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EVERYMAN'S PSYCHOLOGY
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II. AM I A SOUL OR A PSYCHE?
· (BY FATHER G. BYRNE S. J.)
When a weight falls on my foot thing that they could blow it about I feat it; I feel it as distinctly in all directions from their inbo affecting my foot and no other part ratory pipes, as when they were of my body. When, on a hot day, younger they blew soap bubbles. I take a cool drink, I feel relie! So it came to pass that, as th in my parched mouth. When a Professor of Paychology in the friend snaps out at me a cutting London University writes in a book rémark I feel it. In the first and published this year: "Psychology. the last case I may say that I feel is still a science in the making hart, yet it is clear that the "feel rather than a finally established ing" and the hurt" have different one. This is indicated by the lack mennings in each case. A poul of agreement upon the exact de tice inay bo very soothing for my finition of the subject." At any bruised foot, but I should have to rate it is called the New Psycholo hant a long time to find a spot of y. We might, perhaps, complain my wounded. feelings on which to of the term New Psychology if it clop it! Now in the midst of such be still only in the making, for diversity there is something which though a man freely talks about his always remains the same, the "I" new suit before he has paid for it. conscious of the various experien: he does not so talk until the pieces cra When all the experiences are stitched together. However, wo have passed, "I", the "I, which have accepted the New Art, the seems changeless in the midst of New Teaching, the New Education, unceasing change, car look back and even the New Children, so it and collect in a wonderful memory would be unreasonable to give the film the experiences of yesterday, cold shoulder to the New Paycho- though the yesterday be years, ¦ It | logy. can sorrow again with the sOFTOWS
The Old Psychology,
I
of childhood and laugh with | To understand it we must know childhood's joys: I may lose something about the Old Paycho- great deal of the body-eyes, hands, logy, Those who especially deve legs for instance with which the loped the Old Psychology were the was so closely linked, and ou mediaeval thinkers and they did the use of which it depended so think what is more they thought much the loss, is a handicap but clearly. (Incidentally WO may I never for a moment doubt that mention that the Old Psychology "the barque is still there though is still very much alive. There are the waters be gone, I am "T" in lectures on it for the London Uni spite of all that. Herein lies the versity, and for many places he central problem of Psychology. sides). The mediaevalists found They Called Him the Souled their system on the ideas of the Men began to ask themselves eminent Greek thinkers, Plato' and what is it in man that parades as Aristotle. For them soul and "I," that claims as its own all body, in spite of a very close that happens to man, as well as all union, were quite distinct and se that goes to make him up, apeak- parable; in fact, at the moment ing of "my" pains, "my" sorrows, we call death, body and soul were "my" thoughts "my" brain, "my" separated. The 1" which inter- body. In the main the answer was este us was really the soul, and the that, though the body had its lit soul survived the decay of the tle share of the "I" the real body, still bearing with it in an gentleman "I" who received you in even clearer way all the treasured bis. drawingroom, who invited you store of past experiences. They to dinner, who made speeches at called it a spirit which had nothing you, who was responsible for a hand in common with matter such as striking you, was quite different the body is. Its way of acting was from the body. They called him conceived as quite different from the Soul; at least that was the the body's way of acting. The word commonly used in the Eng. laws of space and time had no lish language.--Now-a-days learn natural hold on it. You can mea↑ ed men profer the word Psye. It sure the body with a tape, na your is not very easy to say why, Per-tailor does; you can time the move- haps the modern fashion of dress monts of your lips or of your fin might offer some explanation geza with a watch, but you could There is something substantial in not find the girth of a spirit in the word Soul, as we roll it out. inches, por pigeonhole its move- It is quite capable of bearing the ments by your calendar days. burden of Victorian fashions and claiming for itself, the high-bred qualities of spirituality and im mortality with which it was gen-1 erally endowed. Psyche flits off the lips before it can be substan tially clad, and so it is more popu- lar with the type of mind that prefers to watch a pie in the bak- ing than to eat & baked-one-AtAnd any rate the word is a Greek one and for the Greeks who used it, it meant pretty much the same as
(Note: 1. Those who would pur- Soul means to us. The word sue this theme will find interest- Psychology simply meant reasoning pages in Sir John Adams' ing about, or trying to find out as Everyman's Ptychology and in much as we could about, the Psyche. Dimner's What We Live By or Soul, SAYA
In his Dream of Gerontius, Newman a disciple of the Old Peychology, beautifully expresses the idea;
"Not so with ue in the imma-
terial world: 2 But intervals in their succession Are measured by the living
thought alone,
grow or wane with its in- tensity."
Some Scholar Said! 9. No self-respecting modern Some scholars rose up and said: Psychologist would speak of my "there is no Boul, there is only a 1" He would talk of my "Ego. body with a wonderful brain in a By this use of an English adjective not so wonderful brain box" But with a Latin, pronoun instead of they still kept on using the word with the English pronoun he Paychology, though their Payche, avoidaa vulgar and colloquial had become so unsubstantial. a sound),
OLD CAMPAIGNERS FOREGATHER
IN UNION CHURCH MANSE DRAWING ROOM
pride of life, may be sent in ten minutes to a watery grave, if the ship is hit in a vital part. The speaker (mentioned the loss of H.M.S. Vanguard: when it sank in harbour, whether by submarino action or mine is not known. Everyone on board was lost except one marine who was blown bodily A party of old campaigners of off the ship into the sea and picked the Great War gathered round the up some distance away, and an drawing-room fire of the Manso of other man who was in his bam Union Church, Kowloon, on Tues-mock, but the hammock was blown day evening to exchange war ex off its hooks and out of the ship periences for the benefit of the with him in it, and he escaped Young People's Society alive.
TRENDS, PROVČ
The first speaker was a
An Ordinance man attached to. Wallah super" P.T.W." in the Artillery, whose job is was to fack one whd und trained hundreds † do running repairs to guns, spoke of " P.T'" insteactors and thou- | next. In a paper of much literary zands of soldiers in training camps, merit (he modestly refused to las în rest cumpr behind the line and iit be printed), the writer seven in the American Expeditionary | himself as a attdent of men, Faroe It was interesting to gobligion and psychology, and, some his special point of view, he said his observations recalled Robin he found the work, trying? his Crusoe's" philosophisings upon his ottrades-in-arms adsured him that gate on the desert island. they had found his efforts trying Ai infantryman who became a too A
Company Commander brought the The next speaker was an adherent meeting gearest to the war as 2003 of the Blue Water School; one who at close quarters in the trenches. wild in the Navy, throughout, the | He had the extraordinary fortune War and whoed prinubad experto be wounded three times during ences centred round sape Flow, the war, but only once, by enemy the Battle of Jutland and the fire. On one occasion he was under Dover Patrol. His job in the battih barrager from his own guns and of Jutland was to make electrical paanother yan fired upon by repairs if the ship
ba,had an opportunity of seeing:
battle for ten minu
came or deck to:
men.
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sent
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