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Appendix 6 – Laws of Life

James Caleb Jackson

1862 Vol. 5 page 151.2 – “The skin, .... takes at least three-fifths, (of excretion) the lungs and kidneys another fifth, and the bowels the remaining fifth.”

1863 Vol. 6 page 18.3 – “The purification of the blood is not insured solely by respiration processes. It is quite as necessary that the organs of excretion, having their termination in the skin,”

Score - Unverified

What 32 – Outdoors

(W 14) (R 39) (A 59)

People should live mainly outdoors especially if sick.

1863 Vol. 6 page 19.2 – “our patients, who are able, should practically live out doors .... breathing and bathing in pure air”

Page 168.2 – “living largely in the open air.” Comment – This overstates the need to be outdoors.

Score – Minor

III SUNLIGHT

What 33 – Light W 16 A 61 K 40

People require light for good health.

1863 Vol. 6 page 18.2 – “All sick persons should have plenty of light. ...The human organism cannot thrive, nor can it remain long in a healthy condition, in the absence of light.”

Score – Significant

IV ABSTEMIOUSNESS

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

Don’t drink alcohol.

1863 Vol. 6 page 1.2- “together with narcotic beverages,….under circumstances unfavorable to health to take on diseases of the mucous membrane.” (Also - Feb. 17, 1863 - Adventist Review and Sabbath Herald.)

Comment- Jackson regarded alcohol as a narcotic.

Score – Significant

Why 25 – Alcohol 1 (What 34) Alcohol causes ruin.

1863 Vol. 6 page 84.2 - “These two poisons, therefore, stand over against each other. ... and alcohol completing the ruin.”

Score – Verified

Why 26 – Alcohol 2 (What 34)

The vital forces are exhausted eliminating alcohol.

1863 Vol. 6 page 178.3 – “The vital forces cannot use it (alcohol) for the purpose of supply waste, and only exhaust themselves in their efforts to eliminate it from the system.”

Score - Unverified

Why 27 – Alcohol 3 (What 34) Alcohol damages the brain.

1862 Vol. 5 page 4.3 – “Alcohol liquids in habitual influence upon the brain, seem to deteriorate those portions of it through which the intellectual faculties express themselves,”

Don S McMahon

188

Appendix 6 – Laws of Life

James Caleb Jackson

Score - Verified

Why 28 – Alcohol 4 (What 34) Alcohol affects the senses.

1862 Vol. 5 page 98.3 – “drinking spirituous liquors, …. help to break down the discriminative power of smell, sight, hearing, and touch.”

Score - Verified

What 35 – Alcohol Fumes

Don’t breathe the fumes of alcohol.

1862 Vol. 5 page 2.2 – “the vapors of alcohol and all strong spirituous liquors” (can intoxicate.)

Score - Unverified

Why 29 – Alcohol Fumes (What 35)

Alcohol fumes are faster absorbed than through the stomach.

1862

Vol. 5 page 2.2 – “the vapors of alcohol and all strong spirituous liquors .... produce a much

more rapid effect when inhaled than when they are taken into the stomach; and if the vapor

inhalation be long continued,

the changes produced in the blood and the effects of it on the nervous

system, are such as to injure or to destroy life.”

Score - Unverified

 

What 36 – Tobacco

W 18 R 19 G 27 (A 70) (C 17) K 41

Tobacco is deleterious to health.

1862

Vol. 5 page 4.3 – “Tobacco, which is in so common use among our people, is poison”

1863

Vol. 6 page 81.1 – “the use of tobacco by our people is far more deleterious in its effects upon

their health than is the use of alcoholic drinks.”

Score - Significant

Why 30 – Tobacco 1 (What 36) Tobacco is destructive.

1863 Vol. 6 page 84.2 – “These two poisons, therefore, stand over against each other. ... tobacco playing an original part in the destructive process,”

Score - Verified

Why 31 – Tobacco 2 (What 36) Smoking damages the morals.

1862 Vol. 5 page 4.3 – “tobacco affects more especially those portions of the brain through which the moral sense is expressed. .... The tobacco drunkard shows obtuseness of moral perception.”

Score – Unverified

Why 32 – Tobacco 3 (What 36) Smoking dulls the senses.

1862 Vol. 5 page 98.3 – “the use of snuff, smoking, …. help to break down the discriminative power of smell, sight, hearing, and touch.”

Comment – It does apply to smell and taste directly and sight and hearing as a consequence of vascular changes.

Score – Verified

Don S McMahon

189

 

Appendix 6 – Laws of Life

 

James Caleb Jackson

What 37 - Hard Drugs

W 20 G 28 (A 68) C 18

Opium and hashish are not a safe replacement for alcohol.

1863 Vol. 6 page 84.3 – “ in many instances (men) are in the daily use of opium. Others who do not use it, have substituted for alcohol beverages Hashish - Extract of Hemp,”

Score - Significant

What 38 – Tea & Coffee W 17 R 18 G 29 A 71 C 19 K 43

Tea and coffee are not a safe substitute for alcohol.

1863 Vol. 6 page 84.23 – “have substituted for alcohol beverages …. while others use the strongest infusions of tea and coffee”

Page 132.3 – “drink tea .... we recommend the disuse of all such things”

Score - Minor

Why 33 – Tea & Coffee 1 (What 38)

Tea causes headaches and coffee dizziness.

1862 Vol. 5 page 113.3 – “This beverage (tea) is much worse,-as a general thing, so far as reactionary effects (head ache) of its use are concerned, than is coffee. Persons who drink coffee are more apt to be troubled with vertigo, or dizziness of the head, than with sick headaches.” Comment – Both tea and coffee can cause headaches from caffeine withdrawal, but neither cause dizziness.

Score – Verified

Why 34 - Tea & Coffee 2 (What 38)

It is difficult for the body to separate the tea and coffee from the water.

1862 Vol. 5 page 51.1 – “They should not undertake to supply the fluids of the system by water that has some vegetable substance suspended in it, like tea or coffee, because, before the water thus drunk can answer the purpose of the system, chemical or vital action has to go on, and the foreign matter which has been infused into the water has to be separated from it.”

Score - Unverified

V REST

What 39 – Sleep (W 21) (R 44) (G 34) (A 72) (C 21) (K 45)

Sleep abundantly.

1962 Vol. 5 page 151.3 – “lying in bed, if not sleeping, as many as eight or ten hours in each twenty four.”

Page 80.3 – “Literary persons require more sleep, other circumstances being equal, than those who pursue manual-labor occupations.”

1863 Vol. 6 page 23.1 – “Sleep abundantly during the night,”

Comment – Sleep is essential, but too much sleep is also not advisable. Over eight hours in bed has a slight decrease in life expectancy.

Score – Unverified

What 40 – Early to Bed

R 37 G 33 A 74 C 22

For good health go to bed early.

 

1863 Vol. 6 page 168.2 – “going to bed early”

Score – Unverified

 

What 41 – Regularity of Sleep

 

Get up from bed at the same time each day.

 

Don S McMahon

190

Appendix 6 – Laws of Life

James Caleb Jackson

1863 Vol. 6 page 168.1 – “regularly and rising at a given period of time every morning.”

Score - Minor

What 42 – Mental Rest

If unwell have mental rest.

1863 Vol. 6 page 168.2 – “abstain from intellectual activity”

Score – Minor

What 43 – Times of Stress

Don’t exercise physically or mentally if changing lifestyle.

1863 Vol. 6 page10.2 – “While, under a modification of habit (smoking or diet) the vital forces are arranging themselves anew in their relations to the organism, they should not be taxed by drafts in any other direction. A man in such case should be entirely relieved from responsibility, either in the way of muscular exercise, or mental labour.”

Score - Unverified

Why 35 – Times of Stress (What 43) Changing diet is a nervous strain.

1863 Vol. 6 Page132.3 – “If you are changing the conditions of the nervous system by change in diet, you must make good those changes by rest of body and brain.”

Score - Unverified

What 44 – Hard Bed

G 36

A bed should be very hard.

 

1862 Vol. 5 page 69.3 – “All bedding should be so hard …. Hair, grass, husks, chip, straw, etc., mattresses,”

Score – Unverified

What 45 – Feather Beds

G 35 A 76 C 23 K 49

Feather beds are bad for the health.

 

1862 Vol. 5 page 69.3 – “Feather beds are exceedingly debilitating.”

Score – Unverified

Why 36 – Soft Bed (What 45) A soft bed is debilitating.

1862 Vol. 5 page 69.3 – “Feather beds are exceedingly debilitating.”

Score - Unverified

What 46 – Bed Cloths

A 83 K 50

Bed cloths should be as light as possible.

 

1862 Vol. 5 page 69.3 – “all bed-clothing should be so light, as a due regard to comfort will permit.”

Score - Unverified

VI EXERCISE

What 47 – Exercise W 23 R 38 G 38 A 92 C 25 K 54

Have plenty of exercise.

1862 Vol. 5 page 99.2 – “If you will live and not die work, toil.”

Don S McMahon

191

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