Auckland Geddes 1937
Auckland Geddes 1937
Auckland Geddes 1937
"
A VOICE FROM THE GRANDSTAND." *
that they were being very scientific. The more I have seen of
life and death, of pain and suffering, the more clearly I have
realised that there is never in the real world outside the walls
" "
of the Medical School and teaching hospital A Disease
" "
to be treated ; there is never An Injury to be dealt with ;
"
A candid medical profession should be able to tell us
. . . but at present . . . this most pretentious and incompetent
of defensively organized professions cannot even tell us about
dietary."
This is a quotation from H. G. Wells's The Anatomy of
Frustration. It is no use pretending that such things are
not being said ; or, in my opinion, that they are wholly
undeserved. Why ? I think because too many doctors are
being demoralised by panel practice (vets, looking after
sheep), and because too many come to the sick room thinking
of themselves as Men of Science fighting Disease, and not as
healers with a little knowledge helping Nature to get a sick
man well.
The of the present discontent seems to be that all
root
some wild adventure, the more fully you realise how far
removed from a true picture of what Man really is, the portrait
of him each of the sciences is. Even a synthesis of
bygiven
the portraits fails to represent reality.
Under which of the sciences as we know them to-day would
cannot grasp all reality, we can get to know quite a lot about
him?a surprising amount considering the strict limitation
of five senses.
our
been the claim that a man by taking thought can solve the
problems of the ultimate nature of being or reality ; in other
words, that the field of Ontology is closed to the thinker as
such. I incline also to doubt the competence of the pure
thinker in Epistemology, that is in the study of the ultimate
problems relating to the nature and validity of human
knowledge, for the reason that most thinkers are deficient in
the sense of reality.
Keyserling in his Problems of Personal Life retails an
anecdote to illustrate this point. Let me read it to you.
"
A friend of Bertrand Russell,one of the thinkers whom
knife edge of the present for ever into the unknown future.
I have been challenged as to the existence of psychic
quality in fish. Have you ever seen fish rushing for their
food at the sounding of a dinner bell ? Or swarming to the
feeding place at the appearance of their own individual human
friend ? Fish normally find their food by sight and smell, yet
they can learn the meaning of a bell just like Pavlov's dogs.
There is clearly some psychic quality there. Or, again,
have you ever watched the aerial squadrons of the birds
manoeuvring ? There is clearly something akin to thought
individuals bodied forth by the racial nets are not only material
but also possess some psychic quality, most strongly marked
in the case of Man.
That we may go forward without the risk of serious mis-
understanding we have got to agree about the precise meanings
we are to attach to three words?Soul, Mind, Spirit. By
Soul, in a sense sanctioned by the Oxford Dictionary, I
understand the animating and essential part of Man and
animals which is neither body tissue nor body fluid ; by
Mind, the seat of conscious thought, will and feeling ; by Spirit,
that component of inner being which distinguishes Man from
animal. I shall not speak of spirit until later. For the
" " " "
moment it is enough to say that soul and mind are
373
Sir Auckland Geddes
"
My dear A. G.,?If you think my experience of any
value by all means tell my story . . .
377
Sir Auckland Geddes
"
. In 1916 in the War I was badly crushed.
. . I was
then in the full tide of health and strength and vigour. When
I got out of hospital I was a wreck. My chest had been
crushed, five ribs broken on the left side with a bad haemo-
thorax, my back scarred from burns ; my hands and right
thigh torn and worst of all, my left testicle
. . . smashed . . .
its proper rhythm. It's all an old story now, but I agree
with you it's got nothing to do with morals, if it can all be
cured by an injection. ." . .
That is the substance of the letter and you get the story. Its
importance is that it illustrates as no other I know the linking
agree with Alexis Carrell when in his book Man the Unknown
(which I strongly recommend to your consideration) he makes
it clear?I am not quoting textually?that in the body-soul
fabric the reproductive glands are of the first importance.
This is not only schematically, but experimentally true. In
the male, the strength and quality of the mind and soul move
in some way parallel with sexual
vigour. Great poets, artists,
conquerors and saints have almost without exception been
strongly sexed. Mind and soul are stimulated by love, especially
by love that fails to attain its object. Conversely mind and
soul are dulled by sexual excess.
The great service that Freud has rendered to mankind
was his recognition of the overwhelming importance of
sex alike to conscious mind and unconscious soul. His
descriptions, however, refer more aptly to the sick, the neurotic
and perhaps the Semitic and Eastern peoples than to healthy
Anglo-Saxons. In fact many of the Freudian ideas seem
to have little relevance to strong men, that is, men
strong in
their nervous make-up and in their mastery over self. It is,
of course, matter of common observation that the weak,
a
desperate hour.
" "
For me all is finished. Was I to blame ?
That poor lady's soul was shattered, and a body cannot
live with its soul shattered, any more than a soul can live
379
Sir Auckland Geddes
he says :?
"
I believe in myself ... as in an essentially
not-earthly
spirit ... I know myself to be indestructible but I ...
"
I suddenly realised that my consciousness was
separating
from another consciousness that was also me,"
the A and B consciousness as he called them?B belonging
to the body and apparently disintegrating with the body.
Schematically we may think of the A consciousness as
that part of the soul which, at the moment of somatic death,
the spirit can save alive to be its personal body, which Keyserling
knows his spirit to be bent on creating.
But we have reached a terminus. The schema is : body
with its intrinsic soul doomed to death : spirit with what of
developed soul it can save from the wreck, passing on?to
what ? Who knows !
What has all this got to do with the practice of Medicine ?
Only this, that you will meet sick people, we all do, whose
illness may have originated in the body, the soul or the spirit.
How are you to know them ? I cannot tell you in detail but
I give you some general indications.
can
many of them.
There is still another way of looking at these differences in
people and in the circumstances of their illnesses, which may
have importance in medical practice. Let me put it to you
in a grotesque way :?
A man falls off a high wall and suffers internal injuries,
cuts and bruises. Is it without significance in treatment and
prognosis if he be?
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