THE HONGKONG, DAILY PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 16TMʊ, 1993.
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HAS MAN TWO MINDS ? DANGERS OF THE THEORY OF SUB-CONSCIOUSNESS,
Sir Edward Marshall-Hall's plea before Mr. Justice. Darling that a client had written a letter, while in a sub-conscious. atate 'raises issues which are likely to be hotly debated both by the legal and medical professions, writes spcialist in a home paper.
Whilst much suppors for the theory may be expected from those with a leaping toward psychoanalysis, it is unlikely that the law, as represented by the judicial bench, will concede one inch in their defence of the theory of freewill in crime, on which our whole system of punishment is based.
If it is one admitted that araan has erred while in a sub-conscious, or, as the Freudians prefer to say, an unconscious state, and is, therefore, not responsible for his actions, who thereaftor can be found guilty, particularly of the more abnormal crimes, such as murder, which must be, even in the "normal" criminal. outside the range of habit and ordinary volition 1
The Frendiaus regard every man na having two minds-one conscious, the other unconscions. Into the latter is driven everything that is unpleasant. which may never appear in the conscious- Hess at all to disturb the general peace,
YEARS AFTER.
Unfortunately, they say, the unpleasant iden is not get rid of, and influences other matter. It has its est, namely. the emotional excitement which it arouses, In this way the girl who has begu crossed in love, to use an old illustration, may do some unexpected and apparently. unaccountable thing years after she has forgotten her disappointment, but which can be traced by the pevcho-analysts to that cause.
In the same way many crimes are explained which would otherwise remain inexplicable, and there is undoubtedly an enormous mass of evidence in favour of the theory as well as a great many cures.
The trouble about putting such a doc trine into practical offret in the criminal courts is that it really implies that there is no such thing as free will, and that every one of us acts in response to forces of which we are not conscious, and over which we have, therefore, so control. To punish any man would be manifestly un-
inst.
IF THE DOCTAINE 1B-ACCEPTED. Accept the doctrine, and there is nothing else for it but to-abolish the judges and put in their place a body of Skilled Freudian practitioners. It may be taken for granted that not only will this be resisted by about one hundred per cent, of the judges, but that British public opinion will not abandon its present attitue for a century or so to come:
It may be feasible, on occasion, to bring a psychoanalyst into court to support the statements of a person claiming un- consciousness for his act, but as there would always be quite number of older- Fashioned medical men prepared to scout the iden, we should be just where we were. And if the psycho-analyst is admitted, we cannot very well shut out the socio- logist, who is able to prove gaite con- incingly that the habitual criminal at least, to whom theft is a perfectly con- scious and normal profession, is the victim, if not of his early surroundings, then of his heredity;
All of which may be perfectly true; but as things are in an imperfect world, where the State has to maintain order ni all costs, any departure from the accept- ance of free-will as the guiding principle of the actions of citizens, would lead us into a maze of problems which we are not yet well enough equipped to tackle.
THE MEDICINAL VALUE OF COFFEE
HOW TO PREPARE G)
Seeing that seven men out of ten prefer coffee to tea, says a writer in a London paper, it is amazing that the brewing of a pot of good coffee should be practically an unknown Art in these islands..
As a nation we are not stingy yet nothing will induce the average cook to use sufficient coffee. She trease it as if it were ter, and flatly refuses to believe that a tablespoonful must be used where à teaspoonful of tea is sufficient. can she be brought to under- stand that must be freshly roasted and, freshly ground.
sometimes driven to wonder coffee still labours under the same with which it was regarded when ino- troduced into England in the middle of the 17th century. It wea first served at the George and Valture, off Lombard-street, and the Rainbow, in Fleet-street, but, from con- temporary records, it was evidently regard- ed in the light of a nuisance.
At any rate, in the year 1657 Mr. Fry, a barber and at that time proprietor of the Rainbow Was
presented by the inquest
of St. Danston's in the West "for making and selling a drink called coffee whereby. ia making "the same, he annoyeth bis neighbours by evil smells, and for keeping the fire the most part night and day, where by his chimney and chamber have been set Berta danger to the on fire, to
and afright
bent of his RS
WAS 4.
Oddly enough, the great Brint-Savaria abitter energy of coffee. Yet to-day the medical profession extols coffee as a preventive of malaria and a most useful stimulant. Some doctors even declare it a specific in cases of typhoid.
Since the Great War coffee is slowly com- ing into its own, and here is the simplest and
best recipe for for
making it:
Take a plain earthenware toffoe
jug. Metal should never be used in walking coffee. USB one beaped tablespoonful of freshly ground and roasted coffee to each piat of boiling water. Let the coffee stand in a warm place for two minutes akim off the froth, and coffee is then ready for the table
One more hint. Do not boil the milk for the breakfast, coffee, but take it off the ure just before it begins to bubble. And let me remind you that white crystallisod sugar put lump or ordinary brown-is the proper
weetening fonproper coffees at high
man's business is more likely to go wrong, if he does not mix, a little 'mazio with it-Dr. Hears. Couania --
PIMPLES ON WORLD THEATRE
HEAD AND FACE
Of Wet Nature. Could Not Sleep. Cuticura Heals.
**My head and face broke out with pimples I a wet matkat and formed. sore eroptions. Sometimes the irri- tacion was so great that I scratched my head, which enade it worse. I, had to have my hair cut off an ec- count of the emptions, and some nights I could not sleep.
I
*I read an advertisement for Cuti- curs Soap and Omoment and sent for a free sample. It helped me so I perchased, more, and after using one esks of Soap and one box el Olotment I was bexled."" (Signed). Miss Mary Thake, 47, Orchard Pi.. Backwall, London, 8. E. 14, Eng-
Use Cuticura for all toilet purposen. Soap Is.. Olstment la. 30, and 2a, 6d. Saki Karoche Hous
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BOOKING AT THE THEATRE.
THE CURE FOR
ASTHMA & BRONCHITIS
PRESCRIBED BY THE MEDICAL PROFESSION
眼
One of our most eminent Asthma Specialists says: I have
not seen one who, if there were no serious compli-
cations, no matter how long the duration of the Asthma, could not be cured. ... .
THE GREATEST English Physicians have used and pres " scribed Dr. Hair's Asthma Cure, and Doctors are every- where prescribing it for their patients acknowledging its phenomenal success and sound princi- ples.
Professor & L ALLMAN, MD, FRS, LLD, Late President of the British Asso- ciation (the greatest Scientific Society in the World) wrote that suffering him- self from Asthma be. had used Dr. Hair's Asthma Care with "marked success."
THE ROYAL PHYSICIAN,
Sir Maui MACKENZIE, who aid ka kaaw
many people benefited by Dr. Hair's Asthmat
Amongst countioer albers who have ex- dorsed Dr. Ilair's Treziment are the wife of the Chaplain' to King Edward & Queen Victoria. Gen, IL. 5. Anderson, Gen. H. P. Sykes, Gen, J. P. Coode, Gas. V. I. Whálach,
Gem. G. Smart
Cal. W. C. McDougall,
Crimií A. Adamone;"' Lady Hartealey,
Lady C. Bestie, Lady Sacsint, Lady E. F. Miller,
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Hon. Mrs. Butler,
Dr. Hair states in his Booklet that his successful treatment. will enable the patient in two or three days to sleep in bed without suffering, and if the directions are followed, Health, Strength and Flesh will be rapidly restored.”- Send for Dr. HAIR'S FREE BOOKLET to A. S. WATSON & CO., LTD.,
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