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SMAD. An Organ of Student Opinion. 1935. Volume 6. Number 2.

Philosophomania

Philosophomania.

The scientist does not sit down to write a thesis on decaying fish or on the contents of garbage-tins, yet the psychologist dotes on the lunatic and his imbecilities. And this prying into putrescent humanity is hidden in a maze of technicalities, complexes, rationalisations and subnormal manifestations, just as the secret opium-smoker hides himself well away from the world before indulging his craving. The psychologist is the first to point out that the constant contact of a teacher with infant minds tends to make his own mind childish. How then does he escape from his own contact with the insane?

Your philosopher is a morbid introspective fellow destroying our hearty humanity and good-fellow-ship. Remember the wall of Johnson's friend, who "tried to be a philosopher but cheerfulness would keep on coming in."

Condemning civilisation as a mass of repressions, he craves to return to the natural or bestial state. He says I have sex and libido. Well, what of it; I do not ask whether he has corns on his right toe. He criticises the conventions in the present expressions of sex and favours fuller expression. On the same grounds, I suppose, I should murder a man I feel angry with, because it is the natural and primitive thing to do.

Not only would they destroy the beauty of our emotional life, but even thought they destroy. In the olden days one refuted another's argument with logic and reason. Today your long-haired and shaggy psychologist, when outwitted, derides the arguments of his adversary as defence—mechanisms or rationalisations.

The psychologist forms part of the tyranny of modern life. The pacifist won't let us fight, the economic system wont' work the Government won't let us be seditious, and the psychologist own't let us behave decently.

"If and enemy smite thee on the right cheek, let thy subsequent actions be governed largely by his size."

* * *

"Every man should know himself, but in doing so he is apt to waste a lot of time that might be spent on making more agreeable acquaintances."

* * *

Bob Hall is reliably reported to have said that the present Swimming Club Committee is one of the finest bodies of administrators he has met.