Mind and Body
Mind and body seem mutually to act upon each other as cause and effect. The commonest way in which the body acts upon the mind is by the organs of sensation. Anything that affects, our bodily organs of sensation produces feelings in the mind: When something presents itself before our eyes or our nose our mind has a sensation of sight or of smell. When a warm object touches our bodies, we have a feeling of warmth. This action of the body on the mind through the senses is so continual and familiar that we seldom reflect upon it, although in other instances we are surprised that matter should act upon spirit. Such surprise is expressed when a new drug is discovered which temporarily extinguishes the activity of the mind and-produces insensibility. Under the influence of either, chloroform, and laughing gas, patients in hospitals can undergo dangerous operations without being conscious of any pain. This is very wonderful, but not more wonderful than facts of a similar kind with which the world has long been familiar.
The temporary cessation of the mind’s power of feeling caused by these drugs is much the same as, the affect produced by opium and alcohol. It has long been known to the world that opium can fill the mind with fantastic visions, very different from those that present themselves to the mind in its ordinary state. Still more familiar are the affects of alcohol in producing cheerfulness in some minds, Melancholy in others, and in causing complete, in-sensibility when taken in large quantities. Long-continued excess in drinking wine and spirits may even in the end lead to the delusions of insanity.
The Same affect may also be caused by a severe blow on the head or by sunstroke. The material of the brain is so intimately connected with thought that the slightest injury to it may produce unconsciousness or entirely mar the intellect. Sometimes the affect of such injuries seems to be extremely capricious, as iii the re-corded cases in which injury, to the brain has ,blotted; out the memory of one particular language, or of one particular,’ division of the parts of speech. In all the cages considered above a bodily change is the antecedent, and a mental change the consequent.
Let us now consider those instances in which a mental change appears to be casually connected with a subsequent bodily; change. Of these the most familiar case is a voluntary motion, in which the movement Of our limbs follows a volition formed in our minds., Almost equally familiar are the involuntary changes in our countenance, which express the emotions of joy, grief, anger, and fear; and, by being frequently repeated, permanently alter the features of the, human countenance, so that the skillful physiognomist can read our character in our faces. The state of the mind produces marked affects on the condition of the body. The proverb “Laugh and grow fat” expresses the scientific truth that cheerfulness helps us to assimilate our food; and it is known that fear has a prejudicial affect upon the digestion. Wonderful cures have been affected by influencing the mind of the patient. It has often been noticed that fear is a predisposing Cause: of cholera, and that. Those who have caught the disease are more likely to recover if they do not despair of recovery.
The curative affects of confidence were demonstrated some time ago in the case of another disease, by experiment made with magnets. In a certain hospital it was observed that the application of magnets had a decidedly good affect upon rheumatism. Someone, who suspected the truth, tried, instead of real magnets, pieces of wood coloured and shaped like magnets, and those were found to ‘be equally effectual. This showed that what really affected the cure of the rheumatism was the confidence produced in the mind of patient, and that the recovery, which was supposed to be due to, the power of the magnet, was really a case of what is called faith-healing.
All the cases we, have been considering show that there is between mind and body a very close alliance, so that whatever affects the one may be expected to produce an effect upon the other. From this may be deduced a practical lesion of great importance, which is too often not taken to heart by Indian students. It is that, if we neglect the claims of our body in order to devote ourselves more exclusively to the cultivation of our minds, the ill-health of our bodies will impair our intellectual powers, and it is not unlikely that in the end we may ruin mind and body together.