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Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Harold Merskey*
Affiliation:
71 Logan Avenue, London, Ontario N5Y 2PG, Canada. Email: harold.merskey@sympatico.ca
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Abstract

Type
Columns
Copyright
Copyright © 2012 The Royal College of Psychiatrists 

Dissociation begins with hypnotists, was developed by Janet, promoted by Freud and ruined by the absurdities of multiple personality disorder. Reference Merskey1 Consider Janet Reference Janet2 hypnotising ‘Lucie’, an alternative personality of this patient producing automatic writing:

  1. Q. ‘How are you?’

  2. A. ‘I don't know.’

  3. Q. ‘There must be someone there who hears me.’

  4. A. ‘Yes.’

  5. Q. ‘Who is it?’

  6. A. ‘Someone other than Lucie.’

  7. Q. ‘Ah, Indeed!’

  8. A. ‘Another person.’

  9. Q. ‘Would you like us to give her a name?’

  10. A. ‘No.’

  11. Q. ‘Yes it will be more convenient.’

  12. A. ‘Alright, Adrienne.’

  13. Q. ‘Very well Adrienne. Do you hear me?’

  14. A. ‘Yes.’

In 1889 Binet observed that Janet ‘… himself created her by suggestion’. Reference Binet and Robinson3

Hacking Reference Hacking4 showed that the first 19th-century fugue states in young men were in French military conscripts exploiting the novel long-distance continental railways. In older persons fugues are only found with dementia. Experimental attempts by excellent social psychologists over 60 years have completely failed to replicate repression Reference Holmes and Singer5 and dissociation. Freud's own accounts of his cases with alleged repression/dissociation were completely unreliable, Reference Grunbaum and Crews6 particularly as shown in the Freud–Fliess correspondence. Reference Masson7 Further, Pope et al Reference Pope, Poliakoff, Parker, Boynes and Hudson8 have shown that a phenomenon like dissociation (i.e. losing complete trace of some important event and then recovering it through memory) has not been found so far in world literature preceding 1786, and by then Mesmer was actively using hypnotic procedures. If dissociation is a genuine human experience, it is remarkable that it was not known before that time.

There is no case of proven ‘dissociation’ fulfilling Pope's criteria without organic disorder, although many cases of alleged dissociative memory loss exist, not to mention the generally rejected syndrome of dissociative identity disorder, of which dissociation is the artefactual foundation no matter how much the name or term may be changed.

References

1 Merskey, H. The manufacture of personalities: the production of multiple personality disorder. Br J Psychiatry 1992; 160: 327–40.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
2 Janet, P. L'Automatisme psychologique. Felix Alcan, 1889.Google Scholar
3 Binet, A. Les altérations de la personnalité. Felix Alcan, 1892. Reprinted as Alterations of Personality (ed Robinson, DN). Georgetown University Publciations of America, 1977: 146.Google Scholar
4 Hacking, I. Mad Travelers. Reflections on the Reality of Transient Mental Illnesses. University of Virginia, 1998.Google Scholar
5 Holmes, DS. The evidence for repression: an examination of 60 years of research. In Repression and Dissociation. Implications for Personality Theory, Psychopathology, and Health (ed Singer, JL). University of Chicago Press, 1990: 85102.Google Scholar
6 Grunbaum, A. Made-to-order evidence. Unauthorized Freud: Doubters Confront a Legend (ed Crews, FC). Viking, 1998: 7684.Google Scholar
7 Masson, JM (trans & ed). The Complete Letters of Sigmund Freud to Wilhelm Fliess, 1887–1904. Belknap Press, 1986.Google Scholar
8 Pope, HG Jr, Poliakoff, MB, Parker, MP, Boynes, M, Hudson, JI. Is dissociative amnesia a culture bound syndrome? Findings from a survey of historical literature. Psychol Med 2007; 37: 225–33.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
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