
HYPNOTISM & MESMERISM
& MAGNETIC PASSES
The effect on me and one of my acquaintances was exactly the same as on Mr.
Wallace; the phenomena interested us and we tried to find out how far we could
reproduce them. A wide-a-wake young boy of 12 years old offered himself as
subject. Gently gazing into his eyes, or stroking, sent him without difficulty
into the hypnotic condition. But since we were rather less credulous than Mr.
Wallace and set to work with rather less fervour, we arrived at quite different
results. Apart from muscular rigidity and loss of sensation, which were easy to
produce, we found also a state of complete passivity of the will bound up with a
peculiar hypersensitivity of sensation. The patient, when aroused from his
lethargy by any external stimulus, exhibited very much greater liveliness than
in the waking condition. There was no trace of any mysterious relation to the
operator; anyone else could just as easily set the sleeper into activity. To set
Gall’s cranial organs into action was the least that we achieved; we went much
further, we could not only exchange them for one another, or make their seat
anywhere in the whole body, but we also fabricated any amount of other organs,
organs of singing, whistling, piping, dancing,
boxing, sewing, cobbling, tobacco-smoking, etc., and we could make their seat
wherever we wanted. Wallace made his patients drunk on water, but we discovered
in the great toe an organ of drunkenness which only had to be touched in order
to cause the finest drunken comedy to be enacted. But it must be well
understood, no organ showed a trace of action until the patient was given to
understand what was expected of him; the boy soon perfected himself by practice
to such an extent that the merest indication sufficed. The organs produced in
this way then retained their validity for later occasions of putting to sleep,
as long as they were not altered in the same way. The patient had even a double
memory, one for the waking state and a second quite separate one for the
hypnotic condition. As regards the passivity of the will and its absolute
subjection to the will of a third person, this loses all its miraculous
appearance when we bear in mind that the whole condition began with the
subjection of the will of the patient to that of the operator, and cannot be
restored without it. The most powerful magician of a magnetiser in the world
will come to the end of his resources as soon as his patient laughs him in the
face.
While we with our frivolous scepticism thus found that the basis of magnetico-phrenological charlatanry lay in a series of phenomena which for the most part
differ only in degree from those of the waking state and require no mystical
interpretation, Mr. Wallace’s “ardour” led him into a series of self-deceptions,
in virtue of which he confirmed Gall’s map of the skull in all its details and
noted a mysterious relation between operator and patient.
Everywhere in Mr. Wallace’s account, the
sincerity of which reaches the degree of naivete, it becomes apparent that he
was much less concerned in investigating the factual background of charlatanry
than in reproducing all the phenomena at all costs. Only this frame of mind is
needed for the man who was originally a scientist to be quickly converted into
an “adept” by means of simple and facile self-deception. Mr. Wallace ended up
with faith in magnetico-phrenological miracles and so already stood with one
foot in the World of Spirits.
He drew the other foot after him in 1865. On returning from his twelve years
of travel in the tropical zone, experiments in table-turning introduced him to
the society of various “Mediums.” How rapid his progress was, and how complete
his mastery of the subject, is testified to by the above-mentioned booklet. He
expects us to take for good coin not only all the alleged miracles of Home, the
brothers Davenport, and other “Mediums” who all more or less exhibit themselves
for money and who have for the most part been frequently exposed as impostors,
but also a whole series of allegedly authentic Spirit histories from early
times. The Pythonesses of the Greek oracle, the witches of the Middle Ages, were
all “Mediums,” and Iamblichus
in his De divinatione already described quite accurately “the most
astonishing phenomena of modern Spiritualism."
Just one example to show how lightly Mr. Wallace deals with the scientific
corroboration and authentication of these miracles. It is certainly a strong
assumption that we should believe that the aforesaid Spirits should allow
themselves to be photographed, and we have surely the right to demand that such
spirit photographs should be authenticated in the most indubitable manner before
we accept them as genuine. Now Mr. Wallace
recounts on p.187 that in March, 1872, a leading Medium, Mrs. Guppy, nee
Nicholls, had herself photographed together with her husband and small boy at
Mr. Hudson’s in Notting Hill, and on two different photographs a tall female
figure, finely draped in white gauze robes, with somewhat Eastern features, was
to be seen behind her in a pose as if giving a benediction. “Here, then, one of
two things are absolutely certain.
Either there was a living intelligent, but invisible being present, or Mr. and
Mrs. Guppy, the photographer, and some fourth person planned a wicked imposture
and have maintained it ever since. Knowing Mr. and Mrs. Guppy so well as I do, I
feel an absolute conviction that they are as incapable of an imposture
of this kind as any earnest inquirer after truth in the department of natural
science."

But in 1639, one hundred years before Mesmer, a book
was published in Europe upon the use of mesmerism in the cure of wounds, and
bore the title, The Sympathetical Powder of
Edricius Mohynus of Eburo. These cures, it was
said, could be effected at a distance from the wound by reason of the
virtue or
directive faculty between
that and the wound. This is exactly one of the phases of both hypnotism and
mesmerism. And along the same line were the writings of a monk named Uldericus
Balk, who said diseases could be similarly cured, in a book concerning the lamp
of life in 1611. In these works, of course, there is much superstition, but they
treat of mesmerism underneath all the folly.
After the French Academy committee, including Benjamin
Franklin, passed sentence on the subject, condemning it in substance, mesmerism
fell into disrepute, but was revived in America by many persons who adopted
different names for their work and wrote books on it. One of them named Dods
obtained a good deal of celebrity, and was invited during the life of Daniel
Webster to lecture on it before a number of United States senators. He called
his system "psychology," but it was mesmerism exactly, even to details regarding
nerves and the like. And in England also a good deal of attention was given to
it by numbers of people who were not of scientific repute. They gave it no
better reputation than it had before, and the press and public generally looked
on them as charlatans and upon mesmerism as a delusion. Such was the state of
things until the researches into what is now known as hypnotism brought that
phase of the subject once more forward, and subsequently to 1875 the popular
mind gave more and more attention to the possibilites in the fields of
clairvoyance, clairaudience, trance, apparitions, and the like. Even physicians
and others, who previously scouted all such investigations, began to take them
up for consideration, and are still engaged thereon. And it seems quite certain
that, by whatever name designated, mesmerism is sure to have more and more
attention paid to it. For it is impossible to proceed very far with hypnotic
experiments without meeting mesmeric phenomena, and being compelled, as it were,
to proceed with an enquiry into those as well.
The hypnotists unjustifiably claim the merit of discoveries,
for even the uneducated so-called charlatans of the above-mentioned periods
cited the very fact appropriated by hypnotists, that many persons were normally
- for them - in a hypnotized state, or, as they called it, in a psychologized
condition, or negative one, and so forth, according to the particular system
employed.
In France Baron Du Potet astonished every one with his feats
in mesmerism, bringing about as great changes in subjects as the hypnotizers do
now. After a time and after reading old books, he adopted a number of queer
symbols that he said had the most extraordinary effect on the subject, and
refused to give these out to any except pledged persons. This rule was violated,
and his instructions and figures were printed not many years ago for sale with a
pretense of secrecy consisting in a lock to the book. I have read these and find
they are of no moment at all, having their force simply from the will of the
person who uses them. The Baron was a man of very strong natural mesmeric force,
and made his subjects do things that few others could bring about. He died
without causing the scientific world to pay much attention to the matter.
The great question mooted is whether there is or is not
any actual fluid thrown off by the mesmerizer. Many deny it, and nearly all
hypnotizers refuse to admit it. H. P. Blavatsky declares there is such a fluid,
and those who can see into the plane to which it belongs assert its existence as
a subtle form of matter. This is, I think, true, and is not at all inconsistent
with the experiments in hypnotism, for the fluid can have its own existence at
the same time that people may be self-hypnotized by merely inverting their eyes
while looking at some bright object. This fluid is composed in part of the
astral substance around every one, and in part of the physical atoms in a finely
divided state. By some this astral substance is called the
aura. But that word is
indefinite, as there are many sorts of aura and many degrees of its expression.
These will not be known, even to Theosophists of the most willing mind, until
the race as a whole has developed up to that point. So the word will remain in
use for the present.
This aura, then, is thrown off by the mesmerizer upon his
subject, and is received by the latter in a department of his inner
constitution, never described by any Western experimenters, because they know
nothing of it. It wakes up certain inner and non-physical divisions of the
person operated on, causing a change of relation between the various and
numerous sheaths surrounding the inner man, and making possible different
degrees of intelligence and of clairvoyance and the like. It has no influence
whatsoever on the Higher Self, (1) which it is impossible to reach by such
means. Many persons are deluded into supposing that the Higher Self is the
responder, or that some spirit or what not is present, but it is only one of the
many inner persons, so to say, who is talking or rather causing the organs of
speech to do their office. And it is just here that the Theosophist and the
non-Theosophist are at fault, since the words spoken are sometimes far above the
ordinary intelligence or power of the subject in waking state. I therefore
propose to give in the rough the theory of what actually does take place, as has
been known for ages to those who see with the inner eye, and as will one day be
discovered and admitted by science.
When the hypnotic or mesmerized state is complete - and often
when it is partial - there is an immediate paralyzing of the power of the body
to throw its impressions, and thus modify the conceptions of the inner being. In
ordinary waking life every one, without being able to disentangle himself, is
subject to the impressions from the whole organism; that is to say, every cell
in the body, to the most minute, has its own series of impressions and
recollections, all of which continue to impinge on the great register, the
brain, until the impression remaining in the cell is fully exhausted. And that
exhaustion takes a long time. Further, as we are adding continually to them, the
period of disappearance of impression is indefinitely postponed. Thus the inner
person is not able to make itself felt. But, in the right subject, those bodily
impressions are by mesmerism neutralized for the time, and at once another
effect follows, which is equivalent to cutting the general off from his army and
compelling him to seek other means of expression.
The brain - in cases where the subject talks - is left free
sufficiently to permit it to obey the commands of the mesmerizer and compel the
organs of speech to respond. So much in general.
We have now come to another part of the nature of man which
is a land unknown to the Western world and its scientists. By mesmerism other
organs are set to work disconnected from the body, but which in normal state
funcion with and through the latter. These are not admitted by the world, but
they exist, and are as real as the body is - in fact some who know say they are
more real and less subject to decay, for they remain almost unchanged from birth
to death. These organs have their own currents, circulation if you will, and
methods of receiving and storing impressions. They are those which in a second
of time seize and keep the faintest trace of any object or word coming before
the waking man. They not only keep them but very often give them out, and when
the person is mesmerized their exit is untrammelled by the body.
They are divided into many classes and grades, and each one
of them has a whole series of ideas and facts peculiar to itself, as well as
centres in the ethereal body to which they relate. Instead now of the brain's
dealing with the sensations of the body, it deals with something quite
different, and reports what these inner organs see in any part of space to which
they are directed. And in place of your having waked up the Higher Self, you
have merely uncovered one of the many sets of impressions and experiences of
which the inner man is composed, and who is himself a long distance from the
Higher Self. These varied pictures, thus seized from every quarter, are normally
overborne by the great roar of the physical life, which is the sum total of
possible expression of a normal being on the physical plane whereon we move.
They show themselves usually only by glimpses when we have sudden ideas or
recollections, or in dreams when our sleeping may be crowded with fancies for
which we cannot find a basis in daily life. Yet the basis exists, and is always
some one or other of the million small impressions of the day passed unnoticed
by the physical brain, but caught unerringly by means of other sensoriums
belonging to our astral double. For this astral body, or double, permeates the
physical one as colour does the bowl of water. And although to the materialistic
conceptions of the present day such a misty shadow is not admitted to have
parts, powers, and organs, it nevertheless has all of these with a surprising
power and grasp. Although perhaps a mist, it can exert under proper conditions a
force equal to the viewless wind when it levels to earth the proud constructions
of puny man.
In the astral body, then, is the place to look for the
explanation of mesmerism and hypnotism. The Higher Self will explain the flights
we seldom make into the realm of spirit, and is the God - the Father - within
who guides His children up the long steep road to perfection. Let not the idea
of it be degraded by chaining it to the low floor of mesmeric phenomena, which
any healthy man or woman can bring about if they will only try. The grosser the
operator the better, for thus there is more of the mesmeric force, and if it be
the Higher Self that is affected, then the meaning of it would be that gross
matter can with ease affect and deflect the high spirit - and this is against
the testimony of the ages.
A Paramahansa of the Himalayas has put in print the following
words: "Theosophy is that branch of Masonry which shows the Universe in the form
of an egg." Putting on one side the germinal spot in the egg, we have left five
other main divisions: The fluid, the yolk, the skin of the yolk, the inner skin
of the shell, and the hard shell. The shell and the inner skin may be taken as
one. That leaves us four, corresponding to the old divisions of fire, air,
earth, and water. Man, roughly speaking, is divided in the same manner, and from
these main divisions spring all his manifold experiences on the outer and the
introspective planes. The human structure has its skin, its blood, its earthy
matter - called bones for the moment, its flesh, and lastly the great germ which
is insulated somewhere in the brain by means of a complete coat of fatty matter.
The skin includes the mucous, all membranes in the body, the
arterial coats, and so on. The flesh takes in the nerves, the animal cells
so-called, and the muscles. The bones stand alone. The blood has its cells, the
corpuscles, and the fluid they float in. The organs, such as the liver, the
spleen, the lungs, include skin, blood, and mucous. Each of these divisions and
all of their subdivisions have their own peculiar impressions and recollections,
and all, together with the co-ordinator the brain, make up the man as he is on
the visible plane.
These all have to do with the phenomena of mesmerism,
although there are those who may think it not possible that mucous membrane or
skin can give us any knowledge. But it is nevertheless the fact, for the
sensations of every part of the body affect each cognition, and when the
experiences of the skin cells, or any other, are most prominent before the brain
of the subject, all his reports to the operator will be drawn from that, unknown
to both, and put into language for the brain's use so long as the next condition
is not reached. This is the Esoteric Doctrine, and will at last be found true.
For man is made up of millions of lives, and from these, unable of themselves to
act rationally or independently, he gains ideas, and as the master of all puts
those ideas, together with others from higher planes, into thought, word, and
act. Hence at the very first step in mesmerism this factor has to be remembered,
but nowadays people do not know it and cannot recognize its presence, but are
carried away by the strangeness of the phenomena.
The very best of subjects are mixed in their reports, because
the things they do see are varied and distorted by the several experiences of
the parts of their nature I have mentioned, all of which are constantly
clamouring for a hearing. And every operator is sure to be misled by them unless
he is himself a trained seer.
The next step takes us into the region of the inner man, not
the spiritual being, but the astral one who is the model on which the outer
visible form is built. The inner person is the mediator between mind and matter.
Hearing the commands of mind, he causes the physical nerves to act and thus the
whole body. All the senses have their seat in this person, and every one of them
is a thousand-fold more extensive in range than their outer representatives, for
those outer eyes and ears, and sense of touch, taste, and smell, are only gross
organs which the inner ones use, but which of themselves can do nothing.
This can be seen when we cut off the nerve connection, say
from the eye, for then the inner eye cannot connect with physical nature and is
unable to see an object placed before the retina, although feeling or hearing
may in their way apprehend the object if those are not also cut off.
These inner senses can perceive under certain conditions to
any distance regardless of position or obstacle. But they cannot see everything,
nor are they always able to properly understand the nature of everything they do
see. For sometimes that appears to them with which they are not familiar. And
further, they will often report having seen what they are desired by the
operator to see, when in fact they are giving unreliable information. For, as
the astral senses of any person are the direct inheritance of his own prior
incarnations, and are not the product of family heredity, they cannot transcend
their own experience, and hence their cognitions are limited by it, no matter
how wonderful their action appears to him who is using only the physical
sense-organs. In the ordinary healthy person these astral senses are
inextricably linked with the body and limited by the apparatus which it
furnishes during the waking state. And only when one falls asleep, or into a
mesmerized state, or trance, or under the most severe training, can they act in
a somewhat independent manner. This they do in sleep, when they live another
life than that compelled by the force and the necessities of the waking
organism. And when there is a paralyzation of the body by the mesmeric fluid
they can act, because the impressions from the physical cells are inhibited.
The mesmeric fluid brings this paralyzing about by
flowing from the operator and creeping steadily over the whole body of the
subject, changing the polarity of the cells in
every part and thus disconnecting the outer from
the inner man. As the whole system of physical nerves is sympathetic in all its
ramifications, when certain major sets of nerves are affected others by sympathy
follow into the same condition. So it often happens with mesmerized subjects
that the arms or legs are suddenly paralyzed without being directly operated on,
or, as frequently, the sensation due to the fluid is felt first in the fore-arm,
although the head was the only place touched.
There are many secrets about this part of the process, but
they will not be given out, as it is easy enough for all proper purposes to
mesmerize a subject by following what is already publicly known. By means of
certain nerve points located near the skin the whole system of nerves may be
altered in an instant, even by a slight breath from the mouth at a distance of
eight feet from the subject. But modern books do not point this out.
When the paralyzing and change of polarity of the cells are
complete the astral man is almost disconnected from the body. has he any
structure? What mexmerizer knows? How many probably will deny that he has any
structure at all? Is he only a mist, an idea? And yet, again, how many subjects
are trained so as to be able to analyze their own astral anatomy?
But the structure of the inner astral man is definite and
coherent. it cannot be fully dealth with in a magazine article, but may be
roughly set forth, leaving readers to fill in the details.
Just as the outer body has a spine which is the column
whereon the being sustains itself with the brain at the top, so the astral body
has its spine and brain. It is material, for it is made of matter, however
finely divided, and is not of the nature of the spirit.
After the maturity of the child before birth this form
is fixed, coherent, and lasting, undergoing but small alteration from that day
until death. And so also as to its brain; that remains unchanged until the body
is given up, and does not, like the outer brain, give up cells to be replaced by
others from hour to hour. These inner parts are thus more permanent than the
outer correspondents to them. Our material organs, bones, and tissues are
undergoing change each instant. They are suffering always what the ancients
called "the constant momentary dissolution of minor units of matter," and hence
within each month there is a perceptible change by way of diminution or
accretion. This is not the case with the inner form. It alters only from life to
life, being constructed at the time of reincarntion to last for a whole period
of existence. For it is the model fixed by the present evolutionary proportions
for the outer body. It is the collector, as it were, of the visible atoms which
make us as we outwardly appear. So at birth it is potentially of a certain size,
and when that limit is reached it stops the further extension of the body,
making possible what are known today as average weights and average sizes. At
the same time the outer body is kept in shape by the inner one until the period
of decay. And this decay, followed by death, is not due to bodily disintegration
per se, but to the
fact that the term of the astral body is reached, when it is no longer able to
hold the outer frame intact. Its power to resist the impact and war of the
material molecules being exhausted, the sleep of death supervenes.
Now, as in our physical form the brain and spine are
the centres for nerves, so in the other there are the nerves which ramify from
the inner brain and spine all over the structure. All of these are related to
every organ in the outer visible body. They are more in the nature of currents
than nerves, as we understand the word, and may be called
astro-nerves. They move in
relation to such great centres in the body outside, as the heart, the pit of the
throat, umbilical centre, spleen, and sacral plexus. And here, in passing, it
may be asked of the Western mesmerizers what do they know of the use and power,
if any, of the umbilical centre? They will probably say it has no use in
particular after the accomplishment of birth. But the true science of mesmerism
says there is much yet to be learned even on that one point; and there is no
scarcity, in the proper quarters, of records as to experiments on, and use of,
this centre.
The astro-spinal column has three great nerves of the same
sort of matter. They may be called ways or channels, up and down which the
forces play, that enable man inside and outside to stand erect, to move, to
feel, and to act. In description they answer exactly to the magnetic fluids,
that is, they are respectively positive, negative, and neutral, their regular
balance being essential to sanity. When the astral spine reaches the inner brain
the nerves alter and become more complex, having a final great outlet in the
skull. Then, with these two great parts of the inner person are the other
manifold sets of nerves of similar nature related to the various planes of
sensation in the visible and invisible worlds. These all then constitute the
personal actor within, and in these is the place to seek for the solution of the
problems presented by mesmerism and hypnotism.
Disjoin this being from the outer body with which he is
linked, and the divorce deprives him of freedom temporarily, making him the
slave of the operator. But mesmerizers know very well that the subject can and
does often escape from control, puzzling them often, and often giving them
fright. This is testified to by all the best writers in the Western schools.
Now this inner man is not by any means omniscient. he has an
understanding that is limited by his own experience, as said before. Therefore,
error creeps in if we rely on what he says in the mesmeric trance as to anything
that requires philosophical knowledge, except with rare cases that are so
infrequent as not to need consideration now. For neither the limit of the
subject's power to know, nor the effect of the operator on the inner sensoriums
described above, is known to operators in general, and especially not by those
who do not accept the ancient division of the inner nature of man. The effect of
the operator is almost always to colour the reports made by the subject.
Take an instance: A. was a mesmerizer of C., a very sensitive
woman, who had never made philosophy a study. A. had his mind made up to a
certain course of procedure concerning other persons and requiring argument. But
before action he consulted the sensitive, having in his possession a letter from
X., who is a very definite thinker and very positive; while A., on the other
hand, was not definite in idea although a good physical mesmerizer. The result
was that the sensitive, after falling into the trance and being asked on the
question debated, gave the views of X., whom she had not known, and so strongly
that A. changed his plan although not his conviction, not knowing that it was
the influence of the ideas of X. then in his mind, that had deflected the
understanding of the sensitive. The thoughts of X., being very sharply cut, were
enough to entirely change any previous views the subject had. What reliance,
then, can be placed on untrained seers? And all the mesmeric subjects we have
are wholly untrained, in the sense that the word bears with with the school of
ancient mesmerism of which I have been speaking.
The processes used in mesmeric experiment need not be gone
into here. There are many books declaring them, but after studying the matter
for the past twenty-two years, I do not find that they do other than copy one
another, and that the entire set of directions can, for all practical purposes,
be written on a single sheet of paper. But there are many other methods of still
greater efficiency anciently taught, that may be left for another occasion.
WILLIAM Q. JUDGE
Lucifer, May, 1892
(1) Atma, in its vehicle Buddhi. [Ed.]

Mesmerism, introduced by Austrian physician Franz
Anton Mesmer, is a technique used earlier in curing some sort of mental
disturbances. It involves social role-playing as the performer mesmerizes the
client through his suggestions. Mesmer conducted mesmerism as a healing
technique based on the idea of animal magnetism, a concept according to which
human body posses some sort of magnetic power and that heavenly bodies have
influence on human health.
But the theory of Mesmer was solely rejected by scientific data.
Mesmeric theory was found to have no validity by modern society either. Mesmer’s
theory suggests that all animated bodies including man were affected by a
magnetic force, which also mutually influenced the celestial bodies and earth,
while the physician making suggestions and the client mesmerizes. Mesmerism also
concentrates on the idea of this powerful magnetic field to transfer from one
person to the other.
Discussions are going on now about whether there were any cures
from mesmerism. Several commissions investigated the reality behind the
technique, and none suggest a result which supports the idea of mesmerism.
According to the technique, a magnetic fluid carried the magnetic force. Mesmer
believed that the universe was made up of a series of increasingly rarefied
fluids.
In the beginning Mesmer employed a treatment method called the
magnetic therapy, under the influence of a Viennese Jesuit, Maximillian Hell,
who cured people with a magnetic steel plate. This therapy can be called as the
first practice of mesmerism. Mesmer also applied the technique, with the
explanation that there is a very subtle magnetic fluid flowing through
everything, including the body of people, which sometimes gets disturbed and
needs to be restored to its proper flow. Mesmer tried out the same technique
without magnets.
The glass music - glass harmonica - was the key ingredient in
Mesmer’s magnetic séances. Most of his patients were hysterical bourgeois women.
They would be placed in a magnetic tub filled with glass powder and iron
filings, and will be massaged to a relaxed state by the distant tones of a glass
harmonica played behind curtains. Those curtains will be covered with
astrological symbols. After this he himself will enter the room and will touch
each patient with a white wand. This was the whole process. This particular
atmosphere and action would lead the patients to a magnetic trance from which
most of the patients would awake as cured. This gave birth to the belief of
mesmerism.
According to Mesmer animal magnetism caused such an effect,
which later become the concept of mesmerism. He found out that there is a
dramatic effect of waving a magnetized pole over a person. The effect of
mesmerism will be there while an individual sit in magnetized water or hold
magnetized poles. Mesmer’s movements around the patients with brightly coloured
robes and the total strange atmosphere caused the patients to have a number of
behaviours ranging from sleeping to dancing.
Mesmerism contributes something to real science, which can be
condensed as the idea that, it believes that illness is not natural. As a result
of some kind of blockage of natural forces, a stagnation and sickness arise. An
instinctive desire to free the vital forces is the attempt made by Mesmer, while
applying his curing methods. Now most of the scientists and psychologists
approve the idea that he was doing some kind of hypnosis technique. That’s why
even now mesmerism is associated to some extend with hypnosis.



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