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of God’s will and plan for the universe.” Scientific
teleology teaches that the shape of the egg is part of its
in-dwelling purpose—the best possible way of safely
hatching young birds. Theological teleology is extrinsic :
scientific teleology is intrinsic. Dead matter permits of a
mechanistic explanation ; but living matter, which has
an in-dwelling purpose—to keep alive—must be judged
from a teleological point of view.
The purposiveness or hormic drift of the neuroses has
not been understood until very recent times, and is still
not understood by many physicians. In ancient times the
aberrations of human conduct were laid at the door of
evil spirits, demons, or Satan himself—a purely
mechanistic explanation. The treatment of neuroses,
until fairly recent times, therefore, was directed chiefly
to the exorcism of the evil spirits whose presence caused
the unfortunate victim to err from the path of human
rectitude. The unspeakable tortures that were inflicted
on the victims of nervous and mental disease in the old
days are common knowledge.
In due time the demonic school of thought fortunately
gave way to the more modern method of describing the
neuroses according to the symptoms they present, and
thus attempting to understand them. Thus one set of
neuroses were called anxiety neuroses because the
emotion of fear together with the frantic and irresponsible
activity of spiritual panic were the most noticeable
characteristics of the neurotic’s behaviour. Others were
called psychasthenia, because the individual seemed
actually to have a spirit too weak for the problems of this
world. Aboulia, an apparent absence of will, was
considered a cardinal symptom of some neuroses, and
compulsive doubt the characteristic of others.
The syndrome which we know as dementia prascox
was characterized as schizophrenia because the
personality seemed to be split into two or more distinct
personalities ; another clinical syndrome was known as
manic-depressive psychosis, because of the wide variation
in the patient’s emotional attidudes, and because of his