Добавил:
Upload Опубликованный материал нарушает ваши авторские права? Сообщите нам.
Вуз: Предмет: Файл:
МакМахон "Знание приобретенное или дарованное свыше (англ).pdf
Скачиваний:
44
Добавлен:
10.03.2016
Размер:
2.75 Mб
Скачать

Appendix 5 - Philosophy of Health

Larkin B Coles

Page 126.2 – “And added to these, there will not infrequently appear in males, seminal incontinence, wasting away the vital energies by the excessive and unnatural draft which it makes on the electric forces of the brain and nerves.”

Score – Unverified

What 11 – Rhythm Contraception

A woman is safe from fertilization from eight days after the finish of her monthly period.

Page 160.2 – “The fact, therefore, that as a general rule, no woman is susceptible of impregnation, after about eight days from finishing her lunar period until another comes, is one which needs to be understood for important practical purposes of life (contraception);”

Comment – The safe period is 10 days before the next period starts.

Score - Unverified

What 12 - Spitting

Excessive spitting is dangerous.

Page 22.2 – “It is this fluid (saliva) which is so lavishly secreted and cast away by tobaccochewers.” (is a health hazard).

Comment – Spitting is a health risk to others.

Score - Unverified

Why 21 – Spitting (What 12) Spitting reduces vigor of the system.

Page 22.2 – “They are overtaxed (from spitting) in the amount they are made to secrete; and this over-draft, of itself, tends to lessen the vigor of the system.”

Score – Unverified

What 13Cradle

G 32

Do not rock a child in a cradle.

Page 94.2 – “those brain-destroyers. Cradles”

Score – Unverified

Why 22 – Cradle (What 13)

Rocking a child damages the brain.

Page 94.2 – “those brain-destroyers. Cradles”

Score - Unverified

II. FRESH AIR

 

What 14 – Ventilation

W 12 R 7 G 23 A 42 J 28 K 34

Ventilation is required for good health.

 

Page 18.2 – “We cannot be too careful to have a free circulation of air in our sleeping apartment. Every school-room should have a ventilation ....”

Score – Significant

Why 23 – Ventilation 1 (What 14)

We breathe to gain oxygen and to dispose of carbon dioxide.

Page 17.2 – “The carbon of the blood becomes united with the oxygen, the oxygen consuming the carbon and forming carbonic acid gas;”

Score – Verified

Don S McMahon

155

Appendix 5 - Philosophy of Health

Larkin B Coles

Why 24 – Ventilation 2 (What 14)

If there are low levels of oxygen or high carbon dioxide, the air is not good to breathe.

Page 19.1 – “No air is fit to be breathed that has parted with its due proportion of oxygen, or is unduly charged with carbonic acid gas.”

Score - Verified

Why 25 – Ventilation 3 (What 14)

Sleeping in a poorly ventilated room causes tuberculosis.

Page 19.1 – “Many cases of bleeding at the lungs and of consumption have been introduced by by protracted causes of this kind (sleeping in poorly ventilated room).”

Score - Unverified

Why 26 - Respiration (What 14)

Respiration occurs through the lungs and skin.

Page 17.1 – “Respiration essentially consists in the interchange of certain elementary principles contained in the blood, from those contained in the atmospheric air. The Lungs, and the Skin, form the medium through which this interchange is made.”

Page 19.2 –“The Skin is also an organ of respiration. .... It gives off a portion of carbon in carbonic acid gas, and receives a portion of oxygen from the surrounding air.”

Comment There is no respiration through the skin.

Score – Unverified

What 15 – Deep Breathing

(A 40) (R 22)

Deep breathing is good for health.

 

Page 163.2 – “Let her take special pains to expand her chest, .... for without a full chest (there are health problems)”

Score – Minor

Why 27 – Deep Breathing (What 15)

Deep breathing protects a woman’s offspring from tuberculosis.

Page 163.2 – “for without a full chest, she may plant the seeds of consumption in the constitution of her offspring.”

Score - Unverified

III. SUNLIGHT

IV. ABSTEMIOUSNESS

What 16 – Alcohol (W 19) (R 8) (G 26) A 67 (J 34) (K 42)

Alcohol is a dangerous drug, which should only be used for medicinal purposes.

Page 72.2 – “If we would enjoy health, all stimulating drinks should be avoided as common drink. They may be useful as medicines when nature falters and droops,”

Page 49.1 – “Alcohol liquors of all kinds, whether strong beer, porter, ale cider, or brandy &c., are never to be taken; …. they are all stimulants;”

Comment There was some medicinal use for alcohol in 1860, but due to the social consequences it was not a good treatment.

Score - Minor

Why 28 – Alcohol 1 (What 16)

Alcohol is a stimulant that has no nutrition.

Don S McMahon

156

Appendix 5 - Philosophy of Health

Larkin B Coles

Page 75.1 – “Alcohol liquors of all kinds …. are never to be taken; because, besides the danger of a drunkard’s grave, they are all stimulants; they impart no nourishment to the system, but force its action to an unnatural degree.”

Comment – There is some nourishment in alcoholic drinks. Alcohol is a sedative not a stimulant.

Score – Unverified

Why 29 – Alcohol 2 (What 16) Alcohol burns the system.

Page 13. 1 – “Alcohol burns up the system by its carbon and inflammable gases, so that spontaneous combustion of the whole body sometimes take place:”

Score - Unverified

Why 30 – Alcohol 3 (What 16)

Alcohol is less damaging on the nervous system than tobacco or caffeine.

Page 13.1 – “the nerves are less permanently disturbed by it (alcohol), when used to the same extent, than by tea, or coffee, or tobacco.”

Comment – The opposite is true.

Score – Unverified

Why 31 – Alcohol 4 (What 16) Alcohol causes genetic damage.

Page 150.1 – “His brain, from whence the germ of the future being proceeds, is steaming and fuming by the alcohol.”

Comment – It is true that the brain can be damaged by alcohol, but it does not cause genetic damage.

Score - Unverified

What 17 – Tobacco (W 18) (R 19) (G27) A 70 (J 36) (K 41)

Tobacco is a dangerous drug that should only be used for medicinal purposes. Page 79.2 – “The most violent …. such as tobacco, …. are not harmless;”

Page 153.1 – “Tobacco is one of the most deadly narcotics found upon the list of poisons.” Page 153.1 – “It (tobacco) is sometimes used as a medicine, …. It should never be used as a medicine except by a judicious physician, even by external application;”

Comment – There is no medicinal use for tobacco.

Score – Unverified

Why 32 – Tobacco 1 (What 17) Tobacco is dangerous and addictive.

Page 84.1 – “Tobacco .... is one of the most powerful narcotics stimulants which vegetation produces.”

Page 153.1 – “Tobacco is one of the most deadly narcotics found upon the list of poisons.” Page 104.2 – “Tobacco-using, by chewing, smoking, or snuffing, is a vice of more powerful

influence on the nervous system, and physical function in general, than the drinking of alcohol in the same proportion.”

Comment – This is not fully true, but it produces one of the strongest addictions.

Score – Verified

Why 33 – Tobacco 2 (What 17)

Tobacco damages by interfering with our electrical forces.

Don S McMahon

157

Appendix 5 - Philosophy of Health

Larkin B Coles

Page 141.1 – “If a man chew or smoke tobacco till the electric forces of his nervous system are undermined, or the vital properties of his blood are corrupted, or the secreting energies of his liver and kidneys are destroyed, and he consequently be laid upon a premature dying cough.”

Score - Unverified

Why 34 – Tobacco 3 (What 17)

Tobacco is poisonous and can shorten our lives.

Page 79.2 – “The most violent poisons may be used, after a habit is established, with apparent impunity; such as tobacco, …. They are not harmless; they expose their consumers to premature sickness, old age, and death.”

Page 85.1 – “In this way it gradually wears out vitality, and shortens life;”

Score – Verified

Why 35 – Tobacco 4 (What 17) Tobacco wears out the vital forces.

Page 84.1 – “Still, the poison: is there, and is gradually undermining the vital forces of the system.”

Score - Unverified

Why 36 – Tobacco 5 (What 17) Chewing tobacco causes piles.

Page 25.1 – “Tobacco by its poisonous power in the mouth, has sometimes produced the most inveterate piles.”

Score - Verified

What 18 – Opium

W 20 G 28 (A 68) J 37

Opium is a poison.

 

Page 79.2 – “The most violent …. such as …. opium, …. are not harmless;”

Score – Significant

Why 37 – Opium (What 18)

Opium is poisonous and can shorten our lives.

Page 79.2 – “The most violent poisons may be used, after a habit is established, with apparent impunity; such as …. opium, …. They are not harmless; they expose their consumers to premature sickness, old age, and death.”

Score – Verified

What 19 – Coffee & Tea

W 17 R 18 G 29 A 71 J 38 K 43

Tea and coffee contain a dangerous drug. They should only be used for medicinal purposes.

Page 76.1

– “Coffee is objectionable …. It is a stimulant – a kind of narcotic stimulant bearing

some resemblance to opium;”

 

Page 76.1

– “Coffee should never be placed on any other list than that of medicines;”

Page 78.3

– “(Coffee) ought never to be used except when required as an antidote to poison, or for

some other medicinal purpose.”

 

Page 80.1

– “Tea is another objectionable article, because of its stimulating properties.”

Score - Minor

 

Why 38 – Caffeine 1 (What 19)

Caffeine is a stimulant, which can leave a depressed feeling.

Page 78.3 – “that its (coffee) stimulating qualities are decidedly injurious to the system,”

Don S McMahon

158

Соседние файлы в предмете [НЕСОРТИРОВАННОЕ]