Wiki Methode Paret is the historical, scientific, and practical documentation of the Paret Method — the system of techniques and states developed by Marco Paret and taught through ISI-CNV and the Université Européenne. The method arises from the integration of three equally dignified traditions, each with its own genealogy, primary sources, and corpus of techniques: direct fascination in the lineage of European magnetism, presence as a discipline of state in the alchemical and hermetic tradition, and non-verbal communication founded on polyvagal theory and internal neurology.

For contributors: editorial guidelines · reference style · schema for technique and lineage entries.

The Three Axes of the Paret Method

The Paret Method is not a variant of a single school: it is the phenomenological convergence of three traditions that describe, in different languages, the same states and the same processes. Each of the three axes has its own index page, its own corpus of sources, and its own genealogy.

🜔 Fascination and Magnetism Presence, Alchemy of Man, Hermeticism CNV, Polyvagal and Internal Neurology
The state produced by the gaze, without sleep, without progressive induction: complete anesthesia, catalepsy, suggestibility. The documented lineage from Mesmer and Du Potet, through Donato and Luys, to Di Pisa and the Paret Method. The state discipline of the Method: Integral Presence™, the inner alchemical work (the four stages of the work, Tria Prima, VITRIOL, Solve et Coagula), the initiatory and hermetic traditions (Wirth, Paracelso, Kircher, Cagliostro, Crassellame), the paths of the body (yoga, tantra, Tummo, trataka). The bodily and neurophysiological explanation of trance and bonding states: Polyvagal Theory (Porges), Mirror Neurons, the work of Reich and Boyesen on somatic energy, the DMN, the psychophysical typologies as a convergence of ancient and neuroscience.
Key figures: Mesmer (1734–1815), Puységur (1751–1825), Deleuze (1753–1835), Du Potet (1796–1881), Lafontaine (1803–1892), Donato (Alfred d'Hont, 1845–1900, central figure), Hansen (1833–1897), Regazzoni (19th cent.), Luys (1828–1897), Morselli (1852–1929), Caravelli (20th cent.), Di Pisa (20th cent.). Cluster ~75 entries. Key figures: Paracelso (1493–1541), Athanasius Kircher (1602–1680), Massimiliano Palombara (1614–1685), Federico Gualdi (17th cent.), Crassellame (17th cent.), Pasqually (c. 1727–1774), Cagliostro (1743–1795), Willermoz (1730–1824), Kremmerz (1861–1929), Wirth (1860–1943), Evola and Reghini (20th cent., UR-KRUR Group), the tradition of the Philosophical Mercuries. Cluster ~50 entries. Contemporary references: Stephen Porges (1945, polyvagal theory 1994), Wilhelm Reich (1897–1957), Gerda Boyesen (1922–2005, biodynamics), Arnold Mindell (1940, Process Work), Stephen Wolinsky (1950, Quantum Psychology), Rizzolatti (mirror neurons) (1937), Marcus Raichle (DMN) (1937), Lowen-Keleman-Levine (character body mapping). Cluster opening.

The Paret Method as Convergence

The three axes do not describe different phenomena: they describe the same event from three sides. When a subject enters the Fascinatory State under the gaze of a Donatist fascinator — when they pass into the state of Integral Presence after alchemical work on the three principles — when their autonomic system transitions to the ventral vagal circuit in response to a neuroception safety signal — these are three descriptions of the same fact. The Paret Method holds them together without reducing one to the other.

Key Articles

Paret Method
The integrated system — the summary page linking the three axes.
Presenza Integrale
The proper name of the Method's basic protocol — the state discipline that precedes every technique.
La Fascinazione di Donato — Guida Completa al Metodo
Operational guide to the first axis — all Donatist fascination in one place.
Tria Prima / 4 Stadi dell'Opera Alchemica / Six Character Types
The structure of the alchemical axis: the three principles, the four stages of the work (nigredo → albedo → citrinitas → rubedo), and the six combinations describing human characters.
Fascinazione e Teoria Polivagale — Luys 1890 e Porges 1994
The bridge between the historical-fascinatory axis and contemporary neurophysiology.

The Documentary Corpus

This wiki is based on real primary sources — not on second-hand books. Each axis has its own reference sources:

Fascination and magnetism
Journal «Le Magnétisme» (104+ issues, 1880-1886) · Morselli (1886) · Luys — Charité (1890) · Seligmann (1922) · de Rochas (1893) · Luzy (1947).
Presence, alchemy and hermeticism
Wirth — alchemical, symbolic and tarot corpus · Paracelso — the three principles · The Kybalion · Athanasius Kircher · Philosophia Hermetica di Federico Gualdi · tradition of the Tabula Smaragdina and the Arcana Arcanorum · Cagliostro — Egyptian Freemasonry · White (1996) on the path of the body.
CNV, polyvagal, internal neurology
Stephen Porges, The Polyvagal Theory (1994 ff.) · Wilhelm Reich, Character Analysis · Gerda Boyesen — biodynamics · Arnold Mindell — Process Work · literature on Mirror Neurons (Rizzolatti) and the DMN (Raichle).

Indexes by Axis

Each axis has its own index page with the complete list of entries, the argumentative structure, and the development roadmap:

The Wiki Under Construction

The wiki is an open documentary construction site. The first axis (fascination and magnetism) is the most mature: ~75 entries, ~470 total articles, primary source research completed for the central figures. The second axis (presence, alchemy and hermeticism) is in active expansion. The third axis (CNV-polyvagal) was opened in May 2026 and is being developed in waves of linked pages.

Readers interested in a historical-introductory entry point can start from the fascination axis. Those seeking the practice of the Method in its contemporary operational form find the entry point in Paret Method and Presenza Integrale.


Wiki of the Paret Method · ISI-CNV · Université Européenne — all rights reserved. Primary sources preserved in the ISI-CNV Drive archive. Last structural revision: May 2026.