The Doctor's Dilemma: Preface on Doctors eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 99 pages of information about The Doctor's Dilemma.

The Doctor's Dilemma: Preface on Doctors eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 99 pages of information about The Doctor's Dilemma.
marrying, and churching; praying, reciting, and preaching; and, like solicitors or doctors, getting away from their duties with relief to hunt, to garden, to keep bees, to go into society, and the like.  In the same way many people do cruel and vile things without being in the least cruel or vile, because the routine to which they have been brought up is superstitiously cruel and vile.  To say that every man who beats his children and every schoolmaster who flogs a pupil is a conscious debauchee is absurd:  thousands of dull, conscientious people beat their children conscientiously, because they were beaten themselves and think children ought to be beaten.  The ill-tempered vulgarity that instinctively strikes at and hurts a thing that annoys it (and all children are annoying), and the simple stupidity that requires from a child perfection beyond the reach of the wisest and best adults (perfect truthfulness coupled with perfect obedience is quite a common condition of leaving a child unwhipped), produce a good deal of flagellation among people who not only do not lust after it, but who hit the harder because they are angry at having to perform an uncomfortable duty.  These people will beat merely to assert their authority, or to carry out what they conceive to be a divine order on the strength of the precept of Solomon recorded in the Bible, which carefully adds that Solomon completely spoilt his own son and turned away from the god of his fathers to the sensuous idolatry in which he ended his days.

In the same way we find men and women practising vivisection as senselessly as a humane butcher, who adores his fox terrier, will cut a calf’s throat and hang it up by its heels to bleed slowly to death because it is the custom to eat veal and insist on its being white; or as a German purveyor nails a goose to a board and stuffs it with food because fashionable people eat pate de foie gras; or as the crew of a whaler breaks in on a colony of seals and clubs them to death in wholesale massacre because ladies want sealskin jackets; or as fanciers blind singing birds with hot needles, and mutilate the ears and tails of dogs and horses.  Let cruelty or kindness or anything else once become customary and it will be practised by people to whom it is not at all natural, but whose rule of life is simply to do only what everybody else does, and who would lose their employment and starve if they indulged in any peculiarity.  A respectable man will lie daily, in speech and in print, about the qualities of the article he lives by selling, because it is customary to do so.  He will flog his boy for telling a lie, because it is customary to do so.  He will also flog him for not telling a lie if the boy tells inconvenient or disrespectful truths, because it is customary to do so.  He will give the same boy a present on his birthday, and buy him a spade and bucket at the seaside, because it is customary to do so, being all the time neither particularly mendacious, nor particularly cruel, nor particularly generous, but simply incapable of ethical judgment or independent action.

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The Doctor's Dilemma: Preface on Doctors from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.