Il Potere dello Sguardo — Dalla Tradizione Mondiale alla Neuroscienze/en
Page title: The Power of the Gaze — From World Tradition to Neuroscience
Wikitext to translate:
This page collects the cross-sectional vision of the power of the gaze as a universal phenomenon — from traditional cultures to modern neuroscience, from animal fascination to clinical hypnosis. It is the summary page that connects all the sources of the ISI-CNV archive on this topic.
The Structure of the Phenomenon: What the Gaze Is
Antoine Luzy in 1947 defines the starting point:
- «L'étude de l'œil au point de vue physiologique, a été poussée très loin, mais au point de vue psychologique, il n'en est pas de même.»
Paradox: the eye is the most studied organ in human physiology, but the power of the gaze as a psychological agent has never been systematically explored. Yet everyone recognizes it: «C'est un lieu commun de parler du magnétisme du regard.»
The Evolutionary Hierarchy of the Gaze
From the ISI-CNV source corpus, a precise hierarchy emerges:
1. The Primary Mechanism: Predator/Prey
Seligmann documents in thousands of examples the fundamental pattern: the snake that fixes the bird, the eagle that paralyzes small birds, Levaillant's woodpecker that writhes but cannot escape.
The structure is always identical:
- The predator's gaze is fixed, intense, constant
- The prey animal enters freeze: it writhes, emits sounds, but cannot escape
- Distance is irrelevant — the gaze crosses space
In polyvagal terms (Porges): the predator's gaze activates the dorsovagal in the prey animal — freeze + impossibility of autonomous response. The DVC is the most ancient autonomic nervous system, shared by vertebrates.
2. The Evil Eye: The Unintentional Spike
The evil eye — documented in all human cultures by Seligmann — is the unintentional and involuntary version of the mechanism. A gaze of great emotional intensity (envy, admiration, fear, jealousy) can produce an involuntary dorsovagal spike in the sensitive receiver.
This explains why the evil eye is associated with admiration: «you have a beautiful child» — said with envy = intense gaze of high negative emotionality. Intention is irrelevant; emotional intensity is the trigger.
3. Donato's Fascination: The Controlled Intentional Spike
Donato is the first to systematize the mechanism as a reproducible technique: same predator spike, same prey freeze, but in a controlled, intentional, calibrated context.
The difference: Donato calibrates the spike by producing the ébranlement at the right moment, at the right depth, for the necessary time — then deliberately releases the subject.
4. The Power of the Gaze in Everyday Influence
Luzy documents the level below the hypnotic threshold: the gaze as a tool of personal influence in daily life. Root of the nose, fixity without blinking, desire instead of will — produce real effects of influence without the subject entering a formal fascinatory state.
Technical Constants Across Sources
Across all sources — Donato, Di Pisa, Luzy, De Rochas — the same technical constants emerge:
| Technique | Donato (journal) | Di Pisa (book) | Luzy (book) | De Rochas (book) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gaze point | Right eye into right eye (De Rochas) | Root of the nose | Root of the nose or eyes | Subject's eyes |
| Eyelids | «special way of fixing without blinking» (Morselli) | «any blink nullifies the effect» | «without blinking of the eyelids» | Mention of control |
| Speed | «Abrupt, sudden, surprise» | Count: «one, two, three» | Capture at the moment of raising the eyes | «Action brusque» as trigger |
| Will | «Ardor, impatience» = incandescent desire | Direct command | Desire not will | Concentration of attention |
| Movement | Circular around the subject | Static | Static | Static or cone of fingers |
The Luminous Point as Diagnostic Confirmation
Binocular fusion → luminous point documented by Morselli is the confirmation that the gaze mechanism has achieved its goal. The receiver no longer sees two separate eyes — they see a single luminous point at the center of the operator's forehead. The visual field has narrowed to the operator as the sole object in the perceptual universe.
The same pattern is found in animal fascination: Levaillant's prey, the woodpecker's eyes «fixed on the snake's gaze», unable to look away.
World Tradition as Empirical Confirmation
Seligmann collects thousands of testimonies in which the power of the gaze is documented as a practical reality, not as superstition. These data — the convergence of independent traditions in cultures without contact — confirm that the phenomenon is real and trans-cultural.
The fact that in Italian, French, Spanish, Arabic, Sanskrit, German there exist rich specific terminologies for fascination and the evil eye is not a linguistic coincidence: it reflects the reality of a common experience.
From Traditions to Modern Science
The transmission chain is now complete:
- World traditions (Seligmann) → universal empirical recognition
- Magnetizers (Donato 1875) → first technical systematization
- 19th-century science (Morselli, Luys, De Rochas, Bottey) → physiological documentation
- 20th-century practice (Di Pisa, Luzy) → daily and therapeutic application
- 21st-century neuroscience (Porges, mirror neurons) → mechanistic explanation
- Paret Method → complete integration: technique + physiology + application
Main Sources
- Donato — Il Padre della Fascinazione
- Antoine Luzy — La Puissance du Regard (1947)
- Il Potere dell'Occhio nelle Culture del Mondo — Dr. Seligmann (Die Zauberkraft des Auges)
- Prof. Enrico Morselli — Il Magnetismo Animale, la Fascinazione e gli Stati Ipnotici (1886)
- Albert de Rochas — Testimone Oculare di Donato (Les États superficiels, 1893)
- Fascinazione e Teoria Polivagale — Luys 1890 e Porges 1994
See also
- Lo Stato Fascinatorio nelle Fonti Primarie — Donato, Morselli, Luys
- La Visione del Punto Luminoso — Fenomeno Percettivo durante la Fascinazione
- Donato — La Fascinazione degli Animali e il Meccanismo Trans-Specie
- Paret Method
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