登陆注册
15483400000006

第6章 CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION(3)

In every age, and in every religion there has been justification for his bitter words, "tantum religio potuit suadere malorum"--"Such wrongs Religion in her train doth bring"--yet, one outcome of "a belief in spiritual beings"--as Tylor defines religion-- has been that man has built an altar of righteousness in his heart. The comparative method applied to the study of his religious growth has shown how man's thoughts have widened in the unceasing purpose which runs through his spiritual no less than his physical evolution. Out of the spiritual protoplasm of magic have evolved philosopher and physician, as well as priest. Magic and religion control the uncharted sphere--the supernatural, the superhuman: science seeks to know the world, and through knowing, to control it. Ray Lankester remarks that Man is Nature's rebel, and goes on to say: "The mental qualities which have developed in Man, though traceable in a vague and rudimentary condition in some of his animal associates, are of such an unprecedented power and so far dominate everything else in his activities as a living organism, that they have to a very large extent, if not entirely, cut him off from the general operation of that process of Natural Selection and survival of the fittest which up to their appearance had been the law of the living world. They justify the view that Man forms a new departure in the gradual unfolding of Nature's predestined scheme. Knowledge, reason, self-consciousness, will, are the attributes of Man."[1] It has been a slow and gradual growth, and not until within the past century has science organized knowledge-- so searched out the secrets of Nature, as to control her powers, limit her scope and transform her energies. The victory is so recent that the mental attitude of the race is not yet adapted to the change. A large proportion of our fellow creatures still regard nature as a playground for demons and spirits to be exorcised or invoked.

[1] Sir E. Ray Lankester: Romanes Lecture, "Nature and Man,"

Oxford Univ. Press, 1905, p. 21.

Side by side, as substance and shadow--"in the dark backward and abysm of time," in the dawn of the great civilizations of Egypt and Babylon, in the bright morning of Greece, and in the full noontide of modern life, together have grown up these two diametrically opposite views of man's relation to nature, and more particularly of his personal relation to the agencies of disease.

The purpose of this course of lectures is to sketch the main features of the growth of these two dominant ideas, to show how they have influenced man at the different periods of his evolution, how the lamp of reason, so early lighted in his soul, burning now bright, now dim, has never, even in his darkest period, been wholly extinguished, but retrimmed and refurnished by his indomitable energies, now shines more and more towards the perfect day. It is a glorious chapter in history, in which those who have eyes to see may read the fulfilment of the promise of Eden, that one day man should not only possess the earth, but that he should have dominion over it! I propose to take an aeroplane flight through the centuries, touching only on the tall peaks from which may be had a panoramic view of the epochs through which we pass.

ORIGIN OF MEDICINE

MEDICINE arose out of the primal sympathy of man with man; out of the desire to help those in sorrow, need and sickness.

In the primal sympathy Which having been must ever be;

In the soothing thoughts that spring Out of human suffering.

The instinct of self-preservation, the longing to relieve a loved one, and above all, the maternal passion--for such it is--gradually softened the hard race of man--tum genus humanum primum mollescere coepit. In his marvellous sketch of the evolution of man, nothing illustrates more forcibly the prescience of Lucretius than the picture of the growth of sympathy: "When with cries and gestures they taught with broken words that 'tis right for all men to have pity on the weak." I heard the well-known medical historian, the late Dr. Payne, remark that "the basis of medicine is sympathy and the desire to help others, and whatever is done with this end must be called medicine."

The first lessons came to primitive man by injuries, accidents, bites of beasts and serpents, perhaps for long ages not appreciated by his childlike mind, but, little by little, such experiences crystallized into useful knowledge. The experiments of nature made clear to him the relation of cause and effect, but it is not likely, as Pliny suggests, that he picked up his earliest knowledge from the observation of certain practices in animals, as the natural phlebotomy of the plethoric hippopotamus, or the use of emetics from the dog, or the use of enemata from the ibis. On the other hand, Celsus is probably right in his account of the origin of rational medicine. "Some of the sick on account of their eagerness took food on the first day, some on account of loathing abstained; and the disease in those who refrained was more relieved. Some ate during a fever, some a little before it, others after it had subsided, and those who had waited to the end did best. For the same reason some at the beginning of an illness used a full diet, others a spare, and the former were made worse. Occurring daily, such things impressed careful men, who noted what had best helped the sick, then began to prescribe them. In this way medicine had its rise from the experience of the recovery of some, of the death of others, distinguishing the hurtful from the salutary things" (Book I).

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 心动在这个仲夏之tfboys

    心动在这个仲夏之tfboys

    其实我也不知道该如何去介绍这部小说因为计划永远赶不上变化嘛!如果愿意来看的,就来吧!本人也是第一次写,没有什么经验,我的语言组织能力比较差,所以写的不是很好,请读者大大见谅哦!有什么意见也可以提出来哦多一点真诚,少一点套路。
  • 神魔天堂

    神魔天堂

    「神」与「魔」共存的世界,协助人类而成为了「神」,摧毁人类而成为了「魔」。「正义」与「邪恶」、「光芒」与「黑暗」,究竟谁「善」谁「恶」?改变新世界的大门,它的背后,究竟是「天堂」亦或是......「地狱」。
  • 驭间记

    驭间记

    天弃降世,天下缟素,风雨如晦,末日将至。市井少年脚踏泥泞,剑指苍天,以逆命为棋入局天下,谱写壮丽篇章。
  • 日知录

    日知录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 穿越爱恋:今世桐花开

    穿越爱恋:今世桐花开

    世世桐花落,今世桐花开。掩面看人间,只为与他相遇。前世埋下的因,只能默默承受。今生埋下的果,只想平淡经历。她没有倾国倾城的美貌,也没有沉浮大海的志向,她只想做个普通人,可是,为什么不行?三生石旁,她被尘世束缚,被无助囚禁,只能做千年前的她,十八年前的她。她不想,她不要,她要做自己!不管是三生石还是梧桐树,她只要做自己。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 繁华有时尽

    繁华有时尽

    他脸如雕刻般五官分明,两道剑眉微蹙,此时突然狂风肆虐,长发随风在身后凌乱飞舞,逆着月光,袖口处的牡丹隐隐若现,竟给人一种欲将成仙归去之感。她是现世一抹游魂,机缘巧合古时重生,那些自己曾不屑的情感竟伤得她体无完肤!她说:永世不相见!
  • 特工穿越,EXO追妻记

    特工穿越,EXO追妻记

    他,是高冷的摄政王他,是霸气的鬼见愁他,是可爱的贵公子他,是呆萌的大将军他,是暖心的少竹马他,是帅气的小阁主……她,是21世纪的杀手王;她,也是无人不知、无人不晓的废物当他们遇上她,谁才能最终抱得美人归呢!
  • 快穿攻略计划

    快穿攻略计划

    本书讲述的是系统君带着宿主君穿越时空完成心愿的故事,并带老公大大回家。
  • 盗墓大笔记

    盗墓大笔记

    大爱老三的盗墓笔记,一算时间,这一晃又是一个十年了。最佩服老三的是他对小说的掌握和把握,挖的遍地坑又让你觉得欲罢不能,在本人拍案叫绝之时,突发奇想,想要写一篇恶搞,聊以慰藉,不喜吻喷!
  • 健康排毒金典

    健康排毒金典

    本书精心为读者设计每一个排毒章节,遴选各个排毒方法,帮助您——从今天起,打造“无毒”的强健体质。