justdrew wrote:as for the hypno thing, they always say you can't get someone to do something they would normally be totally against, but what if the person also believed the gun was a water pistol?
The easiest way to do it is just to convince the "subject" that the "target" is an extreme threat to them or their family, or the world in general. Hypnotists can not only make people do things, but see things as well.
I think it was in A Criminal History of Mankind that Colin Wilson mentions a hypnosis experiment where they made a normal housewife pour what she believed was acid onto a baby in a crib (the baby was a doll, the acid was water) by implanting the belief in her that the baby was a monster and a threat to her own child.
She did it, and remembered nothing afterward.
Worth remembering that Derren Brown doesn't call himself a hypnotist or a magician but an illusionist. An illusionist's job is only to convince you that the illusion is real. TV makes that easy. The race track thing was "faked" like Stephen said, and his national lottery premonition was hilariously badly done and caused a lot of damage to his rep. But he does have some kind of power, whatever it is - NLP, body-language, imprinting, personal magnetism, whatever. And hypnosis too of course.
I only caught the very start of this one and got annoyed 'cos he was saying "Could it
really be possible to create an assassin through hypnosis?" He knows fine well it's possible, and that the CIA and others have done it.
Will need to watch the whole thing before judging, though. It sounds like it gets better - and of course it's mainstream TV so he can hardly just say outright what he surely must know.
"The universe is 40 billion light years across and every inch of it would kill you if you went there. That is the position of the universe with regard to human life."