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قراءة كتاب Health Through Will Power
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HEALTH THROUGH WILL POWER
BY
JAMES J. WALSH, M.D., Ph.D., Sc.D., Etc.
MEDICAL DIRECTOR OF FORDHAM UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF SOCIOLOGY; PROFESSOR OF PHYSIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY AT CATHEDRAL COLLEGE; LECTURER ON PSYCHOLOGY, MARYWOOD COLLEGE, ETC.
BOSTON
LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY
1919
Copyright, 1919,
By Little, Brown, and Company.
All rights reserve
Published, November, 1919
Norwood Press
Set up and electrotyped by J. S. Cushing Co.,
Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
To
J. H. W.
EX ANIMO ET CORDE
J. J. W.
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PREFACE
A French surgeon to whom the remark was made in the third year of the War that France was losing an immense number of men replied: "Yes, we are losing enormously, but for every man that we lose we are making two men." What he meant, of course, was that the War was bringing out the latent powers of men to such an extent that every one of those who were left now counted for two. The expression is much more than a mere figure of speech. It is quite literally true that a man who has had the profound experience of a war like this becomes capable of doing ever so much more than he could before. He has discovered his own power. He has tapped layers of energy that he did not know he possessed. Above all, he has learned that his will is capable of enabling him to do things that he would have hesitated about and probably thought quite impossible before this revelation of himself to himself had been made.
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In a word, the War has proved a revival of appreciation of the place of the human will in life. Marshal Foch, the greatest character of the War, did not hesitate even to declare that "A battle is the struggle of two wills. It is never lost until defeat is accepted. They only are vanquished who confess themselves to be."
Our generation has been intent on the development of the intellect. We have been neglecting the will. "Shell shock" experiences have shown us that the intellect is largely the source of unfavorable suggestion. The will is the controlling factor in the disease. Many another demonstration of the power of will has been furnished by the War. This volume is meant to help in the restoration of the will to its place as the supreme faculty in life, above all the one on whose exercise, more than any other single factor, depends health and recovery from disease. The time seems opportune for its appearance and it is commended to the attention of those who have recognized how much the modern cult of intellect left man unprepared for the ruder trails of life yet could not see clearly what the remedy might be.
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CONTENTS
PAGE | ||
Preface | vii | |
CHAPTER | ||
I | The Will in Life | 1 |
II | Dreads | 19 |
III | Habits | 42 |
IV | Sympathy | 57 |
V | Self-Pity | 69 |
VI | Avoidance of Conscious Use of the Will | 80 |
VII | What the Will Can Do | 102 |
VIII | Pain and the Will | 112 |
IX | The Will and Air and Exercise | 133 |
X | The Will to Eat | 148 |
XI | The Place of the Will in Tuberculosis | 167 |
XII | The Will in Pneumonia | 187 |
XIII | Coughs and Colds | 196 |
XIV | Neurotic Asthma and the Will | 207 |
XV | The Will in Intestinal Function | 215 |
XVI | The Will and the Heart | 227 |
XVII | The Will in So-Called Chronic Rheumatism | 240 |
XVII | Psycho-Neuroses | 258 |
XIX | Feminine Ills and the Will | 270 |
Index | 285 |
HEALTH THROUGH WILL POWER
CHAPTER I
THE WILL IN LIFE
"What he will he does and does so much That proof is called impossibility." |
Troilus and Cressida. |
The place of the will in its influence upon health and vitality has long been recognized, not only by psychologists and those who pay special attention to problems of mental healing, but also, as a rule, by physicians and even by the general public. It is, for instance, a well-established practice, when two older folk, near