Difference between revisions of "90:3 Shamanic Theory of Disease and Death"

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90:3.1 Since [[ancient]] man regarded himself and his [[material]] [[environment]] as being directly [[responsive]] to the whims of the [[ghosts]] and the fancies of the spirits, it is not strange that his [[religion]] should have been so exclusively concerned with [[material]] affairs. [[Modern]] man [[attacks]] his [[material]] [[problems]] directly; he recognizes that [[matter]] is [[responsive]] to the [[intelligent]] [[manipulation]] of [[mind]]. [http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_52#52:1._PRIMITIVE_MAN Primitive man] likewise [[desired]] to [[modify]] and even to [[control]] the life and [[energies]] of the physical [[domains]]; and since his limited [[comprehension]] of the [[cosmos]] led him to the [[belief]] that [[ghosts]], spirits, and gods were personally and [[immediately]] concerned with the detailed [[control]] of life and [[matter]], he [[logically]] directed his efforts to winning the [[favor]] and support of these [[superhuman]] [[agencies]].
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90:3.1 Since [[ancient]] man regarded himself and his [[material]] [[environment]] as being directly [[responsive]] to the whims of the [[ghosts]] and the fancies of the spirits, it is not strange that his [[religion]] should have been so exclusively concerned with [[material]] affairs. [[Modern]] man [[attacks]] his [[material]] [[problems]] directly; he recognizes that [[matter]] is [[responsive]] to the [[intelligent]] [[manipulation]] of [[mind]]. [https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_52#52:1._PRIMITIVE_MAN Primitive man] likewise [[desired]] to [[modify]] and even to [[control]] the life and [[energies]] of the physical [[domains]]; and since his limited [[comprehension]] of the [[cosmos]] led him to the [[belief]] that [[ghosts]], spirits, and gods were personally and [[immediately]] concerned with the detailed [[control]] of life and [[matter]], he [[logically]] directed his efforts to winning the [[favor]] and support of these [[superhuman]] [[agencies]].
  
90:3.2 Viewed in this [[light]], much of the inexplicable and irrational in the [[ancient]] [[cults]] is understandable. The [[ceremonies]] of the [[cult]] were [http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_52#52:1._PRIMITIVE_MAN primitive man]'s attempt to [[control]] the [[material]] world in which he found himself. And many of his [[efforts]] were directed to the end of prolonging life and insuring [[health]]. Since all [[diseases]] and [[death]] itself were originally regarded as [[spirit]] [[phenomena]], it was [[inevitable]] that the [[shamans]], while functioning as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicine_man medicine men] and [[priests]], should also have labored as [[Physician|doctors]] and surgeons.
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90:3.2 Viewed in this [[light]], much of the inexplicable and irrational in the [[ancient]] [[cults]] is understandable. The [[ceremonies]] of the [[cult]] were [https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_52#52:1._PRIMITIVE_MAN primitive man]'s attempt to [[control]] the [[material]] world in which he found himself. And many of his [[efforts]] were directed to the end of prolonging life and insuring [[health]]. Since all [[diseases]] and [[death]] itself were originally regarded as [[spirit]] [[phenomena]], it was [[inevitable]] that the [[shamans]], while functioning as [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicine_man medicine men] and [[priests]], should also have labored as [[Physician|doctors]] and surgeons.
  
 
90:3.3 The [[primitive]] [[mind]] may be [[handicapped]] by lack of [[facts]], but it is for all that [[logical]]. When thoughtful men [[observe]] [[disease]] and [[death]], they set about to determine the [[causes]] of these visitations, and in [[accordance]] with their [[understanding]], the [[shamans]] and the [[scientists]] have propounded the following [[theories]] of affliction:
 
90:3.3 The [[primitive]] [[mind]] may be [[handicapped]] by lack of [[facts]], but it is for all that [[logical]]. When thoughtful men [[observe]] [[disease]] and [[death]], they set about to determine the [[causes]] of these visitations, and in [[accordance]] with their [[understanding]], the [[shamans]] and the [[scientists]] have propounded the following [[theories]] of affliction:
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*1. 90:3.4 1. ''Ghosts''—direct [[spirit]] [[influences]]. The earliest [[hypothesis]] advanced in [[explanation]] of [[disease]] and [[death]] was that spirits caused [[disease]] by enticing the [[soul]] out of the [[body]]; if it failed to return, [[death]] ensued. The [[ancients]] so feared the malevolent [[action]] of disease-producing ghosts that ailing [[individuals]] would often be deserted without even [[food]] or [[water]]. Regardless of the erroneous basis for these [[beliefs]], they did effectively isolate afflicted individuals and prevent the spread of [[contagious]] [[disease]].
 
*1. 90:3.4 1. ''Ghosts''—direct [[spirit]] [[influences]]. The earliest [[hypothesis]] advanced in [[explanation]] of [[disease]] and [[death]] was that spirits caused [[disease]] by enticing the [[soul]] out of the [[body]]; if it failed to return, [[death]] ensued. The [[ancients]] so feared the malevolent [[action]] of disease-producing ghosts that ailing [[individuals]] would often be deserted without even [[food]] or [[water]]. Regardless of the erroneous basis for these [[beliefs]], they did effectively isolate afflicted individuals and prevent the spread of [[contagious]] [[disease]].
 
*2. 90:3.5 2. ''Violence''—obvious [[cause]]s. The causes for some [[accidents]] and deaths were so easy to identify that they were early removed from the category of [[ghost]] [[action]]. Fatalities and wounds attendant upon [[war]], [[animal]] combat, and other readily identifiable [[agencies]] were [[considered]] as [[natural]] occurrences. But it was long believed that the spirits were still [[responsible]] for delayed [[healing]] or for the infection of wounds of even " natural " causation. If no observable [[natural]] [[agent]] could be [[discovered]], the spirit [[ghosts]] were still held responsible for [[disease]] and [[death]].
 
*2. 90:3.5 2. ''Violence''—obvious [[cause]]s. The causes for some [[accidents]] and deaths were so easy to identify that they were early removed from the category of [[ghost]] [[action]]. Fatalities and wounds attendant upon [[war]], [[animal]] combat, and other readily identifiable [[agencies]] were [[considered]] as [[natural]] occurrences. But it was long believed that the spirits were still [[responsible]] for delayed [[healing]] or for the infection of wounds of even " natural " causation. If no observable [[natural]] [[agent]] could be [[discovered]], the spirit [[ghosts]] were still held responsible for [[disease]] and [[death]].
90:3.6 Today, in Africa and elsewhere may be found [[primitive]] peoples who kill someone every time a nonviolent [[death]] occurs. Their [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicine_man medicine men] indicate the [[guilty]] parties. If a [[mother]] dies in [[childbirth]], the [[child]] is immediately strangled—a life for a life.
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90:3.6 Today, in Africa and elsewhere may be found [[primitive]] peoples who kill someone every time a nonviolent [[death]] occurs. Their [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicine_man medicine men] indicate the [[guilty]] parties. If a [[mother]] dies in [[childbirth]], the [[child]] is immediately strangled—a life for a life.
*3. 90:3.7 3. ''Magic''—the [[influence]] of enemies. Much sickness was thought to be caused by bewitchment, the [[action]] of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evil_eye evil eye] and the [[magic]] pointing bow. At one time it was really [[dangerous]] to point a finger at anyone; it is still regarded as ill-mannered to point. In cases of obscure [[disease]] and [[death]] the [[ancients]] would hold a formal inquest, dissect the [[body]], and settle upon some finding as the [[cause]] of death; otherwise the death would be laid to [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witchcraft witchcraft], thus necessitating the [[execution]] of the witch responsible therefor. These [[ancient]] coroner's inquests saved many a supposed witch's life. Among some it was believed that a tribesman could die as a result of his own witchcraft, in which [[event]] no one was accused.
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*3. 90:3.7 3. ''Magic''—the [[influence]] of enemies. Much sickness was thought to be caused by bewitchment, the [[action]] of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evil_eye evil eye] and the [[magic]] pointing bow. At one time it was really [[dangerous]] to point a finger at anyone; it is still regarded as ill-mannered to point. In cases of obscure [[disease]] and [[death]] the [[ancients]] would hold a formal inquest, dissect the [[body]], and settle upon some finding as the [[cause]] of death; otherwise the death would be laid to [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witchcraft witchcraft], thus necessitating the [[execution]] of the witch responsible therefor. These [[ancient]] coroner's inquests saved many a supposed witch's life. Among some it was believed that a tribesman could die as a result of his own witchcraft, in which [[event]] no one was accused.
*4. 90:3.8 4. ''Sin''—punishment for [[taboo]] violation. In comparatively recent times it has been believed that sickness is a [[punishment]] for [[sin]], [[personal]] or racial. Among peoples traversing this level of [[evolution]] the prevailing [[theory]] is that one cannot be afflicted unless one has violated a [[taboo]]. To regard sickness and suffering as "arrows of the Almighty within them"[http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Book_of_Job#Chapter_.6] is typical of such [[beliefs]]. The [[Chinese]] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesopotamia Mesopotamians] long regarded disease as the result of the [[action]] of [[evil]] [[demons]], although the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaldea Chaldeans] also looked upon the [[stars]] as the cause of [[suffering]]. This [[theory]] of [[disease]] as a consequence of [[divine]] wrath is still prevalent among many reputedly civilized [[groups]] of Urantians.
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*4. 90:3.8 4. ''Sin''—punishment for [[taboo]] violation. In comparatively recent times it has been believed that sickness is a [[punishment]] for [[sin]], [[personal]] or racial. Among peoples traversing this level of [[evolution]] the prevailing [[theory]] is that one cannot be afflicted unless one has violated a [[taboo]]. To regard sickness and suffering as "arrows of the Almighty within them"[https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Book_of_Job#Chapter_.6] is typical of such [[beliefs]]. The [[Chinese]] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesopotamia Mesopotamians] long regarded disease as the result of the [[action]] of [[evil]] [[demons]], although the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaldea Chaldeans] also looked upon the [[stars]] as the cause of [[suffering]]. This [[theory]] of [[disease]] as a consequence of [[divine]] wrath is still prevalent among many reputedly civilized [[groups]] of Urantians.
*5. 90:3.9 5. ''Natural causation''. [[Mankind]] has been very slow to learn the [[material]] [[secrets]] of the interrelationship of ''cause'' and [[effect]] in the [[physical]] [[domains]] of [[energy]], [[matter]], and life. The ancient [[Greeks]], having preserved the [[traditions]] of [http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_77#77:5._ADAMSON_AND_RATTA Adamson]' s teachings, were among the first to [[recognize]] that all [[disease]] is the result of [[natural]] [[causes]]. Slowly and certainly the unfolding of a [[scientific]] era is destroying man's age-old [[theories]] of sickness and [[death]]. Fever was one of the first [[human]] ailments to be removed from the category of [[supernatural]] disorders, and progressively the era of [[science]] has broken the fetters of [[ignorance]] which so long imprisoned the [[human]] [[mind]]. An [[understanding]] of old age and [[contagion]] is gradually [[obliterating]] man's [[fear]] of [[ghosts]], spirits, and gods as the [[personal]] perpetrators of [[human]] misery and mortal [[suffering]].
+
*5. 90:3.9 5. ''Natural causation''. [[Mankind]] has been very slow to learn the [[material]] [[secrets]] of the interrelationship of ''cause'' and [[effect]] in the [[physical]] [[domains]] of [[energy]], [[matter]], and life. The ancient [[Greeks]], having preserved the [[traditions]] of [https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_77#77:5._ADAMSON_AND_RATTA Adamson]' s teachings, were among the first to [[recognize]] that all [[disease]] is the result of [[natural]] [[causes]]. Slowly and certainly the unfolding of a [[scientific]] era is destroying man's age-old [[theories]] of sickness and [[death]]. Fever was one of the first [[human]] ailments to be removed from the category of [[supernatural]] disorders, and progressively the era of [[science]] has broken the fetters of [[ignorance]] which so long imprisoned the [[human]] [[mind]]. An [[understanding]] of old age and [[contagion]] is gradually [[obliterating]] man's [[fear]] of [[ghosts]], spirits, and gods as the [[personal]] perpetrators of [[human]] misery and mortal [[suffering]].
  
 
90:3.10 [[Evolution]] unerringly [[achieves]] its end: It imbues man with that [[superstitious]] [[fear]] of the [[unknown]] and dread of the [[unseen]] which is the [[scaffolding]] for the [[God]] [[concept]]. And having [[witnessed]] the birth of an advanced [[comprehension]] of [[Deity]], through the co-ordinate [[action]] of [[revelation]], this same [[technique]] of [[evolution]] then unerringly sets in [[motion]] those forces of [[thought]] which will inexorably [[obliterate]] the [[scaffolding]], which has served its [[purpose]].
 
90:3.10 [[Evolution]] unerringly [[achieves]] its end: It imbues man with that [[superstitious]] [[fear]] of the [[unknown]] and dread of the [[unseen]] which is the [[scaffolding]] for the [[God]] [[concept]]. And having [[witnessed]] the birth of an advanced [[comprehension]] of [[Deity]], through the co-ordinate [[action]] of [[revelation]], this same [[technique]] of [[evolution]] then unerringly sets in [[motion]] those forces of [[thought]] which will inexorably [[obliterate]] the [[scaffolding]], which has served its [[purpose]].
  
<center>[http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_90 Go to Paper 90]</center>
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<center>[https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_90 Go to Paper 90]</center>
<center>[http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=The_Urantia_Text_-_Contents Go to Table of Contents]</center>
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<center>[https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=The_Urantia_Text_-_Contents Go to Table of Contents]</center>
  
 
[[Category:Paper 90 - Shamanism, Medicine Men and Priests]]
 
[[Category:Paper 90 - Shamanism, Medicine Men and Priests]]
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[[Category: Ritual]]
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[[Category: Evolution]]
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[[Category: Superstition]]
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[[Category: Anthropology/TeaM]]

Latest revision as of 23:32, 12 December 2020

Lighterstill.jpg

The eye of all ur60.jpg

90:3.1 Since ancient man regarded himself and his material environment as being directly responsive to the whims of the ghosts and the fancies of the spirits, it is not strange that his religion should have been so exclusively concerned with material affairs. Modern man attacks his material problems directly; he recognizes that matter is responsive to the intelligent manipulation of mind. Primitive man likewise desired to modify and even to control the life and energies of the physical domains; and since his limited comprehension of the cosmos led him to the belief that ghosts, spirits, and gods were personally and immediately concerned with the detailed control of life and matter, he logically directed his efforts to winning the favor and support of these superhuman agencies.

90:3.2 Viewed in this light, much of the inexplicable and irrational in the ancient cults is understandable. The ceremonies of the cult were primitive man's attempt to control the material world in which he found himself. And many of his efforts were directed to the end of prolonging life and insuring health. Since all diseases and death itself were originally regarded as spirit phenomena, it was inevitable that the shamans, while functioning as medicine men and priests, should also have labored as doctors and surgeons.

90:3.3 The primitive mind may be handicapped by lack of facts, but it is for all that logical. When thoughtful men observe disease and death, they set about to determine the causes of these visitations, and in accordance with their understanding, the shamans and the scientists have propounded the following theories of affliction:

90:3.6 Today, in Africa and elsewhere may be found primitive peoples who kill someone every time a nonviolent death occurs. Their medicine men indicate the guilty parties. If a mother dies in childbirth, the child is immediately strangled—a life for a life.

90:3.10 Evolution unerringly achieves its end: It imbues man with that superstitious fear of the unknown and dread of the unseen which is the scaffolding for the God concept. And having witnessed the birth of an advanced comprehension of Deity, through the co-ordinate action of revelation, this same technique of evolution then unerringly sets in motion those forces of thought which will inexorably obliterate the scaffolding, which has served its purpose.

Go to Paper 90
Go to Table of Contents