Auckland Geddes 1937

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I

Edinburgh Medical Journal


June 1937

"
A VOICE FROM THE GRANDSTAND." *

By Sir AUCKLAND GEDDES, P.C., G.C.M.G., K.C.B., M.D.

Mr President and thank you for the


Gentlemen,?I
honour of being invited read you a dissertation. For many
to

years my path has lain far from the profession of Medicine.


That I should be here to-night is to me wholly surprising.
I must confess it makes me feel like one of those pathetic
figures who frequent grandstands at Rugby International
Matches, and, on the strength of a precarious membership of
their school 3rd XV forty years before, shout advice and
criticism to the nationalplayers.
I have difficulty in believing that it is more than half a
century since I came to Edinburgh to be educated ; and that
over a third of a century has passed since my education was

assumed to be complete. It seems to be almost my historic


duty to tell you how superior those distant days were. As a
matter of fact I doubt their superiority. Changes of course
there have been and many of them are very good, but in one
instance I think the change has not gone far enough. It is
about this that I am to speak to-night.
All my life I have had much to do with doctors : relatives,
colleagues, friends and advisers. I have been the head of an
organisation employing a
large number of medical men, and
of others result of a variety of accidents
employing few. As a
I have on more occasions than I should have wished found
myself in the position of the patient. I have gradually gained
the impression that on
average the young doctor has surprisingly
little understanding of Man as I have met him?and her.
I have tried to
go back in memory to what I was myself
when young, and I see in
my then self many of the qualities
*
An address delivered on the occasion of the Bicentenary of the
Royal Medical Society, 26th February 1937-
Sir Auckland Geddes

that I find in the young graduate of to-day. This is where


I think there has not been enough change-?not nearly
enough !
I remember a discussion between a group of us who were
then young graduates?it must have been in 1903?in which
we concluded that we should soon
(Medicine was
advancing
" "
so rapidly) be able scientifically to deal with Disease
without pandering to the patient. By this I suppose we
thought we meant that to consider the patient was a sign of
weakness.
Time and again, when, in various parts of the world, I
have found myself ill or injured and confined to bed, I have
been attended by doctors who never even found out that I
had any medical training ; in fact they never found out any-
"
thing about me at all. They were concerned to treat The
" " "

Injury or The Disease and not me, the patient ; they


were in short dealing with a pure abstraction, and thinking

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 ;

there is just a sick child, woman, man to be helped to get


well. In short, the real business of clinical medicine is not
science. It is, in the case of each sufferer, a personal relation-
ship into which sincerity and medical knowledge are suffused
by the physician, and trust and some dependence by the
patient.
Please do not imagine that I am ignorant of or under-
estimate the advances in technique, and in the sciences which
underlie the practice of Medicine. What I am speaking of is
what seems to me to be a lag in development in the preparation
of the student for that strangely close personal
medical
relationshipinto which he as a practitioner will have to enter
with each of his patients one by one, alone and separate. I
am not questioning the fact that the more a physician knows

the better equipped he is to do the job. But no amount of


scientific knowledge, unless it be subordinate to an under-
standing of individual man, ever can make a medical man a
true healer. Far too often a doctor attending patients has
reminded me of a vet.
irresistibly attending sheep.
I do not know if you realise it, but of recent years the
366
" "
A Voice from the Grandstand
medical profession has been losing- something of respect and
trust, on the side of the personal relationship of doctor and
patient. Let me read you an extract :?

"
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

medical students learn some Zoology, Physics, Chemistry,


Anatomy, Physiology, Pathology, etc., etc., but they never
are

to study Man as a whole. Man


given a chance systematically
is much more than a physical body. The better you know him,
or in
as he lives his life in the city or faces death in his job

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

you find an explanation of this case ?

has heart attack as a result


A sister in Edinburgh a severe

of shock and she knows intuitively that her


anxiety, because
brother, stationed in India, has met with some disaster, though
no physical message of any sort has passed. Will you tell
me what scientific steps you will take in Edinburgh to deal
with the true cause and not the symptoms of the illness ?
This is an actual case. The knowledge, of course, was con-
veyed by Telepathy, but what does that mean ? It is a mere
word, and adds nothing to what I have just said?she felt at
a distance. Yet telepathy, as a result of the research carried
out in Professor Rhine's
Department of Psychology, Duke
University, must I think be accepted as a primary datum
of science.
367
Sir Auckland Geddes

Another case : A girl, a victim for years of extremely


bad eczema, receives a letter which fills her with joy and
thankfulness and within a few days the skin of her face and
arms becomes soft and normal and, what is more, she
suddenly
acquires beauty and dignity. In this particular case the skin
condition existed years before the tension that was ended
by the letter. In the interval she had suffered much at the
hands of many physicians, but they had all failed " to cure
the eczema."
I am well aware that it is fashionable to pooh-pooh such
"
cases or alternatively to look wise and murmur endocrines."
I advise you not to pooh-pooh them and to realise that those
" "
who murmur endocrine are referring to the probable
mechanism and leaving out the answers to those perplexing
imp words How ? and Why ? No one can truly answer how
" "
or why to the What is the link ?
question from India to
the sister's heart or from the letter to the girl's skin. I refer
to these things to make a point : the scientific teaching which

medical students receive fails to cover even the facts of falling


ill and getting well. What I wish is to establish the thought
that beyond our scientific knowledge of Man lies an
incompletely explored area in which important things happen
without discoverable physical cause. But we have all become
so sure that Science is the
only door to knowledge that we tend
to ignore the older ways of approach. If we could reawaken
the sense of untrammelled wonder, which in the days of the
Renaissance gave birth to Science itself, we should make
fresh starts along new lines : but for the time being, and for
a little longer, Science is Queen of the Mind.

The brilliant record and achievement of Science show how


rich has been the prize won for each of us by disciplined
curiosity, but that must not obscure from us the fact that
to-day Science is running into blind alleys from which it can
only emerge by escaping from direct touch with human
understanding. In some sciences, but only in some?for
example, Physics?mathematics can come to the rescue to
demonstrate the unpicturable and to prove the high probability
of what is strictly outside human reason. It is not sense that
one plus one should make one
point eight six. Yet in the
summation of certain velocities it does. This, as you know,
is merely another way of saying that the velocity of light
is an ultimate velocity and that consequently Euclidean
368
" "
A Voice from the Grandstand

geometry cannot be applied to the four dimensional space-


time-continuum which modern Physics requires.
If Physics, the most nearly perfect of all the sciences,
requires mathematics to abstract the unpicturable structure
of reality before some understanding" of that structure can
enter the fields of human knowledge, what are we to do to

understand Man who in his ultimate being cannot be less


difficult to understand than the physical world, because he is
of that world and yet is indubitably more than physical ? It is
clear that to-day we cannot diagrammatise Man mathematically.
It is inevitable then that to us, squinting at him through the
narrow chinks of five senses, much about him must seem
our

irrational to our three-dimensional human reason.


limited
The point I seek to emphasise is one that we all know but
frequently overlook. It is that human reason is quite unable
unaided to picture the nature or structure of reality. Even in
Physics it has to call in mathematics, its own child, to formulate
in what is wholly unpicturable. To say, therefore,
symbols
that any view is irrational or non-rational may be either a
recognition of the limitations of the best human mind available
or of a failure of the human mind concerned.

The writings of Alexis Carrell were the first to make it clear


to me why our minds, even the best of them, are peculiarly
unsuited to the study of our inner being, and why they really
dislike being asked to attempt to comprehend life. They tend
to shy away from so difficult a problem and to return to what

they delight in, the contemplation of more simple things.


Nor is this for wonder. For countless generations Man
cause

and Man's forbears in their struggle to keep alive had to


concentrate closely on the three-dimensional world in which

they found themselves. They had to procure food, shelter,


avoid or fight wild beasts and wilder men. They had to
tame animals, invent weapons and tools, plough, sow, reap,
make pottery, weave cloth?in fact, live and lay the foundations
of culture?all good three-dimensional, relatively simple jobs.
From such activities it is a comparatively straight road through
the descriptive to the abstract of Physics, Mechanics
phases
and Astronomy. these,
Unlike the Science of Man is still
in the hands of sciences and they with respect to
subsidiary
him are still descriptive. As yet there is no method; there are
probably not even words to describe Man simultaneously in his
entirety, in his varying aspects, in his relations to the cosmos.
N.S. IV. xliv., no. vi. 2 c 2
369
Sir Auckland Geddes

We think that each man is an indivisible unitary


individual of extreme complexity, and we know that each
science called in to help us in our study of him gives us a
different view. Each abstracts its own schema, but even
after every abstraction we can make has been made there
is a rich residue that we do not know how to abstract. Physics,
Chemistry, Anatomy, Physiology, Psychology, Anthropology,
Ethnology, History, Sociology, Political Economy, Poetry,
Music, Art, Religion, -Metaphysics?each gives us a different
picture, and Philosophy does not succeed in blending these
into reality. In short, we cannot grasp Man as a whole.
This does not mean that it is impossible to improve our under-
standing. On the contrary, once we have ceased to fear what
seems to us non-rational, and recognise that human reason

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

I think Count Herman Keyserling is right when he points


out that one of the most absurd errors of human history has

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

I most appreciate long


as ashe does not go beyond the radius
of his capacity, told me the following anecdote : They were
'

taking a ride together : Russell said


bicycle I have at last
solved the problem of the Infinite.' The other, who had a
more concrete mind, replied : 'You mean that you have
found a new definition of the Infinite,' and Russell, astonished,
' '"
retorted : Butcan it possibly be a question of anything else ?

No story could illustrate more perfectly the incapacity of


the pure thinker, in this case a great thinker within the area
open to exploration by thought, to recognise the definite limits
of pure thought, which has no competence outside the fields
37?
" "
A Voice from the Grandstand

of Logic and Mathematics. Outside these fields, each thought,


on its to occur and not to follow. The
own
plane, seems

importance of this to us to-night is great. It helps us to

realise the extraordinary sharp limitations which bound our


possible scientific knowledge of Man. Eddington has made
it most clear that in Physics Science can tell us nothing about
the nature of reality, apart from its structure. We have,
therefore, to accept that, in connection with Man, Science
can tell us very little beyond what we can learn from the

schemata which it is the function of the underlying sciences


to devise.
So far as I know we can only approach Man through such
schemata, but in using them we must never forget that they
are only schemata and nothing more. With this caution
firmly in mind let me turn to one such diagram which I
personally have found useful. I used it as the central theme
of an address in Belfast more than twenty-five years ago.
I have no idea now whether I thought of it myself or borrowed
it. If I borrowed it, here are my thanks to the unknown author.
I suppose that all of us vaguely think of the Human Race
as
being composed of countless individuals who are born,
grow produce offspring, grow old and die. Always
up,
changing, yet always similar, succeeding each other in the
possession of houses, land and what not. That is the normal
schema of sociology and of history. It is a pure space schema
and refers almost exclusively to three-dimensional space :
time merely comes in to colour the historical sequence and
the limited duration?the three score years and ten?of the
individual. It is a good schema and one that we can never
escape from for long.
Now forget the individuals for a moment. Behind the
outward showing, what is there ? Obviously an unbroken
highly complicated network of living tissue spread out in
time and not in space?a network of germ plasm knotted as
all nets are knotted, when the strands are joined together.
But these knots are like no others, for at each of them an
individual is bodied forth to be the ark of the germ plasm ;
to support it, to nourish it, to serve it, to pass it on to its next
we observe that the net
knotting. And, as we contemplate,
ofliving tissue extends from a beginning we cannot conceive
towards?towards what ? We have no conception. It is
quite impossible to conceive an inevitable end, mortality,
37i
Sir Auckland Geddes

intrinsic in the net. On the contrary, the embodied individuals


with their quick mortality seem phantom-like. The knottings
of the net are of course the fusions of the chromosomes of the
sperm and ovum within the body of the ovum, at each effected
fertilisation : the strands, the cell lineages which link ovum and
sperm to ovum and sperm. Let me, without prejudice, call
the net the plasmic net : let us realise that it is potentially
immortal. Let us also realise that the individuals bodied
forth at each knotting-are inevitably mortal.
It is, of course, obvious that a similar time-spread dia-
grammatic view is possible in the case of all races of animals :
mammal, reptile, amphibian, fish, with the same immortality
of the net and the same mortality of the individual. We can
note further that all these mortal creatures bodied forth each
to serve, to support, to nourish its own knot in its own racial
net, possesses some psychic quality which it uses in the service
of its net. Make no mistake here. Each individual, from
fish to man, has some knowledge of primordial hunger and
primordial fear, for these are the dim impulses that help each
creature to live,to keep alive if possible until it has woven a
new mesh meshes in its racial net which grows from the
or

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

transference there. That the higher animals have psychic


qualities is beyond dispute. It would be idle to labour the
point in this hall in the very street adorned by the statue
of Greyfriars Bobby.
Are we entitled then to assume that the racial plasmic nets
are simultaneously psychic and plasmic ; or that they carry

with them some pre-psychic store from which they endow


each individual they body forth ? What are the alternatives ?
Either that at the bodying forth of each fish, frog, snake, dog,
man, there is a special Act of Creation of psyche or that each
individual is bodied forth within a psychoid matrix.
372
" "
A Voice from the Grandstand

For the it does not matter much which we assume.


moment
What does is that in our schema we recognise that the
matter

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

abstract terms devised to explain certain manifestations


occurring on the plane of Nature. Whether or not they have
in any sense existence apart from the body we cannot tell.
Most, but not quite all, of the evidence suggests that they
are
inseparable aspects of the tissues which we normally call
physical, whether bodied forth in space or spread out in time.
This schematic view of the human racial plasmic net has
helped my mind to find significance in Jung's teaching in his
Analytical Psychology. I shall have to refer to Freud and
his psycho-analysis before long, but I think I should say
here that in my view the advance in understanding made
possible by the work of Freud, Jung and Adler is one of the
few substantial scientific advances made, since my student
days, in the study of the soul of Man.
Jung's doctrine of collective memory and his demonstration
of what Keyserling has brilliantly called soul-palaeontology
only became picturable to me through the device of the
diagram of the plasmic net spread out in time and its possession
of some It is through contemplation of the
psychic quality.
same schematic view that I have come to realise the meaning
of the dark ferocious abysses in the soul which Freud's analysis
has revealed. Let me remind you, and in doing so emphasise
the fact, that none of the findings of these soul analysts have
metaphysical significance. They belong strictly to the plane
of Nature.
I am in a position to read to you to-night an unique document.
It is the record of the experience of a man who passed into

373
Sir Auckland Geddes

the very portals of death and was brought back to life by


medical treatment. The record was taken down in shorthand
by a skilled secretary as life was re-establishing itself. Its
existence has been known to some of your teachers, perhaps to
some of you, for some time. I have to request that those
who know to whom this strange experience befell will respect
the anonymity and professional secrecy in which this com-
munication is veiled.
As I read this extract from the record you will see how
strong a visualiser the recorder is and how symbolic the des-
criptions of the undescribable are as they take shape in words.
"
On Saturday, 9th, a few minutes after midnight,
November
I began feel very ill,
to by 2 o'clock was definitely suffering
and
from acute gastro-enteritis, which kept me vomiting and
purging until about 8 o'clock. By 10 o'clock I had
. . .

developed all the symptoms of very acute poisoning ; intense


gastro-intestinal pain, diarrhoea ; pulse and respirations
becoming quite impossible to count. I wanted to ring for
assistance, but found I could not, and so quite placidly gave
up the attempt. I realised I was very ill and very quickly
reviewed my whole financial position : thereafter at no time
did my consciousness appear to me to be in any way dimmed,
but I suddenly realised that my consciousness was separating
from another consciousness, which was also me. These for
purposes of description we could call the A and B conscious-
ness, and throughout what follows the ego attached itself
to the A consciousness. The B personality I recognised as
belonging to the body, and as my physical condition
grew
worse and the heart was fibrillating rather than beating, I
realised that the B consciousness belonging to the body was
beginning to show signs of being composite, that is, built up
'
'
of consciousnesses from the head, the heart, the viscera,
etc. These components became more individual and the B
consciousness began to disintegrate, while the A consciousness
which was now me, seemed to be altogether outside my body,
which it could see. Gradually I realised that I could see not
only my body and the bed in which it was, but everything in
the whole house and garden, and then I realised that I was
' '

seeing not only things at home, but in London and in


Scotland, in fact wherever my attention was directed it
seemed to me ; and the explanation which I received, from
what source I do not know, but which I found myself calling
374
" "
A Voice from the Grandstand

to myself my mentor, was that I was free in a time dimension


' '
of space, wherein now was in some way equivalent to
1 '
here in the ordinary three-dimensional space of everyday
' '
life. I next realised that my vision included not only things
in the ordinary three-dimensional world, but also ' things
'

in these four or more dimensional places that I was in. From


now on the description is and must be entirely metaphorical,
because there are no words which really describe what I saw
or rather
appreciated. Although I had no body I had what
appeared to be perfect two-eyed vision, and what I saw can
only be described in this way, that I was conscious of a psychic
stream flowing with life through time, and this gave me the
impression of being visible, and it seemed to me to have a
particularly intense iridescence. I understood from my mentor
that all our brains are just end organs projecting as it were
from the three-dimensional universe into the psychic stream
and flowing with it into the fourth and fifth dimensions.
Around each brain, as I saw it, there seemed to be what I can
only describe in ordinary words as a condensation of the
psychic stream, which formed in each case as though it were
a cloud ; only it was not a cloud. While I was just appreciating
this, the mentor who was conveying information to me explained
that the fourth dimension was in everything existing in the
three-dimensional space, and at the same time everything in
the three-dimensional space existed in the fourth dimension
and also in the fifth dimension, and I at the time quite clearly
' '
understood what was meant, and quite understood how now
in the fourth-dimensional universe was just the same to all
1 '
intents and purposes as here in a three-dimensional universe,
that is to say a four-dimensional being was everywhere in the
' ' '

now,' just as one is everywhere in the here in a three-


' '

dimensional view of things. I then realised that I myself


was a condensation, as it were, in the psychic stream, a sort

of cloud that was not a cloud, and the visual impression I


had of myself was blue. Gradually I began to recognise
people, and I saw the psychic condensation attached to A, B, C,
D, E, F and to quite a number of men that I know, especially
to G and H. In addition, I saw quite a number of people
that I know had very little psychic condensation at all attached
' '
to them. In addition to those just mentioned, I saw I very
clearly and she also gave a visual impression of blueness ;
' ' ' '
A gave purple and dark red ; B pink ; D rather
375
Sir Auckland Geddes
'
E pearly ; and ' F apricot colour ;
' '
indefinite grey brown ;
' '
G was definitely brown. Each of these condensations varied
from all the others in bulk, sharpness of outline and apparent
' '
solidity. Just as I grasp all these I saw A enter
began to

my bedroom ; I realised she got a terrible shock, and I saw


her hurry to the telephone ; I saw my doctor leave his patients
and come very quickly, and heard him say or saw him think
'
He is nearly gone.' I heard him quite clearly speaking to
me on the bed, but I. was not in touch with the
body and could
not answer him. I wasreally cross when he took a syringe
and rapidly injected my body with something, which I after-
wards learned was camphor. As the heart began to beat
more
strongly, I was drawn back, and I was intensely annoyed,
because I was so interested and just beginning to understand
'
where I was and what I was seeing.' I came back into the
body really angry at being pulled back, and once I was back
all the clarity of vision of anything and everything disappeared
and I was just possessed of a glimmer of consciousness, which
was suffused with pain.
"
It is surprising to note that this dream, vision or experience
has shown no tendency to fade like a dream would fade, nor
has it shown any tendency that I am aware of to grow or to
rationalise itself as a dream would do. I think that the whole
thing simply means that but for medical treatment of a
peculiarly prompt and vigorous kind, I was dead to the three-
dimensional universe. If this is so and if in fact the experience
of liberation of consciousness in the fourth-dimensional universe
is not imagination, it is a most important matter to place on
record. Since my return with the injections there had been
no of any sort or kind of the experience or of the
repetition
clear understanding that I seemed to have while I was free
from the body."
Thus ends the record. What are we to make of it ? Of
one thing only can we be quite sure. It is not fake. Without
certainty of this I should not have brought it to your notice.
But, was it a dream or does it record a symbolic vision of one

aspect of reality translated into inadequate words ? I do not


know. Whichever or whatever it was it provides us with a

schema that helps to make picturable to our minds things


otherwise difficult to grasp.
First it has helped me to define the idea of a psychic con-
tinuum spread out in time like the plasmic net. It does more ;
376
" "
A Voice from the Grandstand

it provides comprehensible background for the soul


a

palaeontology Jung and it seems to throw a flood of light on


of
the meaning of soul abysses discovered by the method of Freud.
It brings telepathy, clairvoyance, spiritualism and indeed all
the parapsychic manifestations into the domain of the pictur-
able. It also provides a rational seeming background for
such ideas the group or national soul and such a conception
as

as the psychic atmosphere. But, most important, it makes the


idea of the lifelong unity of body and soul much simpler to grasp.
Of course I do not imagine there is a visible psychic stream,
but I do quite definitely believe that the record I have read
presents in words one aspect of Man's complicated being and
relationships,as these were symbolised in the mind of a man

at the point of death.

The clouds of personality, that were not clouds as the


record says, show how inapt to describe this adventure in, or
dream of a world unknown to our five senses, ordinary words are.
Personally, I regard the record as a valuable symbolic
impression of man's body-soul as it disintegrates in death,
and of the existence of a racial psycho-plasmic net extended

in time. There is one important point that we must notice


before I pass on. There is absolutely nothing in the record
which is metaphysical. The whole adventure, if such it were,
took place on the plane of Nature. It is thus to be sharply
distinguished from the records of the spiritual adventures of
the mystics. These belong to the plane of spirit, which is
supernatural.
The point we have reached in the construction of our
diagram is :?

The individual child, woman, man who is to be your


patient is not body and soul, but strictly on the plane of
Nature body-soul bound so long as life shall last indissolubly
to the
psycho-plasmic net, which is the time-extended link
between all that have been and are.
men

In thedays it will often puzzle you whether the


to come
sickness or the hurt that you are asked to treat originated on
the body side or the soul side of your patient's being. You
are sure to meet some
teasing problems.
Let me read you some extracts from a letter :?

"
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 . . .

to pulp and the right one badly damaged ; perhaps a quarter

of it was left to function, but within a year or so that too was


gone?fibrosis they said?anyhow, I was almost if not quite
a eunuch.
Everything seemed to go wrong with me physically.
I was always septic, teeth, tonsils, appendix, and morally I
thought I was going to bits. I fell violently in love with one
woman after another. I was psycho-analysed and pretty
...

thoroughly Freudulated. Complexes and repressions were my


staple mental pabulum and I kept on falling into violent love
with one woman after another. Violent love?insane love !
My home was being destroyed. I had the most profound
consciousness of guilt?self-respect was gone?almost.
"
Then I bumped into you again and you remember how
I poured out my story and confessed to you as to a father
confessor. I shall never forget your words : 'It has nothing
to do with morals. It is tissue starvation : your body fluids
are short of the testicular hormone?that's all.' Then you
went on to talk about a thirsty man in the desert, whose tissues

are short of water, dreaming of water in wells and springs

and green grass and trees, and of a starving man dreaming


of rich and rare foods, and then?how good it sounded !?how
by analogy a man short of testicular hormone would necessarily
dream of women and sexual intercourse. I remember you
distinguished between the love
storms of the
young male due
to distensions, the result of accumulated semen, and the love
storms of the castrated and the senescent, due to tissue
starvation. That's the whole story. With the injections of
testicular extract all my troubles ended. Life has resumed
. . .

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

of the physical and psychical in Man.


And here, while we are considering the influence of the
body-side on the soul-side of Man, let me say that I wholly
378
" "
A Voice from the Grandstand

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

the and the unbalanced become more abnormal when


nervous

their sexual appetities are repressed. We all know that the


strong, on the contrary, become still stronger through the
practice of self-control and abstinence from irregulated sexual
activities ; in short, the influence of the body on the soul is
beyond question.
The influence of the soul body is equally clear and
on the
equally important. pathetic story illustrating the
The most

power of soul over body that I know relates to the tragedy


of a young officer in the Great War. For the most flagrant
cowardice, for deserting his post and his men, he was con-
demned to death and shot. Poor lad, he was the only son
of a widow?always nervous, but fine to look at, well grown
and well nourished.
She wrote when she was told : "I knew he had no courage,
and I feared he had no self-control. I can only pray that the
death of my son has expiated his fault and that his fate may
save others from themselves and may strengthen them in their

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

when its body is shattered. Her death certificate said she


died of heart failure, which was true?her heart had stopped.
For her all was finished.
Theseare cases of extreme
body and soul injuries ; in other
cases they are slight and difficult to recognise and yet in every
degree they may project injury to the other partner in the
body-soul amalgam. I have often pondered that distraught
" "
mother's piteous cry, Was I to blame ? and wondered
whether her medical attendant was without some responsibility.
Like all whose names appear on the Medical Register, I
receive by almost every post advertisements from business
houses trying to persuade me to make patients whom I have
not got swallow something which the business house longs to

supply. Some of these circulars frighten me, especially those


advising that infants be fed on?what shall I call the hypo-
"
thetical patent food ??" Bulkem ! The usual slogan is
that Dr Bunkum finds Bulkem Builds Bigger Babies. Now
if we were fattening babies for the table I could understand
the relevance of the appeal. But we are not, so why fatten
them or stimulate them to grow bigger ? Bigger is not
equivalent to better, and even better can only be interpreted
from adult life backwards. We want our adults to be alert,
intelligent, courageous, capable of
resisting fatigue and the
rush and turmoil of life, and, so far as I know, these qualities
are by no means necessarily associated with great body bulk.

I am not sure that overstimulation of baby growth may not


ultimately be proved to produce rather sluggish, lazy, cowardly,
easily tired, nervously unstable men and women. Historically
it seems to me that many of the most effective men have been
anything but large. At all events Dr Bunkum and his Bulkem
so do all the other diet fads of
want watching?and to-day.
Nobody knows what the effects of dietetic revolutions are.
Always remember that through the body you can reach,
perhaps permanently modify, the soul. I have observed that
a number of the most effective of my acquaintances were

brought up hard?under conditions and on a dietary that


would shock the sentimentalists. Yet they stand modern life
well : they recover quickly from illness and injury, and have
got what the men of the
marketplace, with a painful disregard
"
of the Science of Anatomy, call lots of guts." Let me ask a
question which I beg you to ponder. Has this sentence more
than factual significance?" Oatmeal porridge used to be the
380
" "
A Voice from the Grandstand
"
staple food of the Scottish peasantry ? I think it has, but
I leave you to decide, each for himself.
Now we come to a further and final complication. I do
not pretend to know much about it, but I do know that the
body-soul of a man is only the house in which his real self
lives. The highest animals are no more than body-souls ;
but Man is not an animal. He is also a spirit and this spirit
in some way has become a partner in the body-soul, making
our
diagrammatic formula of Man, body-soul-spirit.
As I myself would have to speak with little certainty, I
propose to borrow the words of Keyserling, just as I find them
in scattered and isolated passages. Keyserling seems to me
to know more of spirit than any other writer, and this is what

he says :?

"
I believe in myself ... as in an essentially
not-earthly
spirit ... I know myself to be indestructible but I ...

know well enough that by far the greatest part of what my


consciousness mirrors is indissolubly bound up with earthly
life, and thus sure to pass away. But I am not only essentially
eternal, I also feel essentially free . .
my self-consciousness
.

applies to nothing except my spirit. Body and soul are


sensed as mere means of expression only
primarily by me . . .

the problem of the spirit concerns me essentially. But now


for the most curious fact of all: the spirit which alone I feel
and acknowledge to be myself is, nevertheless, unknown to me.
"
Between that spirit and my earthly nature there is an
ultimate incompatibility which prevents the latter from
completely apprehending what I know. .
My Spirit, my
. .

deepest Self, is bent on creating for itself its personal body.


But it cannot succeed unless I refrain from accepting any-
thing I have not acquired personally; from believing what
I do not know from personal experience ; from standing by
anything that I am not, really and truly, at the given moment.
Unconditional personal truthfulness is my one categorical
imperative. . .

That is the end of the quotations.


I hope these extracts will serve to introduce Keyserling's
writings to those of you who do not know them. They contain
much that is of importance to medical men, but they are not
easy reading. Most of his works are now available in English,
published by Jonathan Cape.
N.S. IV. XLIV., NO. VI. 381 2 D
Sir Auckland Geddes

To me, Spirit is beyond direct reach, but I can see the


effects it produces. I see it make a mock of the careful safety-
first attitude of body-soul. I see it value a human life at less
than nothing and act accordingly. I see it as courage, faith
and aspiration. I see it as the will to live dangerously. I
see itbefore a man
set an image of what it wants him to be
and mould him to it.
Do not imagine that Spirit is pious or sanctimonious. It is
the reverse. pious seek a reward : Spirit never does. One
The
of the grandest spirits I ever knew treated official Christianity
and the organised Churches with scant respect, almost as a
bad joke, and yet mystically reached out across the years to
the Master Spirit of the Greatest Jew, Jesus of Nazareth.
Now let me juxtapose two passages I have already quoted :?
This from Keyserling :?
"
My spirit, my deepest self, is bent on creating for itself
its personal body,"
and this from the record of the vision :?

"
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

Spirit may be too powerful for bodily health as in the


God-seekers, the mystics. Sometimes their bodies suffer
physical damage when their spirits go out to meet God, if that
is what they do. Do not scoff at mysticism, it has wielded
tremendous power in the world. Personally I have no
of it. The nearest I ever came to it was when I
experience
382
" "
A Voice from the Grandstand

stood beside a bed and observed the condition of a mystic


following supernatural adventure and saw a good general-
a

practitioner and an eminent consulting physician baffled. It


was as if every tissue of the body was inflamed and exhausted.
I just did not understand.
When spirit is defective you get all sorts of fears?fear of
death and damnation, fear of war, fear of loss of income, fear
of the dark. The spirit defectives turn up as pacifists and
the unco' guid, general representatives of the whole tribe of
as

Security seekers and


kill-joys. In fact, show me an over-
...

earnest pompous ass and I shall show you a


spirit defective.
Those who live too intensely in soul are usually spirit
defective. .
They may be first-class thinkers. They may
. .

have a quality of extraordinary rigidity about conserving


security. They may suddenly do things out of blind urge
and, fear-haunted, may commit dreadful atrocities. Among
the soul defectives you will find the animal, sex-driven type,
who may be intellectual, or what is called machine-minded,
with all the brutality and selfishness of the road-hog. The
class-war Bolshevist also fits in here. They wish to organise
and improve mankind by force. The improvements they seek
are material and machine-made aids to security?their own

security. There are millions and millions of these people in


the world to-day. They are neurotic, ill-adjusted and restless
?perhaps they are the product of urban life?of the divorce
of Man from close contact with mother-earth. You will meet

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?

(a) A slates in the ordinary course of his


man
fixing
employment ?
(b) An elder of the kirk escaping from a brothel raided
by the police ?
(c) A hero who falls while saving from certain death by
fire the lovely daughter and sole heiress of Sir Midas
MacMidas ?
Well, is it ?
383
Sir Auckland Geddes

You know that though granulation tissue formation and


epithelial growth can be shown tobe the same in each case,
the hero will recover first. His spirit is aflame with proved
courage ; his body-soul, perhaps, with love ; his mind,
perhaps, with hope?he may have noticed that Miss MacMidas
is the sole heiress of Sir Midas. These are strong stimulants.
The elder of the kirk will probably never get quite well
because he feels degraded and is publicly disgraced. These
are
strong depressants. The slater, as a matter of course,
will get quite well so soon as he has collected the cash coming
to him under the Workman's Compensation Acts. This is
not cynicism on my part or malingering on his?it just is so.

To-night I have deliberately emphasised the individuality "


"
of each person, because, as I see it, The Young Doctor is
" "
apt to
"
generalise each patient as A Human Being suffering
"
from A Disease." Now my conception of The Young
" " "
Doctor is a generalisation just as A Human Being is a
" "

generalisation and as A Disease is also. The trouble is


that we cannot think without generalisations and that we
cannot act with, or on, them. We cannot even meet them
in the flesh because they exist only in our minds. In truth
each young doctor is unique and so is each patient : so, too,
is each case in which, for example, Bacillus Typhosus, in its
millions, interacts with the body tissues and fluids of a
particular man. As all interactions of that kind involve the
psyche of the patient (for example, the will to live), consideration
of the patient's soul-spirit state is of obvious importance.
To recognise this does not diminish the importance either of
the generalisations we use in thinking or of the scientific
knowledge underlying diagnosis and treatment. On the
contrary, it makes it greater. My dissertation is not then
a
plea to diminish the scientific training of the medical student,
but to add to it a recognition of those aspects of Man's being
which to-day, perhaps forever, are beyond the reach of Science.
And so I end as I began, comforted by the thought that
my role has been to shout advice from the Grandstand. You
will notice that I have said nothing new. All I have done
has been to dress up some old truths in new clothes.

384

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