance does not protect us
against the law of sin. Discernment of the one Mind as the
"all-influence" preserves our identity sinless in Soul. Soul
as Mind stands for the inviolability of true identity (Soul)
through divine knowledge (Mind).

Soul as Spirit: Malpractice misuses animal magnetism for


the purpose of evil.
"The following is an extract from the Boston
Herald: 'Mesmerism is a problem not lending
itself to an easy explanation and development.
It implies the exercise of despotic control, and is
much more likely to be abused by its possessor,
than otherwise employed, for the individual or
society'" (102:23).
Spirit, which knows no duality, is the good per se. Soul
preserves every true identity intact. Soul as Spirit is unchang-
ing good. Those who identify themselves with Soul can
never practice evil.

Soul as Soul: Spiritual understanding robs sin of all its


claims.
"Mankind must learn that evil is not power. Its
so-called despotism is but a phase of nothing-
ness. Christian Science despoils the kingdom of
evil, and pre-eminently promotes affection and
virtue in families and therefore in the community.
The Apostle Paul refers to the personification

104
Analysis afthe Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

of evil as 'the god of this world,' and further


defines it as dishonesty and craftiness. Sin was
the Assyrian moon-god" (Marginal heading:
"Mental despotism," 102:30).
Through spiritual understanding (Soul)-which is
based on the fact that "evil is not power" (Mind) and is
"but a phase of nothingness" (Spirit) - the kingdom of evil
is despoiled (Soul). Because sin has no entity of its own
(Soul), it cannot exert any "mental despotism" (vs. Soul).
As long as we build on the opposite of Mind and the oppo-
site of Spirit, we grope about in the dark and cannot attain
spiritual understanding (Soul). The sinlessness of Soul rests
on Mind and Spirit, without which the veritable identities
of being cannot be discerned or understood. This not identi-
fying rightly is sin. On the basis of Mind and Spirit it is
impossible to malpractice (Soul). The rule of Soul is as
simple as that. The third main edition of the Textbook
(Soul) declared, for the first time, that adherence to the
rules of metaphysics protects us from malpractice and also
from malpracticing.

Soul as Principle: Scientific understanding operates as


universal blessing.
"The destruction of the claims of mortal mind
through Science, by which man can escape from sin
and mortality, blesses the whole human family"
(103:6).
Spiritual understanding (Soul) is an all-harmoniously
working Principle, which not only renders us incapable of
sin, but also "blesses the whole human family." Soul, oper-
ating as Principle, does not only bless individuals or

105
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

individual situations; it operates impartially throughout the


whole universe.

Soul as Life: Spiritual understanding cognizes only the


primeval existence of good.
"As in the beginning, however, this liberation
does not scientifically show itself in a knowledge
of both good and evil, for the latter is unreal"
(Marginal heading: "Liberation of mental pow-
ers," 103:9).
The suggestion of the knowledge of both good and
evil appears in the second account of creation. But "in the
beginning," in the first account, it was not there. Primeval
existence (Life) is sinless. We cannot handle evil by strug-
gling against evil-the dragon, the malpractitioner-or by
trying to protect ourselves humanly. Our protection lies in
going back to the primeval facts of being-to the Word of
Life, the eternal seven-fold nature of God-in order to
spiritually understand (Soul) being (Life).
End of Analysis

We have seen (p. 63) that malicious animal magne-


tism needs the cooperation of sinful traits of character; it
is indeed more than just "evil thinking." Sin is, therefore,
held in check not merely through "right thinking," but
through spiritual understanding-through Soul-sense. Soul
handles malicious animal magnetism through understand-
ing spiritually that:
Mind is the all-influence and therefore other hid-
den, secret influences are not possible,
Spirit, good, cannot be used for any purpose unlike
itself,

106
Analysis of the Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

Soul is sinless and therefore robs sin of its claims,


Principle's blessing operates impartially and
impersonally,
Life, primeval existence, can beget no evil.

Principle
(103:12-28)

PRINCIPLE: Mind-science operates in accordance with


a divine Principle; animal magnetism has no divine
Principle.
Unlike animal magnetism, divine Principle cannot be
made to operate by persons. Animal magnetism, being a
belief, requires a person to entertain the belief. But divine
Principle requires no persons; it is self-operating-it prac-
tices itself.

Principle as Mind: Divine Principle demonstrates itself


on the basis of Mind-science.
"On the other hand, Mind-science is wholly sepa-
rate from any half-way impertinent knowledge,
because Mind-science is of God and demon-
strates the divine Principle, working out the
purposes of good only" (103:12).
Animal magnetism is based on a gross ignorance of
the existence of the All-Mind. Mesmer's theory also made
deductions from an All, but his thesis of an all-current or
"all-magnetism" was a belief without foundation. To posit
hypotheses and never see that they are false is the tragedy
of so many researchers. Principle is based on divine Mind,
because Mind alone has the true primeval conception of

107
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Being. Whatever is not conceived of Mind can never


demonstrate itself as self-operating Principle. Animal
magnetism, hypnotism, suggestion, and psychotherapies of
various kinds have one thing in common: They stem from
the human mind, which is not of God, and reveal them-
selves sooner or later as "half-way impertinent knowledge,"
or as pseudo-science.

Principle as Spirit: Divine Principle works out the maxi-


mum of good.
"The maximum of good is the infinite God and
His idea, the All-in-all. Evil is a suppositional
lie" (103:15).
Everything that divine Mind conceives is its own infi-
nite idea, worked out by divine Principle and manifested
as infinite ideas. The realm of Mind is a realm of ideas,
which is the All-in-all. Mind's idea works out the maxi-
mum of good in every situation. This idea may not coincide
with mortal mind's conception and may ignorantly be
regarded as bad; but this does not make the good idea evil.
Any notion or conjecture of ours as to how the idea must
operate as good interferes with the divine plan; it is animal
magnetism, "a suppositional lie."
Principle is self-operating, always working out the
maximum of good (Spirit). Those who do not recognize
this malpractice themselves. They deprives themselves of
the operative power of the All-good. Those who believe
they are frustrated, that they have no real task in life, are
incapable of making a demonstration, are suffering from
lack, are unable to attain "full manhood," or are finding
life pointless - then they believe a suppositional lie and

108
Analysis of the Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

malpractice themselves to the maximum degree. We do best


when we give up our reservations and opinions, and surren-
der to the working of divine Principle. Then we experience
"the maximum of good."

Principle as Soul: Divine Principle defines animal magne-


tism as false belief.

"As named in Christian Science, animal magne-


tism or hypnotism is the specific term for error,
or mortal mind. It is the false belief that mind is
in matter, and is both evil and good; that evil is
as real as good and more powerful" (103:18).
Whereas Christian Science is based on a divine Principle,
animal magnetism is founded on false beliefs- beliefs that
are the opposite of Mind, Spirit, Soul, and Principle, namely:
that mind is in matter (divine Mind is limitless, the
All-in-all),
that this mind is both good and evil (Mind is Spirit,
the only, the wholly good),
that evil is as real as good (Spirit is Soul, which
identifies itself only with good),
that evil is even more powerful than good (Prin-
ciple is the only demonstrable power).
The so-called principle of animal magnetism produces
no effect for us the moment we turn to the Truth that lies
behind this lie-to divine Principle whose nature is Mind,
Spirit, and Soul. In a consciousness dedicated to this Prin-
ciple animal magnetism can do no harm.

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ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Principle as Principle: Divine Principle handles all the


categories of animal magnetism as one single belief.
"This belief has not one quality of Truth. It is
either ignorant or malicious" (Marginal head-
ing: "The genus of error," 103:22).
Animal magnetism belongs to the genus of "error."
No one category of this genus is better than another,
whether the mesmerism is conscious or unconscious, scien-
tific or unscientific, malicious or benevolent, sympathetic
or aggressive, intentional or unintentional, open or secret.
Not one of these categories has "one quality of Truth," not
one is better than another. It is only the human mind that
makes distinctions, fearing one type more than another.
Indeed, the human mind actually loves benevolent or sym-
pathetic magnetism. All the various shades of animal
magnetism are handled in the same way - through the one,
the only, omnipotent Principle. Principle handles the belief
that beliefs can exist at all.
In short, Christian Science gives us the key for han-
dling all claims of animal magnetism, namely: Never believe
a belief.

Principle as Life: Divine Principle preserves the true and


annihilates the false.
"The malicious form of hypnotism ultimates in
moral idiocy. The truths of immortal Mind sus-
tain man, and they annihilate the fables of mortal
mind, whose flimsy and gaudy pretensions, like
silly moths, singe their own wings and fall into
dust" (103:23).

110
Analysis afthe Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

Life preserves. Because animal magnetism does not


originate in divine Principle, it has no true life, no self-
existence; it cannot sustain itself. A characteristic symptom
of all mesmeric healing methods is that the so-called
"healed" suffer relapses and are generally worse after the
treatment than before. The reason for this is partly that
patients' confidence in their own resuscitating power is
taken from them. Instead of relying on Life, they puts their
trust in a mortal.
End of Analysis

Of the seven main themes of the chapter, the fourth


one was the last to be written. It also looks at the problem-
atic question of animal magnetism from the highest
standpoint-from God and its idea. It should be borne in
mind that this approach to the problem was not introduced
into the chapter until 1909.
Because divine Principle is only ever working out its
own divine idea and because this idea demonstrates the
All-in-all, animal magnetism (which is based on beliefs),
can have no self-operative principle.
Animal magnetism cannot work through a divine
Principle, because:
Principle is based on the All-Mind; animal magne-
tism is based on "half-way impertinent knowledge"
(Mind),
Principle is working out the maximum of good; the
conjectures of animal magnetism can only bring
forth evil (Spirit),

111
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Principle alone can define clearly what Principle


is, and must therefore identify animal magnetism
as a false belief (Soul),
Principle is the one and only Principle; it therefore
handles all types of animal magnetism as one and
the same error (Principle),
Principle maintains all that proceeds from Prin-
ciple; as animal magnetism cannot be derived from
Principle, it has no real existence (Life).

Life
(103:29-104:12)

LIFE: The practice of animal magnetism has no place in


divine being.
The previous theme, Principle, ended with the state-
ment that animal magnetism has no real existence. The fifth
theme, Life, now shows that the practice of animal magne-
tism can therefore produce no lasting results, but only such
as inevitably lead to a worse state than before.

Life as Mind: As being is of God, there is no "mortal"


mind.
"In reality there is no mortal mind, and conse-
quently no transference of mortal thought and
will-power. Life and being are of God" (Mar-
ginal heading: "Thought transference," 103:29).
In the All-in-all there is no thought transference because
none is needed. Life is omnipresent being. Mind is mani-
fested everywhere as its infinite idea-at every point of
being. Animal magnetism is based on the opposite belief

112
Analysis a/the Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

that thought and willpower are transferred from one person


to another. It denies the omnipresence of immortal Mind
and starts with the belief that there is a mortal mind. How
could a mortal mind bring forth anything immortal, con-
structive, or permanent? Life as Mind therefore discloses
the impossibility of Mind's ever being mortal or having to
be transferred from one place to another for "in reality
there is no mortal mind."
This belief of conscious and unconscious thought
transference is rife among mental practitioners: They
"send" patients good thoughts, and "think about" them
for an appointed time. Mind as Life is spaceless and
timeless, and the Mind-scientist is conscious of the omni-
presence of Mind.

Life as Spirit: Scientific Life-practice can only do good.


"In Christian Science, man can do no harm, for
scientific thoughts are true thoughts, passing
from God to man" (103:32).
Because man's life and being are of God, scientific
thoughts come to us directly from God, and do not need to
be transferred from one mind to another. God, Spirit, brings
forth only good. In the consciousness of the one Life, there-
fore, the Christian Science practitioner can only do good
(Spirit). A dualistic practice is impossible. This gives us the
confidence and certainty that, because of our devotion to
the Science of being, neither we nor others can come to
any harm. Neither health, supply, true friends-nor any-
thing else that is good by the divine standard-can be taken
away from us, though from the human point of view it may
often appear otherwise.

113
ANIMAL MAGNETISM- UNMASKED

Life as Soul: The newness of Life is discerned and acknowl-


edged by spiritual understanding.

"When Christian Science and animal magnetism


are both comprehended, as they will be at no
distant date, it will be seen why the author of
this book has been so unjustly persecuted and
belied by wolves in sheep's clothing" (104:3).
Why is a progressive idea persecuted? Not because
people want to persecute it, but because they lack spiritual
understanding. Just as we have to understand both the
somethingness of something and the nothingness of noth-
ing in order to handle evil,18 so we must also understand
both Christian Science and animal magnetism. An under-
standing of one without the other is insufficient and no
protection at all for the student.
Mrs. Eddy herself had to examine both sides of the
coin: first her revelation of Christ, Truth, and later-
reluctantly, but at God's behest-the methods of evil. The
religionist and the scientist are equally intolerant of fun-
damentally new models of thought, and use their own
separate means for relentless persecution. In both religion
and science it is always outsiders, dissenters-Jesus, Luther,
Mrs. Eddy, and others-who launch a progressive idea into
world consciousness and set a new paradigm. Initially, only
a few unprejudiced, independent thinkers are able to rec-
ognize and unreservedly accept what is fundamentally
new-thinkers who have neither their own personal inter-
ests nor those of the Establishment to protect. The history

18 See Max Kappeler, Notes on Handling Evil (Seattle: Kappeler


Institute Publishing USA, 1948).

114
Analysis afthe Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

of religion shows that a new idea was generally recognized


and supported by dissenters, so-called heretics, apostates,
recusants. The history of science presents no better pic-
ture. Prof. Max Planck commented: "A new scientific truth
does not usually succeed because its opponents are con-
verted and declare a change of attitude, but far more
frequently because they gradually die off and the next gen-
eration has been familiar with the truth from the
beginning."19
Thus, the persecution of a new idea must be charged
not to persons, institutions, or organizations, but to the inabil-
ity and unwillingness of the human mind to free itself from
old thought-models.
This must be thoroughly understood in connection
with animal magnetism. The animal nature of man, at odds
with his rational nature, tends to overrule his judgment. It
is unwilling and unequipped to investigate anything new
and become properly informed. It puts up a fight against
every change of consciousness and defends dogma and
tradition so that its personal and institutional interests will
not be jeopardized. Sympathetic mesmerism prefers to
avoid the path of the innovator or pioneer, which is tem-
porarily paved with persecution, misunderstanding, enmity,
excommunication, and abandonment to ridicule. Pioneers
themselves, however, since they are never spared these
fruits of their labor, must be awake to those suggestions of
animal magnetism that tell them that they have gone hope-
lessly astray, that it is pointless to swim against the tide of

19 Max Planck, WissenschaftlicheAutobiographie (Leipzig, 1928),


p.22.

115
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

apathy, that all their efforts are senseless, and that the
expenditure of their energy and means is all in vain. Other-
wise they cannot fulfill their mission. History seems to teach
that every new idea is always first persecuted, and animal
magnetism would suggest that this is a law. Yet this is not a
divine law, and we need not accept it. The law of Life as
Soul decrees that newness of Life always manifests itself
as full-flowing blessings of Soul, spiritual sense. This spiritual
sense alone is able to discern the breakthrough of the idea
and feel the deepest satisfaction in it. The Life-idea, spiritu-
ally understood (Life as Sou!), frees us from any persecution
sense and brings that feeling of inner contentment that
comes only from the contemplation of a higher idea.

Life as Principle: The right scientific interpretation of


being has universal impact, through the impulsion of
Life.
"Agassiz, the celebrated naturalist and author,
has wisely said:' Every great scientific truth goes
through three stages. First, people say it conflicts
with the Bible. Next, they say it has been discov-
ered before. Lastly, they say they have always
believed it'" (104:8).
Life is irrepressible. Principle interprets itself. Life as
Principle is the progressive interpretation of being. Sooner
or later a new idea becomes generally accepted as scien-
tific. These words of the Swiss-American naturalist Louis
Agassiz (1807-1873) may have been prompted by the German
philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) who wrote:
"Every hypothesis goes through three stages; in the first it
appears ridiculous, in the second it is opposed, and in the
third it is regarded as self-evident."

116
Analysis afthe Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

Coming from God, every idea bears within itself the


energy of Life whose forward thrust cannot be impeded,
diverted, or repressed. No idea can fail. It may suffer
misinterpretation for a time, but in the end even this must
yield to the irrefutable interpreting power of Principle.
People and institutions cannot hold it back. An idea flick-
ers up in one place or in several places simultaneously, for
it is spaceless; and it can wait, for it is timeless. There is
nothing more mighty than a right idea at the right time.
End of Analysis

The fifth theme, Life, shows us divine Being, the great


reservoir of Life, out of which the newness of Life is con-
tinuously pouring forth. In divine Being there is nothing
mortal, no mortal mind (Mind); only good flows from it to
all mankind (Spirit); spiritual understanding accepts it
(Soul) and penetrates every personal view, until good becomes
scientifically understood (Principle).
All that does not come from the fountain of Life is
animal magnetism:
It derives from a mind that is mortal (vs. Mind),
It does nothing but harm (vs. Spirit),
It persecutes and slanders (vs. Soul),
It misinterprets being (vs. Principle).

117
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Truth
(104:13-106:14)

TRUTH: The divine justice of Truth condemns animal


magnetism.
The sixth theme, Truth, deals with another quite distinct
aspect of animal magnetism. The question here is whether
mental malpractice is able to evade justice and punishment,
since its crimes, being committed in secret in the human
mind, cannot be overtly detected (Mrs. Eddy has already
considered this problem in the second main edition). The
text deals with questions of theodicy, divine justice, the juris-
diction of the courts, their judgments, and inalienable rights.
Truth is the divinely right and exercises divine jurisdiction.
Animal magnetism cannot escape divine judgment.

Truth as Mind: All action that comes from Mind is right;


any other so-called action is wrong.
"Christian Science goes to the bottom of mental
action, and reveals the theodicy which indicates
the rightness of all divine action, as the emana-
tion of divine Mind, and the consequent
wrongness of the opposite so-called action,-
evil, occultism, necromancy, mesmerism, animal
magnetism, hypnotism (Marginal heading: "Per-
fection of divine government," 104:13).
Here Mrs. Eddy takes up the question of theodicy. This
word comes from "theos" (God) and "dike" (right,justice).
Theodicy has to do with the vindication of God's justice.
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibnitz (1646-1716), who coined the
word, attempted to prove in his book "Theodicy" (1710)
that the world as we know it is the best of all possible worlds,

118
Analysis of the Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

and that the existence of evil is the necessary condition for


the existence of the greatest moral good. This teaching in
its various forms is diffused through all human and, more
especially, theological thinking: Good uses evil for the pur-
poses of good; only sickness brings people back to faith in
God; Faust needs Mephistopheles.
The theodicy of Christian Science, on the other hand,
is based on Truth as Mind. The only foundation for an equi-
table world government (Truth) is the action of the divine
Mind - not the action of mortal mind as, for instance, in the
case of mesmerism. Mortal mind is incapable of devising
the ideal world government. If mental action does not ema-
nate from divine Mind it is wrong.

Truth as Spirit: Spiritual qualities alone can bring about


true healing; animal qualities only make every case
worse.
"The medicine of Science is divine Mind; and
dishonesty, sensuality, falsehood, revenge, malice,
are animal propensities and by no means the
mental qualities which heal the sick. The
hypnotizer employs one error to destroy another.
If he heals sickness through a belief, and a belief
originally caused the sickness, it is a case of the
greater error overcoming the lesser. This greater
error thereafter occupies the ground, leaving the
case worse than before it was grasped by the
stronger error" (Marginal heading: "Adultera-
tion of Truth," 104:19).
Truth heals through Mind; animal magnetism believes
that it can heal through depraved dualities. When the mes-
merist appears to heal sickness it is only "the greater error
overcoming the lesser." Indeed, he leaves the case in a

119
ANIMAL MAGNETISM- UNMASKED

worse condition. Truth as Spirit destroys error through the


qualities of good (Spirit) and leaves the patient in a better
and constantly progressive condition.

Truth as Soul: Truth identifies mortal mind as the criminal.

"Our courts recognize evidence to prove the


motive as well as the commission of a crime. Is it
not clear that the human mind must move the
body to a wicked act? Is not mortal mind the
murderer? The hands, without mortal mind to
direct them, could not commit a murder" (Mar-
ginal heading: "Motives considered," 104:29).
Mortal mind and body are structurally one and the
same. The murderer's hand could do nothing without his
criminal mind. Soul identifies; it is not deceived. Truth as
Soul identifies aright: not a person, but sinning impersonal
mind must be identified as the criminal.

Truth as Principle: Divine metaphysics, not persons, is the


true judge of animal magnetism.

"Courts and juries judge and sentence mortals


in order to restrain crime, to prevent deeds of
violence or to punish them. To say that these tri-
bunals have no jurisdiction over the carnal or
mortal mind, would be to contradict precedent
and to admit that the power of human law is
restricted to matter, while mortal mind, evil,
which is the real outlaw, defies justice and is rec-
ommended to mercy. Can matter commit a
crime? Can matter be punished? Can you sepa-
rate the mentality from the body over which
courts hold jurisdiction? Mortal mind, not mat-
ter, is the criminal in every case; and human law
rightly estimates crime, and courts reasonably

120
Analysis of the Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

pass sentence, according to motive" (Marginal


heading: "Mental crimes," 105:3).

"When our laws eventually take cognizance of


mental crime and no longer apply legal rulings
wholly to physical offences, these words of Judge
Parmenter of Boston will become historic: 'I see
no reason why metaphysics is not as important to
medicine as to mechanics or mathematics'" (Mar-
ginal heading: "Important decision," 105:16).
Where a physical, objectively detectable offence is
involved, courts do indeed judge the act according to the
motive; they pass judgment on carnal, mortal mind. But
who can judge a "mental" crime? Can animal magnetism,
as such, be brought before human judges? Can a tribunal
clearly discern, assess, and then punish the evil of this
world? No. For that the higher law of justice is required-
divine Truth. Truth administers divine justice through
impersonal Principle, which interprets itself correctly in
every case, through scientific metaphysics.

Truth as Life: Divine justice puts an end to the misuse of


mental powers.
"Whoever uses his developed mental powers like
an escaped felon to commit fresh atrocities as
opportunity occurs is never safe. God will arrest
him. Divine justice will manacle him. His sins
will be millstones about his neck, weighing him
down to the depths of ignominy and death. The
aggravation of error foretells its doom, and con-
firms the ancient axiom: 'Whom the gods would
destroy, they first make mad'" (Marginal head-
ing: "Evil let loose," 105:22).

121
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Truth, divine justice, the divinely true, also reflects Life;


Truth as Life perpetuates (Life) only what is right in Truth,
and thereby brings about the end of error. Because mal-
practice does not come from Truth, it is doomed to
destruction; it is self-destructive. Malpractitioners condemn
themselves; they bring about their own downfall.

Truth as Truth: Truth upholds the standards of humanity;


the misuse of mental power lets them decline.
"The distance from ordinary medical practice to
Christian Science is full many a league in the
line of light; but to go in healing from the use of
inanimate drugs to the criminal misuse of human
will-power, is to drop from the platform of com-
mon manhood into the very mire of iniquity, to
work against the free course of honesty and jus-
tice, and to push vainly against the current
running heavenward" (Marginal heading: "The
misuse of mental power," 105:30).
Everything in our consciousness that does not conform
to the standard of Truth works against its own redemption.
A true consciousness (Truth) preserves the high standard
of man (Truth).

Truth as Love: Man's God-given rights are inalienable;


to violate them is to incur divine retribution.
"Like our nation, Christian Science has its Dec-
laration of Independence. God has endowed
man with inalienable rights, among which are
self-government, reason, and conscience. Man is
properly self-governed only when he is guided
rightly and governed by his Maker, divine Truth
and Love" (Marginal heading: "Proper self-gov-
ernment," 106:6).

122
Analysis a/the Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

"Man's rights are invaded when the divine order


is interfered with, and the mental trespasser incurs
the divine penalty due this crime" (106:12).
"The divine penalty" is the reduction of error to its
native nothingness. The effect of "divine order" is that Truth
reflecting Love can only ever fulfill itself. Truth has its own
fulfillment, which cannot be impeded.
In Christian Science, man is under a higher justice
than that of human tribunals. Governed by Truth and Love,
by the facts of being, which are always at the point of per-
fection, we possess complete self-government, which is not
exposed to wrong or capable of being invaded. The justice
that we enjoy is perfect and divine. We do not inquire of
human justice for its standard of values mean nothing to us.
End of Analysis

Throughout the theme of Truth, every subordinate


theme serves to show that mental or mortal consciousness
is condemned. The text deals with "mental action" (vs.
Mind), "mental qualities" (vs. Spirit), the "motive," which
determines the deed (vs. Soul); it deals with the judgment
of mentality not matter (vs. Principle), the misuse of men-
tal powers (vs. Life), the misuse of human willpower (vs.
Truth), and with mental trespass (vs. Love). This mortal
mentality constitutes the mortal consciousness of man,
which is the real malpractitioner. How do we guard against
malpracticing consciously or unconsciously? By consciously
claiming Truth for ourselves and acting accordingly.

123
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Thus, Truth exposes animal magnetism as false con-


sciousness:
whose mental action can produce only wrong effects
(vs.Mind),
which only makes every situation worse (vs. Spirit),
whose motives determine deeds (vs. Soul),
whose mental crimes escape human jurisdiction
(vs. Principle),
whose misuse of mental power is nevertheless self-
destructive (vs. Life),
which degrades man (vs. Truth),
whose mental trespasses receive no forgiveness
(vs. Love).

Love
(106:15-29)

LOVE: The law of Love does not sanction animal


magnetism.
In the perfection and all-inclusiveness of Love there
is only all or nothing, the all of Truth and the nothing of
error. All that is not of God is animal magnetism, or nothing-
ness. The allness of good excludes the possibility of evil.

Love as Truth: Animal magnetism cannot inherit the


perfection of Love.
"Let this age, which sits in judgment on Christian
Science,sanction only such methods as are demon-
strable in Truth and known by their fruit, and
classify all others as did St. Paul in his great epistle
to the Galatians, when he wrote as follows:

124
Analysis of the Chapter ''Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

'Now, the works of the flesh are manifest, which


are these; Adultery, fornication, uncleanness,
lasciviousness, idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, vari-
ance, emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies,
envyings, murders, drunkenness, revellings and
such like: of the which I tell you before, as I have
also told you in time past, that they which do such
things shall not inherit the kingdom of God ... '"
(Marginal heading: "Right methods," 106:15).
The consciousness of Truth makes us recognize that we
are the sons of God, the heirs of God, whereby we inherit
the kingdom of God, the realm of the perfection of Love.
The opposite consciousness, that of error or animal mag-
netism, cannot therefore "inherit the kingdom of God."

Love as Love: In the perfection of Love there is no animal


magnetism.
" .. .'But the fruit of the Spirit is love,joy, peace,
long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meek-
ness, temperance: against such there is no law'"
(106:26).
Nothing can prevail against the perfection of Love. Against
Love there is no law - no animal magnetism, no accuser.
End of Analysis

The unmasking of animal magnetism reaches its climax


in this seventh theme of Love. Can anything imperfect exist
in perfection? Perfection excludes imperfection. But to
attain this perfection, only the methods ofTruth may be sanc-
tioned (Love as Truth); then animal magnetism is indeed
the nothingness of imperfection (Love as Love).

125
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

The Place Value of the Chapter "Animal Magnetism


Unmasked" in the Textbook

The structure of the Textbook. Within the framework of


the 16 chapters of the Textbook ("Prayer" to "The Apoca-
lypse"),20 the chapter on animal magnetism occupies a
specific position. Its place value in the structural arrange-
ment of the Textbook is most significant. The climax of the
Bible is the symbol of the city foursquare, New Jerusalem,
coming "down from God, out of heaven" (Rev. 21:2). Mrs.
Eddy interprets the four sides of this holy city as (1) Word,
(2) Christ, (3) Christianity, (4) divine Science (see 575:18).
Each of the four sides, being spiritual, must reflect the other
three, so that the Word does not only reflect itself (Word as
Word), but it also reflects Christ (Word as Christ), Christian-
ity (Word as Christianity) and Science (Word as Science).
The same applies to the second side of the holy city, Christ;
here we have Christ as Word, Christ as Christ, Christ as
Christianity, and Christ as Science. Christianity has a simi-
lar 4-fold reflection and likewise Science. Thus there are,
in all, 16 different fundamental aspects of divine Being.
We know that the 16 chapters of the Textbook ("Prayer"
to "The Apocalypse") correspond with these 16 aspects.21

20 The Textbook contains 18 chapters. From the point of view of its


structure, the last two chapters must be regarded as an appen-
dix. Mrs. Eddy herself writes at the end of the 16 th chapter: "The
writer's present feeble sense of Christian Science closes with
St. John's Revelation ... " (577:28)( author's italics). Furthermore,
she writes at the beginning of the 17th chapter, "Glossary," that
"this chapter is added" (579:4). The 18th chapter consists of testi-
monies of various writers who have been healed through reading
the Textbook (see S&H p. 600).

126
Analysis afthe Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

The standpoint of the Word of God. The first four chap-


ters trace the ordered approach to the Word of God. They
describe, in four steps or stages, the Christian Science
student's right inward attitude for finding and realizing
oneness with God. The first chapter, "Prayer" (Word as
Word), presents this right attitude as one in which the
seeker turns to the Principle of being with a consciousness
of perfection. Only "God in us" can know God. The second
chapter, "Atonement and Eucharist" (Word as Christ),
demands a willingness to renounce the ungodlike for the
God-like in every experience and thus to accept at-one-
ment with God. The third chapter, "Marriage" (Word as
Christianity), then shows that, in proportion to our accep-
tance of this atonement with God, our attitude increasingly
expresses true humanhood in the place of mortal, human
qualities. And finally, the fourth chapter, "Christian Science
versus Spiritualism" (Word as Science), shows that we can
succeed in our approach to God, Spirit, only through a spiri-
tually scientific understanding of God, whereas blind faith
and beliefs are inadequate. Spiritualism is thus the opposite
of the Science of pure Spirit.
The standpoint of Christ. The second four chapters
portray the one Being from the Christ standpoint. Christ
is God's idea. The standpoint of Christ is: "out from God."
To go out from God, however, we must first attain the stand-
point of God. We can find the approach to God, and thereby
gain the standpoint of God, through the four Word chapters.

21 See Max Kappeler, The Structure afthe Christian Science Text-


book- Our Way of Life (Seattle: Kappeler Institute Publishing
USA,1954).

127
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

But unless we embody the attitude that the first four chap-
ters have shown us, we remain in the realm of beliefs, where
the spiritually scientific approach is mixed with material
beliefs (spiritualism). We cannot then experience the Christ-
operation either in our consciousness or in harmonious
demonstration. And so we remain a prey to animal magne-
tism, experiencing in our world of beliefs the falsehood that
Mind is both good and evil, and that evil can control good.
Christ presupposes Word. If we do not reach the
standpoint of the Word of God, we experience only the anti-
Christ-the influence and power of mortal mind, of erro-
neous beliefs that manifest themselves solely as evil.
Without the Word chapters we should have no notion of
how to find the right (and only) standpoint from which to
start; we could not free ourselves from evil's grasp. That is
why the first of the four Christ chapters is "Animal Magne-
tism, Unmasked" (Christ as Word), which bids us to divest
ourselves of everything that would prevent us from taking
the Word of God as our only standpoint in every situation.
But the standpoint of the Word is: Mind, Spirit, Soul,
Principle, Life, Truth, Love. When we go out solely from
this standpoint, the false beliefs of animal magnetism are
unmasked as nothingness and cannot harm us.
The method of handling error, therefore, does not
require that we struggle against it with all our might. As
error is nothing, it does not need to be struggled against;
otherwise we go down into a hell of our own making, build-
ing up in our own minds the belief of a kingdom of evil
which in reality does not exist. Handling evil requires that
we handle our own belief, which views the whole universe
and its events from a different standpoint from that of the

128
Analysis o/the Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

Word of God. When we accept in our consciousness the


standpoint of Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle, Life, Truth, Love,
as the only scientific standpoint, we become aware only of
"God and His idea, the All-in-all" (103:16); we have then
adopted the attitude of "Christ as Word," in which animal
magnetism is unmasked as nothingness (ibid. p. 52).
The question of evil. The fundamental error of animal
magnetism lies in the claim that evil exists and that it has
power. The Textbook does not declare from the very begin-
ning that there is no evil. The seeking thought of the student
is led to this absolute declaration only by degrees. If we
study all the references to the term "evil" in each chapter
of the Textbook, we learn the following: The chapter
"Prayer" does no more than awaken the desire to be freed
from evil; thus, there is still an implied belief in the exist-
ence of evil. In "Atonement and Eucharist," we are
constantly instructed to cast out evil; so again, it is tacitly
assumed that evil exists. In the chapter "Marriage," we are
called upon to let good predominate over evil in our lives;
thus some importance is still attached to evil. Not until the
last of the Word chapters, "Christian Science versus
Spiritualism," do we come to the scientific elucidation of
the problem of evil: "Evil has no reality. It is neither per-
son, place, nor thing, but is simply a belief, an illusion of
material sense" (71:2). Only in the strength of this declara-
tion can the first of the four Christ chapters, "Animal
Magnetism Unmasked," dispossess evil of any existence:
Evil has no power, no action, no influence, no law: "Evil is
a "suppositional lie" (103:17).Again we see that Christian
Scientists must first succeed in discerning spiritually- not
merely intellectually - the unreality of evil (chapters I-IV)

129
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

before they can prove the powerlessness of evil in their


own experiences. It is not enough to mentally supplant the
belief that evil has power by the new belief that error is
powerless. To replace one belief by another is not scientific;
a belief must yield to spiritual understanding. How many
declare that evil has no power and does not exist and yet
in their innermost hearts are terrified of it?
God the only power. Similarly the question, "What is
the only power-God or God's opposite?" is not answered
at the very beginning. A study of the references to "power"
in the various chapters of the Textbook gives the following
insight The chapter "Prayer" indicates that only that which
is directed to the divine possesses power. Then the chapter
"Atonement and Eucharist" shows that Jesus exerted divine
power over the power of sin, sickness, and death, over
matter and the body. The chapter "Marriage" points out
that the lack of spiritual power in popular Christianity can-
not be taken as counter-evidence of the actuality of divine
power. The chapter "Christian Science versus Spiritualism"
then explains that on the human plane mortal thought has
power until the spiritual is understood. If God is not under-
stood to be the only power, we experience God's unlikeness as
power. Not until the chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"
do we find the declaration that the power of God, divine
Mind, is "all-embracing" and the clear statement that ani-
mal magnetism has no power. Up to this point the reader
of the first four chapters retains the belief that evil also
has power-even though it may be less than God's.
As we study the chapter on animal magnetism, we see
how Christian Science deals with animal magnetism as a
world belief. The world believes in the power of mortal

130
Analysis afthe Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

mind; of magic (vs. Mind); of animal and human qualities


(vs. Spirit); of despotism (vs. Soul); of human sciences and
pseudo-sciences (vs. Principle); in the power to destroy,
persecute, and do harm (vs. Life); in the power of injustice
and in the lack of power against wrong (vs. Truth); in the
power that excludes us from redemption (vs. Love).
So, too, Quimby's therapy was based on a mortal belief,
on the power of right thoughts, or arguments of "truth."
But in Christian Science, the power of healing lies in divine
Mind, not in "right thinking." To be able to heal through
the power of Mind, Christian Scientists' first requirement
is to be at one with God in their whole inner attitude. This
oneness is not only a new mental outlook, it is also a new
spiritual outlook. Mrs. Eddy's great problem in teaching
her students Christian Science was how to advance the
process of their spiritualization. This seemed to her, at first, to
be a hopeless task. She saw the great danger of her students'
supposing that they could carry out their healing and redeem-
ing work through mental power - the power of thought and
willpower-instead of through spiritual power. For this
reason she first called her discovery "Moral Science," not
"Mental Science."
How then could the student's thought be spiritualized?
The answer lay in recognizing the unfolding process of spiri-
tualization, which had taken place in Mrs. Eddy herself.
She gave the answer to the question in] 891, by adding the
chapter "Science, Theology, Medicine" to the Textbook. This
first appeared as Chapter I and only found its right position
in ] 902 as Chapter VI (Christ as Christ). In this chapter
she writes: "God had been graciously preparing me during
many years for the reception of this final revelation of the

131
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

absolute divine Principle of scientific mental healing"


(107:3). What was her preparation? It was experiencing the
first five chapters of the Textbook. In them lies the Principle
of that spiritual experience that gradually endowed her with
divine power so that "the revelation of Immanuel, 'God
with us'" (107:7), could manifest itself in her as Christ's
power of manifestation in man.
We know from her biography that as a child she retired
seven times a day to pray. Her spiritual development began
with prayer,just as the Textbook begins with "Prayer." The
first chapter shows the right spiritual (not mental) attitude
towards prayer.
Later, when the time came for her to join the Congre-
gational Church, she took a definite stand against the
doctrines of the Last Judgment, predestination, and the eter-
nal damnation of unbelievers. Her convictions of universal
redemption and of the fundamental unity of God and man
had by now become so firm that she stuck to her opinions in
spite of strong opposition from her parents as well as from
the Church, and she was prepared to bear the consequences.
This prompted her insistence on vigorous championship
of Truth, such as we find in the second chapter, "Atone-
ment and Eucharist." Without this willingness to give up
all for Truth, no one can win the crown. Right thinking,
without courageous action to correspond, leads nowhere.
We know also that for 20 years Mrs. Eddy tried, in
spite of insuperable difficulties, to preserve her marriage
and to make it as successful as possible. This developed in
her the finest human qualities. In her journalistic writing,
as well as in her social work for the community, she was

132
Analysis of the Chapter "Animal Magnetism Unmasked"

always striving to raise standards. This is also the theme of


her chapter "Marriage."
When spiritism spread throughout New England, Mrs.
Eddy spoke and wrote strongly against it, although she lost
many of her friends through so doing. In the chapter "Chris-
tian Science versus Spiritualism," she rejects spiritualism
and spiritism unequivocally.22
After this she was involved in quimbyism, a type of
mesmerism, until she could eventually fathom it clearly and
perceive the great difference between mind-healing and
divine Mind-healing. In the chapter on animal magnetism,
she shows that human, erring, mortal mind has no intrinsic
power or reality. It was her insight into the nothingness of
mortal mind that prepared her consciousness for the revela-
tion of the allness of divine Mind.
Thus, the uncovering of the nothingness of animal
magnetism in chapter V is followed by chapter VI, "Science,
Theology, Medicine," which shows the power and allness
of Mind and Mind-healing. In this chapter, Mrs. Eddy sum-
marizes "the fundamental propositions of divine
metaphysics" in four statements (113:9). If we compare
these propositions with the definition of animal magne-
tism, which appears under the theme of Principle as Soul
in chapter V (see 103:20--22), we realize that the answer to

22 More information on spiritism and spiritualism can be found in


Max Kappeler, The Science of the Oneness of Being in the Chris-
tian Science Textbook (Seattle: Kappeler Institute Publishing
USA, 1983) pp. 97-98; also Max Kappeler, Compendium for the
Study of Christian Science, No.5 Spirit (Seattle: Kappeler Insti-
tute Publishing USA, 1951) pp.151-53.

133
ANIMAL MAGNETISM- UNMASKED

the anti-Christ as stated here is found in the sixth chapter


(Christ as Christ).
1. In chapter V, animal magnetism is defined as the false
belief "that mind is in matter." In chapter VI, we find
the first fundamental proposition states: "God is All-
in-all"; therefore, Mind cannot be "in" anything. All is
Mind and the manifestation of Mind as All-in-all.
2. In chapter V, animal magnetism is the belief that Mind
is "both evil and good," whereas the second funda-
mental proposition in chapter VI declares: "God is
good. Good is Mind"; therefore, Mind is wholly good.
3. In chapter V, animal magnetism is the belief "that evil
is as real as good," whereas the third fundamental
proposition in chapter VI shows that matter-and
therefore "mind in matter" - is devoid of reality: "God,
Spirit, being all, nothing is matter."
4. In chapter V, animal magnetism is the belief that evil
is "more powerful" than good, whereas in the fourth
fundamental proposition in chapter VI, "God, omnipo-
tent good" denies "death, evil, sin, disease."
Thus, we realize that it is only through the spiritual
development of the first five chapters that we can experi-
ence, in chapter VI, the constant power of the revelation
and manifestation of divine Mind. Unless we can discern
animal magnetism and handle it from the standpoint of
the 7 synonymous terms for God, our consciousness is not
sufficiently open and free to receive the continual revela-
tion of Truth, for "Truth is a revelation" (117:27).

134
Chapter 4

The Prophet Joel's Method of Handling Animal


Magnetism

The Christian Science textbook is a revelatory book


of which Mary Baker Eddy herself says: "It was not myself,
but the divine power of Truth and Love, infinitely above
me, which dictated 'Science and Health with Key to the
Scriptures'" (My. 114:23). "1 should blush to write of 'Science
and Health with Key to the Scriptures' as I have, were it of
human origin, and were I, apart from God, its author" (My.
115:4). "1 was a scribe under orders ... " (Mis. 311:26). Revela-
tion came to her from the eternal Truth and reality of divine
Being. Biblical writers drew their inspiration from the same
source. It is therefore not surprising that the Bible follows
the same spiritual laws as the Christian Science textbook.
Only the language, or symbolism, is different.
The Book of Joel provides a striking example of how
to handle animal magnetism. Joel builds up the subject in
the same sevenfold order of Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle,
Life, Truth, Love.23 The marked similarity between the
seven themes in the Book of Joel and those in the chapter
on animal magnetism is not immediately apparent because
the language is different. Yet the spiritual meaning is the

23 See Max Kappeler, The Minor Prophets in the Light of Chris-


tian Science (Seattle: Kappeler Institute Publishing USA, 1962),
p.44-53.

135
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

same. Mesmer coined the term animal magnetism, while


Joel speaks of an army of palmerworms, locusts, canker-
worms, and caterpillars.
Joel symbolizes that attitude of consciousness that has
the ability to uncover the suppositional power of animal
magnetism. "Joel" means "Jahweh is God," indicating that
only God, good, is God-that evil, or animal magnetism, is
not a god, and can therefore do neither good nor harm.
Joel was the son of Pethuel. "Pethuel" means "God deliv-
ers."The fact that God delivers (Pethuel) is demonstrated
even in human experience through the consciousness of
the son, which acknowledges and accepts none besides God
as the one God (Joel = Jahweh is God). Joel's purpose is to
show that God liberates us from animal magnetism only
when we consciously accept God alone as our God. While
Joel acknowledges that God alone is God, animal magne-
tism also claims to be a god, another power or reality.
In the following pages, the seven themes in Joel are
compared with the seven themes in the chapter on animal
magnetism in the Textbook, demonstrating their spiritual
agreement and proving that they come from the same
source of inspiration.

Mind

In the first theme of the chapter on animal magne-


tism, Mrs. Eddy shows that animal magnetism is "not a
remedial agent"; it is the suppositional power of evil,
capable of producing violent effects that can lead "to moral
and to physical death." She seeks to explain to students of
Christian Science that animal magnetism has no power as

136
The Prophet Joel's Method of Handling Animal Magnetism

such, but is a product of the imagination. We must realize


that its effect is "the effect of illusion" and that "this
appearance is deceptive." She awakens us to the danger of
being led astray by the "seeming benefit" of an apparent
"remedial agent."
Similarly Joel describes, in symbolic language, how
animal magnetism can never do good but only cause deso-
lation. "For a nation is come up upon my land, strong, and
without number. .. " (Joel 1:6). But this power, this army of
animal magnetism, brings with it only devastation: "That
which the palmerworm hath left hath the locust eaten; and
that which the locust hath left hath the cankerworm eaten;
and that which the cankerworm hath left hath the caterpil-
lar eaten" (Joel 1:4). This animal host destroys all things, as
though it alone had power. Just as Mrs. Eddy throws light
on this illusion and opens our eyes to its danger, so Joel
warns his hearers: "Awake, ye drunkards ... " (Joel 1:5). He
tries to rouse them from their illusions and give them the
new wine of deeper insight. Immortal Mind awakens
drunken and deluded thought to the realization that the
forces of animal magnetism only seem to be "strong and
without number."

Spirit

In the second theme, Mrs. Eddy shows that animal


magnetism is a "mere negation," a negation devoid of real
substance or reality. Being the very spirit of negation, it is
an unreal concept; its fruits can have no real substance.
Animal magnetism is without substance.

137
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Joel's message is similar: Animal magnetism cannot


bear fruit. The prophet gives a description of utter devas-
tation, for the army of animal magnetism robs us of true
substance: "The field is wasted ... the corn is wasted: the
new wine is dried up, the oillanguisheth ... the harvest of
the field is perished. The vine is dried up, and the fig tree
languisheth; the pomegranate tree, the palm tree also, and
the apple tree, even all the trees of the field, are withered
... Is not the meat cut off before our eyes (?) ... The seed is
rotten under their clods, the garners are laid desolate, the
barns are broken down; for the corn is withered ... the herds
of cattle are perplexed, because they have no pasture; yea,
the flocks of sheep are made desolate ... the fire hath
devoured the pastures of the wilderness, and the flame hath
burned all the trees of the field ... the rivers of waters are
dried up ... " (Joel 1:10-12,16-18,20). Thus Joel depicts
animal magnetism as a "mere negation," barren and void
of substance.

Soul

In the third theme of her chapter, Mrs. Eddy speaks


of the "aggressive features" of animal magnetism, which
are coming to the fore today. Premeditated sinful malprac-
tice is the opposite of Soul-sense. "The looms of crime,
hidden in the dark recesses of mortal thought, are every
hour weaving webs more complicated and subtle. So secret
are the present methods of animal magnetism that they
ensnare the age into indolence, and produce the very apathy
on the subject which the criminal desires." This leads not
to the freedom of Soul but to "despotic control."

138
The Prophet Joel's Method of Handling Animal Magnetism

Joel also describes this secret power, which insinuates


itself through every chink in the mental armor, gradually
permeating the whole human consciousness and taking
complete possession: " ... the day of the Lord cometh, for
it is nigh at hand; A day of darkness ... the land is as the
garden of Eden before them [the 'great people and
strong'], and behind them a desolate wilderness; yea, and
nothing shall escape them ... Before their face the people
shall be much pained ... They shaII run like mighty men;
they shall climb the wall like men of war; and they shall
march everyone on his ways, and they shall not break
their ranks: Neither shall one thrust another; they shall
walk everyone in his path ... They shall run to and fro in
the city; they shall run upon the wall, they shall climb up
upon the houses; they shall enter in at the windows like a
thief" (Joel 2:1-3, 6-9). It seems as though nothing can
halt the army of animal magnetism or divert it from its
course; it overcomes all obstacles, creeping in by stealth
and taking complete control.
In the middle of the Textbook chapter on animal mag-
netism, however, in the third theme (Soul as Soul), there
comes a great turning point-a clarion call to turn from
sin to Soul: "Mankind must learn that evil is not power ...
Christian Science despoils the kingdom of evil, and pre-
eminently promotes affection and virtue in families and
therefore in the community". As soon as we rely on spiri-
tual understanding and let Soul-sense rule, we become
immune from the attacks of sin or animal magnetism, and
we find in our daily experience that sin, or evil, can have
no more power over us. Our safety and invulnerability lie
in identifying ourselves with Soul.

139
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Joel, also, changes tone in the middle of the Soul theme


and calls upon his hearers to turn: "Therefore also now,
saith the Lord, turn ye even to me with all your heart, and
with fasting, and with weeping, and with mourning: And
rend your heart, and not your garments, and turn unto the
Lord your God ... " - here, again, is the call to turn from
sense to Soul, for Soul can transform all things - " ... for he
is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and of great kind-
ness, and repenteth him of the evil. Who knoweth if he will
return and repent, and leave a blessing behind him ... Spare
thy people, 0 Lord, and give not thine heritage to reproach,
that the heathen should rule over them ... " (Joel 2:12-14,
17). Soul-consciousness can turn even the worst situation
into a blessing, proving that evil is merely "so-called" evil
and that in reality only good is operating. Evil has no real
entity; it is only a misinterpretation of good. Spiritual under-
standing corrects this false testimony.

Principle

What happens when, through our spiritual understand-


ing (Soul), we identify ourselves with divine Principle? We
then relinquish the standpoint that interprets life and its
experiences apart from God and adopt the standpoint of
God, divine Principle, which demonstrates this Principle
alone, and always harmoniously. In the fourth theme, Mrs.
Eddy says: "On the other hand, Mind-science is wholly sepa-
rate from any half-way impertinent knowledge, because
Mind-science is of God and demonstrates the divine Prin-
ciple, working out the purposes of good only. The maximum
of good is the infinite God and His idea, the All-in-all."

140
The Prophet Joel's Method of Handling Animal Magnetism

Principle furnishes the solution to the problem: Everything


must be regarded from the throne of grace itself. Such a
consciousness is conscious only of the divine idea and its
operation - that which sustains the universe, including man,
and destroys error: "The truths of immortal Mind sustain
man, and they annihilate the fables of mortal mind .... "
Joel's message is similar: "Then will the Lord be jeal-
ous for his land ... " (Principle is always "jealous" for its
idea.) "Yea, the Lord will answer and say unto his people,
Behold, I will send you corn, and wine, and oil, and ye shall
be satisfied therewith ... be glad and rejoice: for the Lord
will do great things ... " (Principle demonstrates the maxi-
mum of good.) " ... for the pastures of the wilderness do
spring, for the tree beareth her fruit, the fig tree at the vine
do yield their strength ... for [the Lord] hath given you the
former rain moderately, and he will cause to come down
for you the rain, the former rain, and the latter rain in the
first month. And the floors shall be full of wheat, and the
fats shall overflow with wine and oil. And I will restore to
you the years that the locust hath eaten, the cankerworm,
and the caterpillar, and palmerworm, my great army which
I sent among you. And ye shall eat in plenty, and be satis-
fied, and praise the name of the Lord your God, that hath
dealt wondrously with you ... And ye shall know that I am
in the midst of Israel, and that I am the Lord your God,
and none else" (Joel 2:18-19, 21-27). In proportion, as we
turn to Principle and let Principle operate as the center
and circumference of our being ("that I am in the midst of
Israel"), Principle restores to us all that animal magnetism
appeared to take from us. Scientific understanding cor-
rects the belief that "locusts, cankerworms, caterpillars

141
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

and palmerworms" are the army of animal magnetism, and


designates the army as the Lord's ("my great army"), the
army of infinite Principle and its infinite idea. Principle is
always in our midst. When we look out from Principle we
know that Principle is always "working out the purposes
of good only" and that animal magnetism can never deprive
us of anything Godlike.

Life

Once we turn from sin to Soul and identify ourselves


scientifically with divine Principle, to the point where we
look at everything from Principle, then we can see that all
true Life comes from Principle. In the fifth theme of her
chapter on animal magnetism, Mrs. Eddy writes: "Life and
being are of God." The Life-stream flows from God to man,
"for scientific thoughts are true thoughts, passing from God
to man." This frees us from the erroneous belief that influ-
ences can be transferred from man to man. "In reality there
is ... no transference of mortal thought and will-power."
From Principle flows a superabundance of Life, spiritual
individuality, and divine inspiration.
Joel, also, shows that recognition of Principle as omni-
action floods the whole universe with abundant newness
of Life and inspiration. "And it shall come to pass after-
ward, that I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh" - there
is only one flow, that "from God to man" - "and your sons
and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall
dream dreams, your young men shall see visions: And also
upon the servants and upon the handmaids in those days
will I pour out my spirit" (Joel 2:28-29). The fullness of

142
The Prophet Joel's Method of Handling Animal Magnetism

Life expresses itself universally as individual inspiration


and creative spontaneity. By interpreting everything from
Principle, instead of human conceptions, we are able to
welcome the solution of a new problem, and avoid that
initial opposition to every new scientific truth (and persecu-
tion of the pioneer) to which Mrs. Eddy refers in the fifth
theme of her chapter. We then become ready to be pioneers
ourselves - divinely authorized innovators.

Truth

The sixth theme in the chapter on animal magnetism


deals with the theodicy of Christian Science: Truth guaran-
tees universal "divine government." The jurisdiction of
Truth sets up divine justice against mortal mind's unlawful
machinations, thus assuring the inalienable rights of man.
Joel, also, introduces the subject of right judgment, or
divine justice:" ... whosoever shall call on the name of the
Lord shall be delivered ... " (Joel 2:32). Whenever we submit
to Truth we can rely on this law of right judgment, which
brings deliverance from animal magnetism. "For, behold,
in those days ... I will also gather all nations, and will bring
them down into the valley of Jehoshophat" ("Jehoshophat"
means "Jahweh is judge"), "and will plead with them there
for my people and for my heritage Israel, whom they have
scattered among the nations, and parted my land. And they
have cast lots for my people; and have given a boy for an
harlot, and sold a girl for wine, that they might drink ...
speedily will I return your recompense upon your own
head" (Joel 3:1).

143
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Here we are reminded of Mrs. Eddy's words: "Who-


ever uses his developed mental powers ... to commit fresh
atrocities ... is never safe. God will arrest him. Divine justice
will manacle him. His sins will ... [weigh] him down to the
depths of ignominy and death." Under the law of Truth
error condemns itself. But Truth safeguards the inalienable
rights of man. In Joel's words:" ... the Lord will be the hope
of his people, and the strength of the children of Israel ...
then shall Jerusalem be holy, and there shall no strangers
pass through her any more" (Joel 3:16-17). No misconcep-
tions can penetrate the consciousness of divine Truth; no
longer can interference with the divine order invade man's
rights, nor mental trespass violate his consciousness. Mental
crime is outlawed.

Love

In the seventh theme of Mrs. Eddy's chapter on animal


magnetism, the fruits of animal magnetism are contrasted
with the fruits of Spirit, showing that the works of the flesh
"shall not inherit the kingdom of God." Only the works of
Truth attain fulfillment; animal magnetism dissolves into
its native nothingness.
Joel, also, shows on one hand the fruits of Truth and
on the other the fruits of error. The fruits of Truth are satis-
faction and plenty. "And it shall come to pass in that day,
that the mountains shall drop down new wine, and the hills
shall flow with milk, and all the rivers of Judah shall flow
with waters ... " (JoeI3:1S). Mrs. Eddy gives the same sense
when she quotes from Galatians: "But the fruit of the Spirit
is love,joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith,

144
The Prophet Joel's Method of Handling Animal Magnetism

meekness, temperance .... " Animal magnetism however is


doomed, as Joel foretells: "Egypt shall be a desolation, and
Edom shall be a desolate wilderness, for the violence against
the children of Judah ... For I will cleanse their blood that I
have not cleansed ... " (Joel 3:19,21). Similarly, Mrs. Eddy
enumerates the works of the flesh that are excluded from
the kingdom of God. Joel closes his prophecy with the Lord
dwelling in Zion (Joel 3:21). Truth is fulfilled in Love, the
kingdom of God is inherited; against this realm of conscious-
ness there is no law of animal magnetism.
End of Theme Comparison

Both the Book of Joel and Mrs. Eddy's chapter on


animal magnetism analyze the fundamental questions to
which mankind has always sought an answer: Are there
two powers, one good and the other evil? Is the human
mind a power and, if so, is it both good and evil? And fur-
ther: If there is such a mind, must it be regarded as a real
entity or not?
If there is only one Being, then there is only one power.
Dualism is excluded, rendering the question of good and
evil irrelevant. The omnipotence of God, divine Mind, is
power per se. We can either understand this power of divine
Mind or misunderstand it. When misunderstood, it seems
to mortal mind to be both good and evil, even predomi-
nantly malevolent. But when understood, it appears to the
human mind as what that mind calls "good." The power of
Mind, however, is beyond the concepts of good and evil.
Because there is but one power, the power of animal
magnetism - the army of locusts, cankerworms, caterpil-
lars, and palmerworms-is not for Joel an entity in itself;

145
ANIMAL MAGNETISM- UNMASKED

rather it is a mere misconception of the army of the Lord,


who calls it "my great army." Turning "to the Lord your
God" consciousness is compensated by experiencing the
"great army," "for the Lord will do great things." Joel shows
plainly that there are not two armies-an army of locusts
and an army of the Lord - but only one army. Looked at
from the standpoint of mortal mind it appears to be the
so-called army of animal magnetism. From the standpoint
of divine Mind it is "my great army." Mrs. Eddy offers us a
similar challenge: "Mankind must learn that evil is not
power ... the divine Principle [is] working out the purposes
of good only." Then the maximum of good, God and its
idea, is also demonstrated and experienced. Changing
mortal mind's standpoint for the divine standpoint restores
the harmony and plenty, which "seem" to have been lost.

146
Chapter 5

"Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves"

The need for divine laws

Today's problems cannot be handled by yesterday's methods


In the first chapter, we saw how the revelation of "Life
in and of Spirit" broke upon Mrs. Eddy's consciousness
when she was "near the confines of mortal existence, stand-
ing already within the shadow of the death-valley." Being
at first unable to explain scientifically this "mystery" of the
healing Truth, she was forced to explore it step-by-step. To
the end of her life she strove to give, through constant revi-
sion of her Textbook, an increasingly lucid presentation of
this revelation.
Another parallel development, however, was also tak-
ing place - an ever deeper investigation into the "mystery
of error" (Mis. 223:1). Mrs. Eddy was initially reluctant to
fathom a mystery of so different a kind, with "its hidden
paths, purpose, and fruits" (ibid.). But her discovery "that
Mind is All and matter is naught" (109:1) so stirred up "the
human mind" that it sought to prove that it too was an
independent entity-capable of bringing about both good
and evil. In the early 1870s, Mrs. Eddy was quite unprepared
for the phenomenon of intentional malicious mesmerism.
She had not ever supposed that her discovery of divine
Mind-healing could be misunderstood and consequently

147
ANIMAL MAGNETISM-UNMASKED

misused. Now, however, she was forced to take up the


research into animal magnetism. She had a long way to go
before finding the solution to the problem - before finally,
in 1910, changing the title of her chapter on animal magne-
tism to "Animal Magnetism Unmasked."
We have already seen, in Chapter 2, how Mrs. Eddy's
understanding of the whole problem of handling evil
evolved gradually. There, we showed this development by
analyzing the relevant chapter in each of the seven main
editions of the Textbook. We saw how the definite changes
in accentuation, which took place in the successive editions,
unfolded in the Word order: Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle,
Life, Truth, Love. Thus, the first main edition has the tone
of Mind, the second of Spirit, the third of Soul, the fourth
of Principle, the fifth of Life, the sixth of Truth, and the
seventh of Love.
The text analysis given in the third chapter of this book
is based on the text of the final edition of 1910, the authori-
tative edition for students of Christian Science. We find
that Mrs. Eddy develops her chapter on animal magnetism
in the same unfolding order of the Word: Mind, Spirit, Soul,
Principle, Life, Truth, Love. There is, therefore, a certain
agreement between the seven main editions of the Textbook
and the seven themes of the chapter on animal magnetism
in the final edition. This is not a textual similarity, for the
text does not bear any resemblance to that of the final edi-
tion until we come to the sixth main edition, when the
standpoint of interpretation draws nearer to Truth and
Love. The link that we notice is, rather, a metaphysical, spiri-
tually scientific agreement, discernible only to spiritual

148
"Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves"

sense. In the first five main editions (and, to a certain extent,


in the sixth as well) the approach to the subject is predomi-
nantly metaphysical, whereas the sixth, and especially the
last main editions, are written from the standpoint of
Science. The following pattern becomes evident: The spiri-
tual attitude with which animal magnetism is approached
in the first main edition finds its spiritual and scientific
culmination in the first theme of the chapter on animal
magnetism as it appears in the final edition. Here the main
tone is Mind. The same applies to the second main edition
in relation to the second theme of the Textbook chapter
(Spirit), and likewise for the third to seventh main editions
in relation to the respective themes of the Textbook chapter
(Soul, Principle, Life, Truth, Love).
Textual analysis, along with spiritual and scientific inter-
pretation, explains why Mrs. Eddy emphasized so strongly
that only the 1910 edition should be used as the standard
Textbook for the study of Christian Science. Only the final
edition presents pure Science. The earlier editions never-
theless serve to show more clearly that the development
from spiritual thought to scientific idea was a gradual pro-
cess. "They are indicators of successive stages of growth in
Christian Science ... The very contrasts help to see how the
thoughts have arisen only as we have been able to receive
them." A supplement to this passage from the "Journal" of
April 1891 may be found in the preface to "Miscellaneous
Writings." In this new collection, Mrs. Eddy republished
her miscellaneous writings that had already appeared in
the "Journal" between the years 1883 and 1896 (with the
addition of a few other articles). These were now made

149
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

"accessible as reference; and reliable as old landmarks."


She continues: "Owing to the manifold demands on my
time in the early pioneer days, most of these articles were
originally written in haste, without due preparation." Some
articles to which data "are affixed" are meant "to serve as
mile-stones measuring the distance,-or the difference
between then and now, - in the opinions of men and the
progress of our Cause" (Mis. x:8-16).
As far as the subject of animal magnetism is concerned,
we find that she did not think it necessary to include in
this volume her articles "Ways that are Vain" (1887) and
"Malicious Animal Magnetism" (1889) (see pp. 69-70) by
way of "landmarks," "milestones," or "indicators of suc-
cessive stages of growth" (ibid.). By the year 1896, they
had been effectively superseded. The sixth main edition
(1891) had already brought about such a marked change
in the handling of animal magnetism that it would have
been a most retrograde step for the reader of "Miscella-
neous Writings" to regard those articles as contemporary
teaching. Already, her short notice "A Card" in the "Jour-
nal" for August 1890 and, even more explicitly, her later
article "What Our Leader Says" in the "Journal" for
March 1899 (see p. 74), make it plain that the problem of
animal magnetism must be tackled from a quite different-
a higher-standpoint.
That this was not understood for a long time may be
seen from the following unfortunate developments. In 1909,
Mrs. Eddy collected together articles that she had written
after the publication of "Miscellaneous Writings." She
sealed them in a single packet, dated August 21, 1909, and
wrote on the envelope: "Nobody shall open this or read its

150
"Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves"

contents during my lifetime without my written consent."24


Mrs. Eddy left us in 1910. Not long afterwards, in March
1913, the Christian Science Board of Directors handed over
this sealed packet to Mrs. Eddy's publisher, with instruc-
tions to publish the manuscripts under the title "The First
Church of Christ, Scientist and Miscellany." On their own
authority, and disregarding Mrs. Eddy's express wishes, the
Directors of the Mother Church decided to incorporate
into the new volume a number of other articles of their
own choosing. One of these is "Ways that are Vain."
This article, written in 1887, belongs to the period of
struggle of the fifth main edition. Had it been Mrs. Eddy's
intention to publish it as a guide for the handing of animal
magnetism, she could have done so ten years after writing
it, in her collected "Miscellaneous Writings" in 1896. There
she writes in the Preface: "These pages, although a repro-
duction of what has been written, are still in advance of
their time; and are richly rewarded by what they have hith-
erto achieved for the race" (Mis. xi:5). The fact that she did
not include "Ways that are Vain" with the other articles for
republication indicates that they were neither current nor
"in advance of their time" but, from a metaphysical stand-
point, already obsolete. Moreover, she would have had a
further opportunity to republish the article in 1909 when
compiling manuscripts that later appeared as "Miscellany."
How greatly her attitude to the subject of animal magne-
tism had changed is further illustrated by her article in the

24 Report of the Committee on General Welfare to the Members of


The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts,
p.21.

151
- - - - - - -

ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

"Journal" for July 1895 (reprinted in the "Christian Science


Sentinel" for November 13, 1909). There, she makes her
last statement on animal magnetism: "Animal magnetism,
hypnotism, etc., are disarmed by the practitioner who
excludes from his own consciousness, and that of his patients,
all sense of the realism of any other cause or effect save
that which cometh from God. And he should teach his
students to defend themselves from all evil, and to heal
the sick, by recognizing the supremacy and allness of good"
(My. 364:9). This reads quite differently from what Mrs.
Eddy had written in "Ways that are Vain." We can see from
this why she gave the following warning in the "Journal"
for August 1908: "What I wrote on Christian Science some
twenty-five years ago I do not consider a precedent for a
present student of this Science. The best mathematician
has not attained the full understanding of the principle
thereof, in his earliest studies or discoveries. Hence, it were
wise to accept only my teachings that I know to be correct
and adapted to the present demand" (My. 237:5). The inser-
tion of "Ways that are Vain" into "Miscellany," contrary to
her wishes, led readers (including today's readers) to believe
that the teaching in it is "adapted to the present demand."
It is always disastrous to try to overcome present prob-
lems with outworn methods of the past. Those who are
acquainted with the general thought of the Christian Science
movement know how much the attitude of "Ways that are
Vain" still overshadows much more progressive methods
of handling animal magnetism. The average Christian
Scientist has a real fear of animal magnetism. This is the
most extreme form of self-malpractice.

152
"Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves"

Animal magnetism must now be handled through laws


A much higher attitude to the problem gradually
evolved. In the edition of February 1908, Mrs. Eddy made
one of the last amendments to her Textbook-she added
this brief paragraph to the end of her chapter "Christian
Science Practice": "Christian Scientists, be a law to your-
selves that mental malpractice cannot harm you either
when asleep or when awake" (442:30). The attention of the
field was drawn to this addition by her notice in the "Jour-
nal" for March 1908, in which she says: "I consider the
information there given to be of great importance at this
stage of the workings of animal magnetism, and it will
greatly aid the students in their individual experiences" (My.
236:27). One year later, there appeared in the "Journal" for
July 1909 a further notice that called upon Christian Scien-
tists to "give daily attention" to this new addition (My.
237:14). As protection against malpractice she now pre-
scribes not only Christ-like traits of character, such as love,
patience, gentleness, goodness, meekness, unselfishness, and
so on, but also genuine adherence to scientific spiritual laws.
Being a general (therefore collective and universal)
belief, animal magnetism cannot be handled simply by indi-
vidual disbelief or by ignoring it altogether. Christian
Science teaches that the belief of the majority governs that
of the minority unless "individual dissent or faith ... rests
on Science" (155:12). We cannot just say we do not believe
in the influence of other people's thoughts, in astrology,
spiritualism, occultism, magic, and so on. What we need is
an understanding of Science firmly rooted in conscious-
ness, for this alone can handle general beliefs. Neither a
host of arguments for Truth, nor fragmentary scientific

153
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

statements, are strong enough to meet all the claims of


mental malpractice. The only thing that avails is Science.
Science however means "knowledge reduced to law and
embodied in system" (Funk & Wagnalls Dictionary).
When calling on Christian Scientists to be a law to
themselves so that mental malpractice cannot harm them,
Mrs. Eddy does not say exactly which law or laws she is
referring to. It would not have been possible for her to state
all the laws of being explicitly and develop them in all their
complexity. Mrs. Eddy gave us the fundamentals that con-
stitute the system of the Science of being, and it is the task
of the Christian Scientist to reduce the myriad facts belong-
ing to a particular category of Being to the simplest and
most comprehensive possible laws. The capacity for such
simplification - for such reduction to laws - is the beginning
of understanding.
Through careful textual analysis of (a) the seven main
editions of the Textbook and (b) the seven themes of the
chapter concerned, we can reduce the complexity of details
belonging to the specific subject of "animal magnetism" to
a few simple facts-to the 7 synonyms for God. With the
help of these synonyms we can deduce the laws that handle
animal magnetism systematically from the standpoint of
divine Being. What makes a scientist is not just being able
to understand the text of scientific books, but being able to
work in a scientifically creative way. The concept of Science
" .. .includes trustworthy methods for the discovery of new
truth within its own domain" (Oxford English Dictionary).
Without the inherent ability to constantly discover new
truth, a science is no longer worthy of the name. "All Science
is a revelation" (Ret. 28:25). Through revelation, not

154
"Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves"

through human logic, Mrs. Eddy made the discovery that


divine Being can be understood as a Science. The unique
feature of this Science is this: It reveals the fact that Truth
reveals itself to each one of us through its scientific char-
acter.1f we ask what it is that "reveals," the answer is to be
found in the Textbook, which shows that it is "Science,"
"divine Science," or "Christian Science" that reveals. Not
once in the Textbook do we find that "God reveals .... "
The Textbook deals with the Science of being, which
is reduced to a system of divine ideas: "Divine metaphys-
ics is now reduced to a system, to a form comprehensible
by and adapted to the thought of the age in which we live.
This system enables the learner to demonstrate the divine
Principle, upon which Jesus' healing was based, and the
sacred rules for its present application to the cure of disease"
(146:31).A system is based on laws operating within itself
to maintain the correlation of separate facts and preserve
the whole as an indivisible unity.
Mrs. Eddy shows that God is the only lawmaker and
lawgiver governing being, the universe, and man, with divine
laws. What are divine laws? It is not enough to admit that
everything is subject to God's laws. We must know what
these laws are and be able to formulate them clearly. What
would be thought of a mathematician who affirmed that
mathematics was based on certain laws without being able
to explain exactly what the elements and relationships of
those laws were? The truth of mathematics is useless to
those who are ignorant of its laws. To be able to use math-
ematics we must have an exact knowledge of its laws. It is
the same with the Science of being. If we are not acquainted
with its laws we cannot demonstrate the facts of being

155
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

scientifically in our daily lives. Scientific thinkers in Chris-


tian Science, therefore, need to fathom the complex laws
of infinite Being - to use them creatively and let themselves
be used by them.
Scientific analysis of the text shows that each chapter
of the Textbook has its own laws, in addition to the laws of
unity and structure, that weld the 16 chapters together as
a structural whole. The laws that operate in the chapter
"Prayer" are different from those in "Atonement and
Eucharist," and so on. Without this diversification, classifi-
cation, and individualization, the Textbook would not be
an exposition of Being in its Science, but only an amorphous
mystical whole, which would be little more than a collection
of aphorisms.
Our subject is animal magnetism. The chapter in ques-
tion, coming fifth in the Textbook, has within the structure
of the whole the place value of "Christ as Word" (see p.
116); it explains how the Christ resolves the belief of anti-
Christ into its native nothingness, through the operation
of certain specific laws. When we become acquainted with
these laws we can use them to handle animal magnetism
ourselves, thus taking heed of Mrs. Eddy's instruction:
"Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves that mental
malpractice cannot harm you either when asleep or when
awake" (442:30).

The law of Mind

In the first main edition, the chief emphasis is on Mind;


here the main purpose is to investigate the emergence of a
deviation from mental practice (mental malpractice), to

156
"Christian Scientist!J~ be a law to yourselves"

fathom its methods and observe its effects. This led to the
discovery and elucidation of the "metaphysical mystery of
error" (Mis. 223:1). Thoughts seem to have power, evil or
error seems to have power. Is it possible for one person's
state of mind and health to be influenced by another's
thoughts, will, or evil nature? Is there such a thing as
thought transference from one person to another? Can one
person be held within the mental control of another? Can
good and evil, health and sickness, be transmitted?
The first theme of the Textbook chapter on animal
magnetism is also concerned with investigating this so-
called agency and its alleged influence on people's minds
and bodies. It deals with the findings of various medical
commissions, which had been set up for this purpose, and
also with Mrs. Eddy's own observations. The conclusion
was that animal magnetism possesses no influence and that
the observable effects are psychogenic-due to the imagi-
nation. In short, the supposed effects of animal magnetism
do not belong to the realm of divine reality; they belong to
the domain of illusions. Their manifestation is in proportion
to one's faith in esoteric magic.
By what yardstick did Mrs" Eddy measure when she
made such an unequivocal judgment on the nature of this
so-called influence? In Christian Science, divine Mind exer-
cises the only real influence. There is no other influence
besides this Mind. The so-called influence of stars, people,
environment - everything that does not stem directly from
the divine Mind-is therefore nothing but a false belief, an
illusion or deception, to be classified as mere "appearance,"
not as reality. This brings us to the following law:

157
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Law: Divine Mind is the all-influence; there is no other


influence.
When we realize that we have only the Mind which is
God, then in our own consciousness the starting point is
always Mind. We are also aware that Mind alone exercises
influence on the whole universe including man, and there-
fore no one and nothing can be under any other influence,
as none other exists. Every other supposed influence is an
illusion. Only in the sphere of illusions can we experience
conscious and unconscious psychogenic and mental influ-
ences. A first priority for Scientists is therefore to be
consciously aware that divine Mind alone has any influence
in the realm of reality.
Because every synonym for God reflects every other
synonym, it is scientifically legitimate to modify the law of
Mind previously described through this sevenfold reflec-
tion. In this way we culture the consciousness that the
all-influence of divine Mind manifests itself as the influence
of all the ideas of Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle Life, Truth,
and Love.
As each synonym can be characterized by a large
number of specific ideas,25 this elaboration of the laws gives
the student of Christian Science wide scope for divine in-
spiration. The elaborations of the laws in this book are thus
to be regarded only as examples: They do not represent
the only possible, correct, or authentic renderings. But the
variation of a law must stick to the ideas characterizing

25 See Max Kappeler, Compendium for the Study of Christian


Science, No. 4-10 (Seattle: Kappeler Institute Publishing USA,
1951-53).

158
"Christian Scientist~~ be a law to yourselves"

each particular synonym, otherwise the law is falsified and


it reverts to an exercise in mystical meditation. This natu-
rally means that the Christian Scientist needs to acquire a
spiritually refined and cultured acquaintance with the 7
synonyms for God. We can, for instance, know:

Mind as Mind: The influence of divine Mind is all-power.


Everyone and everything is under the perpetual influ-
ence of divine creative power and action. Divine law
alone exerts influence in human affairs. We live under
the influence of constant enlightenment, inspiration,
and vision. An "all-current" of divine intelligence and
divine information pervades our thoughts and stimu-
lates our creative abilities. No ungodlike power, force,
action or intelligence can touch us or influence us-
neither from the stars, the weather, heredity, the body,
nor from any other source. Man does not move in the
magnetic field of private or public opinion, individual
or collective suggestion.

Mind as Spirit: The influence of divine Mind is the one pure


Spirit. Spirit, good, places us under the influence of
divine good only. Nothing evil can influence us, no evil
thoughts, intentions, deeds, or ambitions. Only good,
the fruit of the Spirit, comes to us and remains with
us. The influence of Spirit compels in us the new birth,
the spiritualization of our life and consciousness. It
forces us to relinquish the material and seek the spiri-
tual. Dualism and spiritualism have no more influence
on us than materialism. The only influences that affect
us are spiritual reality and progress.

159
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Mind as Soul: The influence of divine Mind is the sinlessness


of Soul. This influence suffuses everything and every-
one with the joy, bliss, freedom, and beauty of Soul.
Depression, listlessness, and psychological complexes
have no influence on us; they cannot identify them-
selves with us. The influence of Soul is constancy,
inviolability, unimpaired identity; this influence keeps
man free from sin. In the consciousness of Soul-sense,
the influence of sense-testimony and emotionalism
cannot harm us or weaken our spiritual understand-
ing. We are not subject to any psychic influences.

Mind as Principle: The influence of divine Mind is the


scientificalness of divine Principle. In the conscious-
ness of the one Mind our thinking has the imprint of
divine Mind-reading, of the divine interpretation of
the universe including man, as the influence of divine
Principle makes us think scientifically, systematically,
and structurally. A consciousness of the divine gov-
ernment of Principle imparts a sense of the harmony
of being, in the human as well as in the divine realm,
for under the influence of scientific consciousness even
the body works harmoniously. N either medical, physi-
ological, nor psychological theories and laws can
influence the harmonious government of our being.

Mind as Life: The influence of divine Mind is the newness


of Life. In the consciousness of the one Mind we are
under the influence of the uninterrupted Life-impulse,
which constantly surprises us with spontaneous inspi-
ration and the infinitely varied individualization of

160
--- -~----------

"Christian Scientist!;~ be a law to yourselves"

being. Those who place themselves under the influ-


ence of the unquenchable Life-source glimpse the
creative genius of Being, which never repeats itself
throughout its infinite restructuring. Boredom, frus-
tration, indifference, retrogression, and mental
ossification cannot influence the progression of Life.

Mind as Truth: The influence of divine Mind is the conscious-


ness of Truth. The influence of Truth brings to human
consciousness true health, divine creative power,
wholeness, and true form. Only that which is true, right,
and just comes to everyone and everything, influenc-
ing the development of true manhood, even in mortal
existence. Neither disease nor tyranny, nor anything
unworthy of manhood, can influence the true idea of
man. Truth gives man dominion over error, so that all
erroneous influences are powerless before a conscious-
ness of the one Truth. There is no influence capable of
enslaving man.

Mind as Love: The influence of divine Mind is the perfec-


tion of Love. In the consciousness of Love we are held
in Love's current of grace and blessing, which bestows
only Love because Love cannot help but be Love.
Influences of hatred, revenge, envy, anxiety, and fear
cannot prevail against Love, as there is no room for
them in the perfection of Love; finding no foothold
they are swept away. No negative influence can corne
near Love. Love's current leads only to divine com-
pleteness, and under this influence man sees the
consummation of divine purposes in his own experience.

161
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

The law of Spirit

In the second main edition, the subject of animal mag-


netism is dealt with under the title "Mesmerism." The main
emphasis is now on Spirit, which admits of no mingling of
Godlike with ungodlike.1t is here that the contrast between
mesmerism and metaphysics is brought out. Mrs. Eddy
takes up the struggle against the adulteration of her system
of metaphysics by mesmerists. Mesmerists often passed
themselves off as metaphysicians, and some metaphysicians
called themselves mesmerists. She points out emphatically
that the metaphysics taught by her is not mesmerism, for
the two are fundamentally incompatible. Mesmerism is
based on the action of the human, mortal, fleshly mind,
whereas the basis of her metaphysics is the "Divine mind."
The second theme of the Textbook chapter presents
the subject of Spirit in relation to animal magnetism from
a much higher standpoint. The contrast here is not between
mesmerism and metaphysics, but between animal magne-
tism and God. The basis of animal magnetism is false belief;
the basis of Science is God. But only one basis is real and
that is God. Spirit is the only real force or agent, and Spirit's
attraction is the only attraction. Everything based on some
other foundation is unreal, a mere negation of reality, an
unreal concept of mortal mind. God, Spirit, is the nature of
divine Mind and is reflected as spiritual qualities, whereas
animal magnetism expresses animal and human nature.
This can be formulated as follows:

Law: The nature of Spirit is the only real nature; animal


nature is a negation.

162
"Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves"

If there is only the Spirit which is God, then there is


only one Spirit that is real. In the one Spirit, all effects come
only from spiritual laws and spiritual qualities. Therefore,
human existence is influenced only by Spirit and spiritual
ideas. Man lives under the attraction of Spirit, not in the
sphere of bad, negative, or degrading propensities. The
nature of God and man is Spirit; it is not animal. Man,
dwelling in the atmosphere of Spirit, remains untouched
by any form of materialism or spiritualism.
When we consider this law of Spirit in the light of the
7 synonyms for God, we can, for instance, know:

Spirit as Mind: The reality of Spirit consists of ideas of


divine Mind. Human opinions, thoughts, preconceptions,
and conjectures are therefore unreal, illusory, decep-
tive. Ideas of Mind, such as power, force, intelligence,
law, and action constitute the nature of spiritual reality.
They alone form the substance of Spirit. The human
belief that Mind is in matter (and that power, force,
intelligence, law, and action, therefore, belong to matter)
is a mere negation of the reality of the one and only
nature, that of Spirit. Man as the idea of Spirit expresses
only Mind's idea, never a negative mentality.

Spirit as Spirit: The reality of Spirit consists of the substance


of Spirit. Ideas constitute this substance. As the idea
of Spirit, man is constituted of spiritual qualities only.
In reality, therefore, we live only in the atmosphere of
spiritual unfoldment, divine order, and irresistible
progress. Our substance consists of the fruits of Spirit,
incorruptible treasure. In reality, the new birth is always

163
ANIMAL MAGNETISM- UNMASKED

going on in us, producing ever better conditions, oppor-


tunities, and capabilities. No negation can rob us of
this inexhaustible substance.

Spirit as Soul: The reality of Spirit is ensured by the change-


lessness of Soul. No contrary opinion can make
alterations in reality. Reality remains untouched, unblem-
ished' inviolate, intact. Man, who dwells in Soul as the
idea of Spirit, cannot be sUbjected to attacks of sin
and malpractice; our spiritual entity remains immune
from all malicious attempts to distort our true
selfhood. Our real identity is safe against egotism,
emotionalism, sentimentality, excitability, and instabil-
ity. Undeterred, we go forward from sense to Soul until,
step-by-step, our God-given mission is fulfilled.

Spirit as Principle: The reality of Spirit forms the imper-


sonal basis of divine Principle. This reality is not
dependent on human or personal theories about reality.
Spirit's foundations cannot be shaken by natural science,
dogma, philosophy, or cosmology. Theories and sciences
come and go; reality remains what it is. Those who have
chosen Spirit as their Principle cannot, therefore, be
enslaved by other principles, people, or organizations.
For them, the reality of spiritual Principle operates
irresistibly; they acknowledge no other reality.

Spirit as Life: The reality of Spirit lies in the eternality of Life.


Nothing is capable of destroying reality. No spirit of
negation, no spirit of denial can change, impair, dimin-
ish, limit, deprive, or kill Life. As the idea of Spirit, man

164
"Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves"

moves in the realm of the one eternal, deathless Life


in which he experiences ever afresh only spiritual
progress, increased inspiration, and spontaneous intu-
ition. Animal magnetism cannot make man a prey to
loneliness, poverty, lack, age, and death.

Spirit as Truth: The reality of Spirit exists because of the


self-affirmation of Truth. Only that which is true, right,
and just is affirmed in man as the idea of Spirit. Error
alone denies what is real and actual. Truth affirms in
us complete health and wholeness, the right standard
of manhood, freedom, and dominion over all error.
Animal magnetism is the great liar and negator, which
would set up the unreal as the real, but in truth only
destroys itself.

Spirit as Love: The reality of Spirit consists of the all-inclu-


siveness of Love. Because Love is all-embracing and
therefore includes all reality, animal magnetism - the
denial of Spirit - is excluded; it is unreal. Spiritual reality
finds its fulfillment, the divine plan finds its comple-
tion, in the allness of Love. Man as the idea of Spirit
experiences the reality of salvation and purposeful
living, which animal magnetism cannot hinder or deny.

The law of Soul

The third main edition, with its emphasis on Soul, deals


with demonology-the intentional, premeditated, insidi-
ous, malicious misuse of mental power, the unrestrained
cruelty of demonic mentality. This demonology unleashes

165
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

animal impulses without adherence "to the rules of meta-


physics," which demands moral responsibility.
We find a similar tone in the third theme of the Text-
book chapter, except that now in this final edition the
subject is much more concentrated and treated from a
higher, unemotional standpoint. Here as well, Mrs. Eddy
speaks of malicious animal magnetism, its "aggressive
features," the "looms of crime, hidden in the dark recesses
of mortal thought," "hidden agents," "secret methods,"
"despotic control," "mental despotism," and so on.
Also typical for the theme of Soul is the indication
of the scientific rule for handling evil- namely, spiritual
understanding. The rule is plain: "Mankind must learn that
evil is not power ... Christian Science despoils the king-
dom of evil.. .. " This does not come about through "a
knowledge of both good and evil." What is required is a
clear spiritual understanding that affirms the facts of being
and denies their suppositional opposites: "let your com-
munication be, Yea, yea; Nay, nay" (Matthew 5:37).
Christian Scientists know that they have to handle
both conscious and unconscious beliefs. Just as we can see
only about one-seventh of an iceberg appearing on the
surface, while the much greater part is hidden from sight,
so we are aware of only an iota of the sum total of false
beliefs that threaten our harmony. We are unaware of indi-
vidual, collective, and universal beliefs latent in the
unconscious, though they color all our human life. If we
wish to demonstrate in our daily experience the perfect
idea of manhood, free from beliefs, then we must handle
beliefs of every kind consciously and consistently. It is not

166
"Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves"

enough to spasmodically tackle the erroneous beliefs we


become aware of in discordant situations. This leaves us in
the perpetual danger that some other belief may surface
from the unconscious to manifest itself in fresh discord.
Thus, the sequence would never be broken, as one problem
sets off another and we should never find rest. Hence the
necessity for handling evil in general, every day. Instead of
giving all our attention to the healing practice, we now see
preventive practice as the more important. Preventive prac-
tice, far more than healing practice, makes us true Christian
Scientists. Those regarding Christian Science as an exclusively
or essentially therapeutic method is using malpractice-
healing presupposes sickness. Without the prerequisite of
sick humanity that view of Christian Science would lose
its raison d'etre.
We can formulate this as follows:

Law: The spiritual understanding of Soul plainly identi-


fies what exists and what is nonexistent.
Soul-sense identifies rightly: It is not duped by sense-
testimony. From Soul comes the ability to define clearly
through spiritual understanding what is true and real and
what is only illusion. It enables us to attest the truth of
what is true and to disclaim illusion as false, so that we do
not fall into the trap of seeing illusion as truth and truth as
illusion. When the truths of Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle,
Life, Truth, Love are distinctly affirmed in us, and their
suppositional opposites denied as nonexistent, then our
true selfhood is secured in consciousness.
The following are examples of this law seen in the light
of the 7 synonyms for God:

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ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Soul as Mind: The spiritual understanding of Soul testifies


that Mind alone is power, force, intelligence, wisdom,
knowledge, law, origin, action, guidance; therefore
mortal mind has no power, force, intelligence, wisdom,
knowledge, law, origin, nor action, and cannot guide
us correctly.

Soul as Spirit: The spiritual understanding of Soul testifies


that Spirit alone is substance and reality, that only
Spirit brings about development, unfoldment, divine
order, and true fruitage. The purity of Spirit alone
brings the new to birth. Matter, on the other hand, has
no substance nor reality; it can neither unfold and
develop good, nor can it bring forth good fruits.

Soul as Soul: The spiritual understanding of Soul testifies


that Soul alone brings happiness, joy, satisfaction,
sinlessness, constancy, security, balance, identity, invio-
lability, and invulnerability. The corporeal senses can
testify to none of these; their testimony is never true.

Soul as Principle: The spiritual understanding of Soul testi-


fies that divine Principle alone is the basis for a true
science, or divine system, and that only the categories
of Principle can interpret Being aright and demon-
strate harmony. Personal opinion is not Principle; its
sciences are hypothetical, its categories inadequate,
and its interpretations wrong; its systems and organi-
zation are human and its results always discordant.

Soul as Life: The spiritual understanding of Soul testifies


that divine Life alone is both Life and life giver; that

168
"Christian Scientist~~ be a law to yourselves"

Life alone bestows true individuality and inspiration;


Life alone possesses spontaneity; Life alone is able to
exalt all things and perpetuate all that is true. Mortals
are not creators; they lack true individuality and genu-
ine creative impulse; their way of life is narrow, limited,
finite, monotonous, transient.

Soul as Truth: The spiritual understanding of Soul testifies


that divine Truth alone imparts true consciousness
and that Truth is the savior, the healer, the physician,
and an ever-present help-that Truth alone is God's
ideal, demonstrating health, wholeness, and dominion.
Truth-consciousness alone constitutes man. The human
concept of truth is not truth but error. Error is not our help,
savior, or healer. Erroneous consciousness is not man.

Soul as Love: The spiritual understanding of Soul testifies


that divine Love alone is perfect, fulfilling its purpose-
ful plan, and is all-inclusive and universal. Hate,
revenge, fear, envy, and intrigue cannot carry out or
fulfill their designs; rivalry meets with no success.

The law of Principle

In the fourth main edition, where the accent is on Prin-


ciple, demonology is presented as an impersonal belief.
Everything shown as the personal operation of malicious
malpractice in the third main edition is absent from the
fourth. Names of persons have been removed from the text.
Animal magnetism is an impersonal belief and can there-
fore be countered by impersonal divine Principle.

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ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

This standpoint of Principle is also the fourth theme


of the Textbook chapter. The ever-operative Principle is
the sole practitioner, working out "the purposes of good
only," "the maximum of good": "God and His idea, the
All-in-all." Animal magnetism is not a person but a per-
sonal belief, belonging exclusively to "the genus of error."
Malpractice never originates in a person. True practice, on
the other hand, comes from God and "demonstrates the
divine Principle."
We do well to rid ourselves of the misconception that
any person or organization can malpractice us. If we none-
theless feel the symptoms of being malpracticed, we know
that this is only possible while we believe in malpractice-
and that this is our own belief that we are feeling. We need
to be more consciously aware that the only practice operat-
ing for us is the practice of divine Principle, which is ever
at work.
From this we can deduce the following law:

Law: Divine Principle practices us as idea, as the demon-


stration of the maximum of good.
Suppose we imagine ourselves to be under a curse,
intentional or otherwise, because of someone's attitude
toward us of hatred, envy,jealousy, revenge, ignorance, and
so on. Suppose also that we still believe that such a nega-
tive attitude has power to influence our life for evil- then
this is our own misapprehension, our malpractice. For true
practice, the only practice there is, consists in the fact that
in all circumstances divine Principle is practicing us-as
the infinite divine idea. All that is ever going on is divine
Principle and its idea.

170
"Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves"

Let us see how we can elaborate this law in the light


of the 7 synonyms for God:

Principle as Mind: Divine Principle practices me, every-


one, and everything as the infinite idea of Mind,
demonstrating in me, in everyone, and in everything
the maximum of intelligence, spiritual vision, wisdom,
enlightenment, knowledge, awareness, divine intu-
ition, power, action, faculties, guidance, direction.
No mentality can be placed under the influence of
malpractice.

Principle as Spirit: Divine Principle practices me, everyone,


and everything as the infinite idea of Spirit and dem-
onstrates in me, in everyone, and in everything the
maximum of spiritual purity, reality, substance, rebirth,
development, progress, success, and spiritual order.
Progress can never be hindered through malpractice.

Principle as Soul: Divine Principle practices me, everyone,


and everything as the infinite idea of Soul and dem-
onstrates in me, in everyone, and in everything the
maximum sinlessness, satisfaction, spiritual selfhood,
poise, confidence, spiritual sense, and spiritual under-
standing, joy, and definiteness. Malpractice can never
distort, deface, or remove any identity.

Principle as Principle: Divine Principle practices me, every-


one, and everything as the infinite idea of Principle
and demonstrates in me, in everyone, and in every-
thing the maximum of scientificalness, structuring,
system, government, spiritual power, honesty, obedi-

171
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

ence to God, spiritual operation, harmony, and imper-


sonality. Malpractice has no operative power.

Principle as Life: Divine Principle practices me, everyone,


and everything as the infinite idea of Life and demon-
strates in me, in everyone, and in everything the
maximum of newness and impUlsion of life, spontane-
ity, vitality, renewal, exaltation, inspiration,
individualization, abundance, provision, multiplication,
support, and permanence. Malpractice cannot even
temporarily or partially interfere with or diminish being.

Principle as Truth: Divine Principle practices me, everyone,


and everything as the infinite idea of Truth and dem-
onstrates in me, in everyone, and in everything the
maximum of divine sons hip, Christ-consciousness,
divine manhood, Science-consciousness, health,
dominion, justice, and ideality. Malpractice has no
conSCIOusness.

Principle as Love: Divine Principle practices me, everyone,


and everything as the infinite idea of Love and dem-
onstrates in me, in everyone, and in everything the
maximum of plan-fulfillment, salvation, completeness,
perfection, divine compensation, purpose, aim, divine
oneness, and universality. Malpractice practices in
nameless nothingness.

The law of Life

In the fifth main edition, with the accent on Life, the


chapter appears for the first time under the title "Animal

172
"Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves"

Magnetism." "Animal" stresses the sense of "life in and of


matter," which is further symbolized by the dragon. It is
here that we find the warfare between the dragon and the
woman, which is described in the newly added chapter "The
Apocalypse" as "the divine method of warfare in Science,"
(568:6) whereby "the maximum of good is met by the
maximum of evil."
This is the period of struggle in which Mrs. Eddy
started a section for animal magnetism in the "Journal"
(1887-1888) to give readers the opportunity of sharing
their observations and experiences. In "A Card" (1890) she
announces that such discussion is to be dropped until Scien-
tists are no longer "in danger of dwarfing their growth in
love." The whole problem of animal magnetism is to be
solved only through "patient, unceasing love to all man-
kind, -love that cannot mistake Love's aid."
The fifth theme in the Textbook chapter deals briefly
with the same problem. From the recognition that "Life
and being are of God" follows the realization that "in Chris-
tian Science, man can do no harm, for scientific thoughts
are true thoughts, passing from God to man." But what if
someone is not "in Christian Science," and is not enlight-
ened enough to recognize the progressive scientific idea?
He or she then becomes the persecutor and slanderer
(dragon) who unjustly "persecutes and belies" the idea and
its pioneer.
In the history of both religion and science there have
been countless examples of this. Animal magnetism decrees
that whenever a new revolutionary idea is born, pioneers
and their followers must pay the price of persecution-
sickness, accident, lack, frustration, personal sacrifice, death,

173
ANIMAL MAGNETISM- UNMASKED

and so on. This false law, which in reality is directed not


against persons but against God, can only be successfully
countered by a scientific law.
What is this law, looked at from the standpoint of divine
Life? Life is the source of inspiration and newness for every
single idea. Those who have enough unselfed love toward
God are capable of grasping a new idea, and it is love for
the revealed idea that impels us to follow it. But we can
love the idea only because Love has first loved us. Thus, we
know that Love loves each one of us for loving the new-
ness of the idea and lets us partake of the abundance of
Life. This brings us to the law of Life:

Law: In adhering to a progressive spiritual idea we par-


take of the measureless abundance of Life.
Instead of assailing the dragon (animal magnetism,
or even persons, organizations, and churches who perse-
cute and misunderstand us) - as in the period of the fifth
main edition - the scientific law now demands a much
higher method. Not only must "patient, unceasing love to
all mankind" now determine our moral attitude, but some-
thing more, namely the conscious conviction that Life is
constantly rewarding us for our adherence to a progres-
sive idea. Then we feel within us the boundless dynamics
of the infinite progression of being. "Infinite progression is
concrete being ... " (Mis. 82:20).
Let us consider this divine law in the light of the 7
synonyms for God. We can for instance know:

Life as Mind: When we adhere to a progressive spiritual


idea, Life loves us beyond measure; Life loves us so

174
"Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves"

much that only the ideas of Mind can come to us,


influence us, abide with us, and operate in us. As a
result of our searching, studying, and discovering the
divine Mind in its more infinite meaning, Mind gives
us renewed vision, more spiritual perception, filling
us with the Mind of Christ whereby all our spiritual
activities, motives, and desires are divinely supported
and maintained. We are conscious of this fact; we
know it and we feel it. Therefore, mortal mind finds
no response in us.

Life as Spirit: When we adhere to a progressive spiritual


idea, Life loves us beyond measure; Life loves us so
much that Spirit bestows on us the infinite substance
of good and infinite unfoldment in heavenly order.
As a result of separating ourselves from the old land-
marks with their well-worn paths, Spirit fosters the new
birth in us, bringing forth painlessly newness of life,
enlarged opportunities, and riper faculties. We know
that this is true, and we feel it. Therefore, frustration
finds no place in us.

Life as Soul: When we adhere to a progressive spiritual


idea, Life loves us beyond measure; Life loves us so
much that Soul keeps us safe, unfallen, and untouched
by maliciousness and brutality. As a result of our being
steadfast, unshaken, and selfless in the face of misun-
derstanding, slander, and ridicule, Soul blesses us with
inward joy and satisfaction. We are conscious of this,
and we feel it in every fiber of our being. Therefore,
we cannot be a target for maliciousness.

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ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Life as Principle: When we adhere to a progressive spiri-


tual idea, Life loves us beyond measure; Life loves us
so much that Principle brings to us the harmony of
divine system, impersonal government, and authority.
As a result of giving up our personal views, doctrinal
platforms, obedience to ecclesiastical authorities, and
loyalty to people and, instead, letting ourselves be
governed only by God and its Christ, guided by divinely
scientific investigations and conclusions instead of
religious beliefs, then Principle loves us by crowning
our endeavor with divine, imperishable honors. We
know that this is an indisputable fact, and in loving it
we feel it. Therefore, ecclesiastical despotism and
human pride cannot defy our mission.

Life as Life: When we adhere to a progressive spiritual idea,


Life loves us beyond measure; Life loves us so much
that Life prepares every step of the way for us, remov-
ing all obstacles from our path and leading us into
superabundance of life. As a result of our taking up
the cross and following the new light without heeding
persecution, Life leads us into the infinite realm, which
is untouched by mortals' limited, hidebound sense of
existence. Life gives us the freedom to unfold as God-
given individuality, unimpeded by blinkers or
antiquated views. We rejoice and feel satisfied. Thus
inadequacy, narrow-mindedness, lack, and decay can-
not harm us.

Life as Truth: When we adhere to a progressive spiritual


idea, Life loves us beyond measure; Life loves us so
much that Truth bestows on us health, wholeness,

176
"Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves"

dominion, Christ-likeness, and divine consciousness,


whereby we can claim our rightful heritage. As a result
of acting in accordance with our highest concept of
Truth, adhering to the standard of Truth, and support-
ing all those in the front line who carry the banner of
Truth, Truth makes us worthy of future generations,
strengthening our Christ-manhood and making us
invulnerable to enemies. We are constantly aware of
this fact and feel its power Therefore, the world's con-
sciousness has no part in us.

Life as Love: When we adhere to a progressive spiritual


idea, Life loves us beyond measure; Life loves us boun-
tifully, through Love's gift of infinite motherhood,
protection, and perfection, thus crowning our love for
the spiritual idea with success. As a result of loving
God more than persons, places, and things, of loving
God with all our heart, soul, and mind, Love makes us
a blessing to all- and all become a blessing to us,
whether friends or so-called enemies, present or future
generations. In seen or unseen ways, by human or
divine means, with acknowledgment or without, they
can only be a universal blessing. We know that this
law is true and fulfills itself; we feel its promise. Con-
demnation, curse, hate, and excommunication are
unknown in us.

The law of Truth

The sixth main edition, with the accent on Truth, is


introduced by a new scriptural note that exhorts us to "have

177
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness." Our


best way of keeping free from animal magnetism is to be
active in Truth and to do right. Only that which is true and
real is going on in Truth. Everything else is merely false
belief, which is powerless." ... evil is not power. Its so-called
despotism is but a phase of nothingness." Evil is only
"suppositional." "In reality there is no mortal mind." Ani-
mal magnetism, in short, is the specific term for error as
such; it has "not one quality of Truth." If we have our being
in Truth and work in Christian Science we cannot do any
wrong or harm.
The sixth theme in the Textbook chapter likewise deals
with the just government of Truth, called by Mrs. Eddy
the "theodicy revealed by Christian Science." All action
is right in Truth. In Truth is vested the supreme jurisdic-
tion, the practice of divine justice. Every action of animal
magnetism is unjust. Whenever we allow ourselves to be
governed by Truth we are ruled justly, and our inalienable
rights remain intact.
We can master animal magnetism also from the stand-
point of Truth. How? By consciously claiming our
inalienable right to be the true idea of God, whereby we
are absolved from all wrong in consciousness and hence in
human experience also. We are then incapable of thinking
evil, doing wrong, or suffering error.
Thus, we come to the law of Truth:

Law: When we are consciously one with God and its idea,
we are free from every form of error.
In the light of the 7 synonyms for God we can, for
instance, abide in the following consciousness:

178
"Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves"

Truth as Mind: When we are consciously one with the con-


sciousness of Mind and its ideas, we think and act only
in ideas, and we are free from thinking and acting in
accordance with human thoughts, opinions, misconcep-
tions, and motives; we are free from mortal reasoning,
false ambitions, ands false desires. Being consciously
one with the power and might of Mind, we are free from
willpower, free from wielding human power, and free
from trusting our own personal abilities.

Truth as Spirit: When we are consciously one with the con-


sciousness of Spirit and its ideas, we can only ever be
governed by the one Spirit, the pure reality, and the
only substance of good; we are free from dualistic,
materialistic, and spiritualistic thought. Being con-
sciously one with the order and unfoldment of Spirit,
we are free from retrogression, crises, and frustrations.
We are free from the beliefs attached to physical birth
with all its claims of heredity.

Truth as Soul: When we are consciously one with the con-


sciousness of Soul and its ideas, only Soul-sense rules
in us, only spiritual sense, spiritual understanding, the
certainty, balance, and the constancy of Soul. We are
free from a belief in the physical senses, which result
only in inner uncertainty, inner strife, and inconstancy.
Being consciously one with the immortal identity of
Soul, we are freed from our material, corporeal
selfhood, our egoism, and our mortality.

Truth as Principle: When we are consciously one with the


consciousness of Principle and its ideas, only the prin-

179
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

cipled, scientific standpoint operates in us, the self-


organizing structure of the divine system of ideas. We
are free from personal, unscientific, dogmatic, and
ecclesiastical attitudes and methods. Being consciously
one with Principle's self-operative power of spiritual
demonstration, we are free from any sense of power-
lessness to restore harmony in every situation.

Truth as Life: When we are consciously one with the con-


sciousness of Life and its ideas, we experience our
unique divine individuality, perpetually refreshed with
newness and variety along the path of Life. We are
free from all idiosyncrasies, from the fear of living a
pointless, senseless, aimless life, from the feeling that
we are caught in a trap from which there is no escape,
and from the belief that the future holds nothing for
us. Being consciously one with the profusion abun-
dantly flowing from the inexhaustible fountain of Life,
we are free from the feeling of any kind of lack -lack
of ideas, abilities,joy, work, opportunities, relationships,
and so on.

Truth as Truth: When we are consciously one with conscious-


ness of Truth and its ideas, we are conscious of our
divine sonship, our true manhood, and our inalienable
divine inheritance. We are free from the erroneous
consciousness of being a mortal, or "fallen man."
Being consciously one with Truth-consciousness as
the only true consciousness, we are free from all aware-
ness of disease, depression, and injustice. We feel a
sense dominion over all error. In this consciousness,

180
"Christian Scientists, be a law to yourselves"

we know that we can neither do nor suffer wrong, nor


commit any injustice against mankind.

Truth as Love: When we are consciously one with conscious-


ness of Love and its ideas, we are held in a state of
perfection, holiness, fulfillment, and boundless grace.
We are free from the belief of ever being abandoned
to hopelessness, condemnation, curse, or eternal noth-
ingness. Being consciously one with Love's plan, with
the goal-directed universal design of Love, we are free
from nihilism, free from any risk of going astray, free
from a sense of the pointlessness of life, and the mean-
inglessness of an existential vacuum. We are then
conscious of being the blessed of God and feel the
godliness within us.

The law of Love

The seventh main edition, with its accent on Love,


brings the subject of animal magnetism to the point where
it is unmasked as nothing. How could it be anything when
"God and His idea" is "the All-in-all"? Evil, or animal
magnetism, is nothing but "a suppositional lie," "an unreal
concept of the so-called mortal mind," "a phase of noth-
ingness," possessing no reality. Hence the necessity for
keeping our consciousness free from "a knowledge of both
good and evil" and filled instead with good only. In her
article "What Our Leader Says" (1899), Mrs. Eddy bids us
keep our minds "so filled with Truth and Love, that sin,
disease, an death cannot enter them," for "it is plain that

181
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

nothing can be added to the mind already full." This builds


an impregnable defense against all the claims of error.
The seventh theme of the Textbook chapter also brings
out the all-inclusiveness of Love to the total exclusion of
evil. Love sanctions only what is true, for nothing else can
inherit the kingdom. When our consciousness rests in the
completeness of Love, we no longer need to master ani-
mal magnetism because we see it as nothing, no part of
divine being. For such a consciousness there is no mortal
law - "against such there is no law."
This brings us to the following law:

Law: In a consciousness of God's allness there is no animal


magnetism.
In the light of the 7 synonyms for God this law tells us,
for instance:

Love as Mind: In the consciousness of the allness of divine


Mind, there is not another mind - a mind belonging
to animal magnetism, possessing power, intelligence,
and influence, and acting in accordance with law.

Love as Spirit: In the consciousness of the allness of divine


Spirit, there is no matter-no material substance,
no material fluid, no material attraction, no material
energy, and no material healing methods.

Love as Soul: In the consciousness of the allness of Soul,


there is no corporeality, no physical sense nor feeling,
no embodiment of the psyche, no transmigration of
souls, and no reincarnation.

182
"Christian Scientist!,~ be a law to yourselves"

Love as Principle: In the consciousness of the allness of


divine Principle, there are no persons, neither practi-
tioners nor malpractitioners, no personal practitioner-
patient relationships, no personal authority, and no
personal dictatorship.

Love as Life: In the consciousness of the allness of divine


Life, there is no persecution, no misunderstanding, no
hindrance to progress, no threat to life, no loss, and no
destruction of life.

Love as Truth: In the consciousness of the allness of divine


Truth, there is no mortal manhood and nothing to
cause or spread disease.

Love as Love: In the consciousness of the allness of divine


Love, there is no imperfection, no anxiety, fear, revenge,
enmity, envy, jealousy, condemnation, curse, and anni-
hilation. There is no animal magnetism.

183
Chapter 6

The Science of Divine Mind as the Answer to


Animal Magnetism

Mind over matter. Looking at the development of ani-


mal magnetism in broad outline, we are first struck by the
extraordinary variety of forms it took. As one type of mag-
netism faded out, another emerged, including exorcism,
animal magnetism, hypnotism, suggestion, quimbyism, and
then on to autogenous training, dynamic psychiatry, psycho-
somatics, and so forth. Each one of these methods can point
to undeniable results, all justifying themselves by their fruits.
Nevertheless, none of them persisted for any length of time.
Each one was quickly superseded by the next. Even today
we are exposed to a veritable flood of new mental and psy-
chic methods, which still deal with the same fundamental
problem under different names. Every faith and every
human belief is capable of producing external changes, thus
proving the hypothesis of mind's power over matter and the
body. The state of consciousness determines the outward
condition.
Al! is mental. A firm belief in God and Jesus Christ heals
just as effectively as a strong faith in material remedies or in
the doctor. Every belief, however irrational, effects changes,
irrespective of the name by which it is known. Name has
nothing to do with it, any more than theory and method.
What operates is the human, mortal mind. In this opera-
tion, the beliefs of the majority govern those of the minority,
universal beliefs govern collective beliefs, collective govern
individual, stronger govern weaker, unconscious govern

184
The Science of Divine Mind as the Answer to Animal Magnetism

conscious. In short, the greater error governs the lesser-


and all in the name of newly discovered truths.
Each belief rules within its own domain. If we realize
this we are no longer so surprised and amazed by the emer-
gence of completely new irrational methods. Only the most
confirmed rationalist believes in a rational law of causality
as the sole explanation of cause and effect. Why should
the rational alone produce effects? True, we cannot expect
rational effects from irrational causes. Because our own
generation, more than any other, is constantly experienc-
ing the inadequacy of reason and the rational sciences, it is
not surprising that more people are turning their interests
to irrational, or even a-rational, theories and methods-
for all of them work.
The step from physics to metaphysics. Thus the step
from physics to metaphysics takes place. Although Mesmer
could still believe that in his theory and practice he had
lifted therapeutics out of a realm of religion and metaphys-
ics (such as Gassner belonged to) and placed it firmly in
newly accepted materialistic science, it is now clear that it
was he himself who opened the way to a realm of count-
less psychic and mental meta-physical speculations. Today
humanity is in a transitional stage between accepting phys-
ics as the only reality and exploring the far reaches of
metaphysics. New physics is veering more and more toward
metaphysics:" ... the whole objective universe of matter and
energy, atoms and stars, does not exist except as a construc-
tion of the consciousness; an edifice of conventional
symbols shaped by the senses of man."26

26 Lincoln Barnett, Einstein and the Universe (New York: William


Sloane Associates, 1948), p. 11

185
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Matter is the subjective state ofmortal mind. The history


of animal magnetism shows with what dangers a transition
from physics to metaphysics is fraught. The laws of physics
are, after all, generally reliable. For instance, we can confi-
dently rely on the law of gravity, the principle of the lever,
and so on, and these laws operate within a materialistic
thought-system independently of any subjective action on
our part. Not so with a metaphysical realm of conscious-
ness, in which there are such possibilities as telekinesis,
psychokinesis, levitation, bilocation, and so forth. Here
physical laws are broken through, and matter, including
the body, is subordinate to the subjective human mind. This
is the great danger. The world is put at the mercy of the
individual will, which sets aside otherwise reliable laws of
physics. If we see a powerful development of mental and
psychic forces in the next few centuries-of which there
are already signs-we could be more alarmed by this than
by any atom and hydrogen bombs. Instead of a terrible
end, humanity could experience terrors without end.
Mental power can be both good and evil. The devel-
opment of animal magnetism has moreover laid bare the
ambivalence of mental, psychic, conscious, and uncon-
scious forces. These can be used for both good and evil,
positive and negative, constructive and destructive pur-
poses - for both healing and causing diseases. In the
service of selfish ambitions and aims, they can be used
for the harm of society. Mental and psychic powers are
always bedeviled by dualism. Having their origin in mortal
manhood, in animal instincts and impulses, they are by
nature earth bound and animal-limited, finite, mortal,
erroneous. They tend in the main to be reactionary, negative,

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The Science of Divine Mind as the Answer to Animal Magnetism

and nihilistic. Even the conscious mind is stamped with


dualism, Janus-faced.
The step from metaphysics to divine metaphysics. This
development must nevertheless be seen in the long run to
be essentially positive. The dualistic nature of metaphys-
ics, with its catastrophic consequences, will rouse humanity
to a deeper investigation of the mental realm. Realizing its
inadequacy we shall be driven to take a further step forward-
the step from metaphysics to divine metaphysics. This in
turn is the foundation for the next development toward a
yet higher stage of consciousness. Even Mrs. Eddy was led
first "into the mazes of divine metaphysics" (Ret. 30:19)
before she found a sure foothold in the clear comprehen-
sibility of Science. What stages of consciousness are
required for this step?
The standard of ideas. Because the mental and psychic
realm is dualistic, certainty and harmony can only be
reached when consciousness adopts a monistic, positive
standard of values. Divine metaphysics offers such a stan-
dard because its metaphysical values are divine, namely
God's ideas. What are divine ideas? They are primordial
conceptions of the divine Mind, of which the divine Mind
alone is conscious. In this sense ideas are monistic; there
are not both good and bad ideas, true and false ideas, posi-
tive and negative ideas. Ideas are beyond valuation as good
or bad. Because they come from divine Mind and not from
human thinking, they are infinite, eternal, timeless, and
spaceless. Because divine Mind is Spirit, ideas are spiritual.
Herein lies the answer to the problem of matter: Because
the immateriality of idea is real, the material concept is
dissolved as unreal.

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ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

Ideas constitute the standard of reality. They alone have


real power, and this power operates in accordance with God's
plan - the plan of Love, of perfection. A consciousness that
is one with ideas is also one with God, the harmoniously
governing Principle of being. Such a consciousness has no
possibility of choosing between good and evil and acting
accordingly. Thus, the dissolution of dualistic human con-
sciousness controlled by thoughts and feelings lies in
consciously putting oneself under the control of ideational
conSCIOusness.
To achieve this, it is essential to be familiar with the
ideas of Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle, Life, Truth, Love. This,
in turn, requires that the student of divine metaphysics
should gain an exact knowledge of what divine ideas are
by studying the 7 synonyms for God as used in the Chris-
tian Science textbook. Without this knowledge, the student
has no possibility of distinguishing ideas from illusions
(including good thoughts) and, consequently, not the remot-
est chance of being able to master animal magnetism. It is
significant that Mrs. Eddy's method for handling animal
magnetism only reached its culmination in the year 1909
with the addition to her chapter of the following sentence:
"The maximum of good is the infinite God and His idea ...."
Ideas are not what we think; they are God's ideas-
the ideas of the 7 synonyms for God. Those who wish to
enlarge their consciousness must watch not only that they
are in harmony with individual ideas, but also that they are
one with the 7 synonyms for God; that is, one with Mind,
Spirit, Soul, Principle, Life, Truth, Love. Each of the syn-
onymous terms is the super-symbol for all the ideas
belonging to the synonym concerned. If we are conscious

188
The Science of Divine Mind as the Answer to Animal Magnetism

of a synonym, then we are also conscious of all the ideas


that constitute this synonym. With such an economy of
knowledge, the handling of error becomes far more effec-
tive; however, for this a new logic is required.
One-value logic. Aristotle was the founder of two-value
logic, which has been accepted ever since, even in our own
day. It is a logic based on opposites, such as true and false,
good and evil, spirit and matter. Human thinking, in the
main, still bears the imprint of this logic founded on dual-
ism.Animal magnetism, with its positive and negative uses,
is only possible when thought is based on this two-value
logic. Therefore, we can best master it by handling its root
cause, by transcending two-value human consciousness. A
one-value divine consciousness rests on the one Mind, not
on a mind that thinks in both ideas and illusions; on the
one Spirit, not on both positive and negative spiritual pow-
ers; on the one Soul, not on both the human soul and also
the testimony of the physical senses; on the one Principle,
not on both a scientific principle and personal opinions;
on the one Life, not on a dual concept of both an immortal
life and a mortal life with its beginning and end (life and
death); on the one Truth, not on both truths and lies; on
the one Love, not on both divine and human love. Thus,
our standpoint changes from divine metaphysics to the
Science of the one Being.
The step from divine metaphysics to the Science of being.
In transcending the level of divine metaphysics, however,
and attaining a consciousness of the Science of being, we
do not leave divine metaphysics behind. Because Principle
has an idea, the Science of being includes divine metaphys-
ics. But from the standpoint of Science, it is not we who are

189
ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

one with Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle, Life, Truth, Love, but
God who is one with us. God is then the Mind of man; so
God is also the Spirit of man; God is the Soul of man; God
is the Principle of man; God is the Life of man; God is the
Truth of man; and God is the Love of man. From this high
standpoint, we let God handle animal magnetism through
the fact that Mind as man's Mind, Spirit as man's Spirit,
Soul as man's Soul, Principle as man's Principle, and Life,
Truth, and Love as man's Life, Truth, and Love are ever
operating to manifest the infinitely individualized idea. This
totally excludes any possibility that animal magnetism exists
and operates.
This step from divine metaphysics to Science does not
primarily mean that we handle animal magnetism in a better
way, but we go to the root of animal magnetism by transcend-
ing the level from which we grapple with the problem of evil.
In Frankl and Maslow - to name only two - we also find
leanings in this same direction. Yet Mrs. Eddy took the step
more than 100 years ago. Whereas psychologists regard the
psyche as human and therefore dualistic, and endeavor to
deal with it metaphysically, Mrs. Eddy in Christian Science
transformed this psychology to the "psychology, or the
Science of Spirit, God" (369:25). She went significantly fur-
ther than Maslow with his "psychology of health" and
Frankl with his "logo therapy" or "the will to (divine) mean-
ing," for neither of these thinkers had a standard of ideas
with which to align health and the meaning of life.
Man as idea. For the same reason, psychologists can
find no valid answer to the question of man's "new image,"
for man is the compound idea of God - the 7 synonyms for
God. Thus, psychologists are always in danger of slipping

190
The Science of Divine Mind as the Answer to Animal Magnetism

too easily into mysticism when they try to locate man's


center in the All. By contrast, the grandeur of Mrs. Eddy's
revelation is brought home to us all the more plainly.
A true image of man comes only from a true image of
God, for man as idea is the image of divine Mind. Through
the understanding of Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle, Life,
Truth, Love and their ideas, the true image of "man" as
idea appears, supplanting the image of mortals held in the
servitude of animal magnetism. This scientific restoration
of the concept of man to his pre-existence in the All-Mind
is the divine method of dissolving the so-called power of
animal magnetism into its native nothingness. Jesus used
this method; his "true knowledge of pre-existence, of the
nature and the inseparability of God and man,-made him
mighty" (Mis. 189:8). In the understanding of the Science
of divine ideas, therefore, lies the perfect protection against
all the supposed effects of universal, collective, and individual
conscious and unconscious belief.
Spiritual laws. That which gives us power is not within
ourselves; rather, it comes from an understanding of
"psychology, or the Science of Spirit." Understanding does
not at all mean knowledge of separate facts, but insight
into the interrelationship of these facts as laws, with their
orders and rules contained within a system. From this stems
the necessity for understanding and practicing not human
psychology but "psychology, or the Science of Spirit." And
this requires research into its specific laws.
Laws must be so general that they include every pos-
sible application within their own scope. Through correct
modification of a law every individual case finds its right
solution. In applying the laws that are necessary for solving

191
--- ------_._-----------

ANIMAL MAGNETISM - UNMASKED

the problem of animal magnetism, we are availing ourselves


of a scientific method that is more powerful as the laws
become simpler. It is the aim of every science to find what
all the phenomena within its scope have in common-a
common denominator so fundamental and simple that it
provides the answer for every problem posed. Thus, a
science is primarily interested in discovering these funda-
mental laws and not in discussing their infinite possibilities
of practical application.
It has, therefore, been the main purpose of this book
to find laws that enable us to be a law to ourselves. Then
the divine law operates in us in such a way that it modifies
itself quite naturally to suit the countless manifestations
of animal magnetism, correcting what has to be corrected.
For this reason there has been no attempt to record and
comment on individual cases taken from the experience
of many years. The value of so doing would be small, if not
actually negative. As no one case is like another, the Chris-
tian Scientist cannot go by the example of others. This
would only lead away from fundamentals and encourage
imitation. If we are familiar with fundamental principles,
the details will take care of themselves. Every case is novel
and must be tackled in a new way from the Principle of
being and in correspondence with divine laws. This is
scientific practice.

192
By the Same Author

I. The Science of Chrisian Science


Why Study Christian Science as a Science? (35 pages)
Introduction to the Science of Christian Science
(169 pages)
Compendium for the Study of Christian Science, #1-10
(a series of 10 booklets, approx. 30 pages each)
The Seven Synonyms for God: An Analysis of the
Concept of God in the Christian Science Textbook
(361 pages)
The Structure of the Christian Science Textbook-Our
Way of Life:
Vol. I: Revelation of the Structure (204 pages)
Epitomes for the Spiritually Structured Interpretation of
the Christian Science Textbook (110 pages)
The Science of the Oneness of Being in the Christian
Science Textbook (274 pages)
The Four Levels of Spiritual Consciousness: Science itself,
divine Science, absolute Christian Science, Christian
Science (198 pages)
The Law of the Self-Evolution of Scientific Spiritual
Understanding (104 pages)
The Spiritual Breakthrough to the Next Millennium
(85 pages)
Christian Government- Its Scientific Evolution
(106 pages)
The Development of the Christian Science Idea and
Practice (96 pages)
A Study Aid for the Science of Christian Science
(116 pages)
The Subject and Method for Studying the Science of
Christian Science (147 pages)
II. The Science of the Bible
The Bible in the Light of Christian Science:
Vol. I: Genesis (124 pages)
Vol. II: Exodus (90 pages)
Vol. III: Joshua, Judges (210 pages)
Vol. IV: I and II Samuel (258 pages)
The Minor Prophets in the Light of Christian Science
(214 pages)
The Epistles in the Light of Christian Science (253
pages)
The Christ-idea (31 pages)
The Science of Prayer (64 pages)

III. Special Subjects on the Science of Christ Science


What is the Science of Being? (18 pages)
The Ordered Approach to the One Being (26 pages)
The Necessary Change of Standpoint (13 pages)
Only Science Reveals (25 pages)
The Pioneer of Truth is Blessed (6 pages)
"Stately Science Pauses Not" (Mary Baker Eddy)
(49 pages)
Evolution - Material or Spiritual? (23 pages)
Christian Science in the World of Today and Tomorrow
(17 pages)
The Christian Science Textbook Science and Health with
Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy-Our
Way of Life and Our Teacher (18 pages)
Scientific Obstetrics (17 pages)
The One Man (22 pages)
"He Shall Never See Death" (St. John 8:51) (21 pages)
The Psychology of Spirit (19 pages)
Logical Reasoning in Christian Science (28 pages)
Truth and Scientific Truth (21 pages)
Metaphysics and Science in Christian Science (36 pages)
The Dissolving of Duality as Presented in the 16th Chapter
of the Christian Science Textbook ("The Apoca-
lypse") (16 pages)
When I Think of John W. Doorly ...
I: Scientific Obstetrics (15 pages)
II: Introduction to the Matrix-Consciousness
(57 pages)
Man: The Thinker-or the Thought? (5 pages)
Notes on Handling Evil (10 pages)
Taking Responsibility for the Idea (4 pages)
"Quo vadis?" Where are you going, Christian Scientist?
(27 pages)
About the Author

Dr. Max Kappeler (Switzerland), a pupil of John W. Doorly,


CSB (England) was a dedicated and lifelong student of Chris-
tian Science. After completing his Ph.D. in economics at the
University of ZUrich, he began his pursuit of a more scientific
sense of Christian Science, joining John Doorly's research group
in 1938. The outbreak of war brought him back to Switzerland,
where in 1948, after a successful business career, he felt compelled
to devote all his energies to the research, teaching, and practice
of the Science of Christian Science. For over 60 years, he wrote
books and held classes on this subject in Switzerland, Germany,
and the United States. His writings have been published in
German and English, with selected texts in French.
All of Kappeler's work is based entirely on the Bible and
the writings of Mary Baker Eddy. They represent a scientific
approach to the spiritual, one that will challenge, inspire, and
offer a lifetime of study and research to those seeking a deep,
spiritually scientific understanding of God, man, and the universe.
About the Science of Christian Science

John W. Doorly, CSB, of London, England (1878-1950),


was the first to pursue deeply the question of what Christian
Science means as Science: Why is it called "Science"? Does it
warrant the term? If so, how and why? Through a lifetime of
researching Christian Science as a practitioner, lecturer, teacher,
author, and president of The Mother Church (1919-1920), he
discerned, step-by-step, the order and system of divine meta-
physics implicit in the Christian Science textbook, Science and
Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy. He
presented these findings in his classes, books, and extensive Talks
on the Science of the Bible, published as verbatim reports.
Max Kappeler, Switzerland (1910-2002). In his lifelong
work, Dr. Kappeler remained devoted to his teacher, John W.
Doorly, and expounded upon the fundamental system of the
Science of Christian Science discovered by Doorly.
This system is composed of the three ontological root
categories which comprise the essence of Christian Science as
found in the Textbook. These main categories, called the divine
system of reference, are:
1. "The 7". The nature of God as defined in the Christian
Science textbook through seven synonyms: "God is incor-
poreal, divine, supreme, infinite Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle,
Life, Truth, Love." (see S&H 465:9)
2. "The 4". The fourfold mode of operation of God as derived
from the four sides of the Holy City, the culmination of
biblical revelation: Word, Christ, Christianity, and Science.
3. "And the 4". The four levels of Science, as described in
the Textbook as: Science itself, divine Science, absolute
Christian Science, and Christian Science.
-~-- -- -----------

Kappeler Institute for the Science of Being, USA


PO Box 99735, Seattle, WA 98139-0735
Tel: (206) 286-1617 FAX: (206) 286-1675
Web: www.kappelerinstitute.org
E-mail: [email protected]

Printed in the USA by


Northwest Publishing Center/Newman-Burrows
Seattle, WA USA

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