Brain Awareness Week
Despite enormous advances in neuroscience, our understanding of
the basic brain functions and their importance to the individual and
humanity were known well and revealed by Hippocrates, the father of
medicine, in his eloquent description more than 2,000 years ago.
Men ought to know that from the brain, and from the brain only, arise
our pleasures, joys, laughter and jest as well as our sorrows, pains,
griefs and tears. Though
it, in particular, we think, see, hear and distinguish the ugly from
the beautiful, the bad from the good, the pleasant from the
unpleasant. It is the
same thing which makes us mad or delirious, inspires us with dread and
fear, whether by night or day, brings sleeplessness, inopportune
mistakes, aimless anxieties, absent-mindedness and acts that are
contrary to habit. These
things that we suffer all come from the brain when it is not healthy,
but becomes abnormally hot, cold, moist or dry or suffers any other
unnatural affection to which it was not accustomed.
Madness comes from moistness.
When the brain is abnormally moist, of necessity it moves and
when it moves neither sight nor hearing are still, but we see or hear
now one thing and now another, and the tongue speaks in accordance
with the things seen and heard on occasion.
But all the time the brain is still, a man can think properly.
Clearly, the brain is more than an amorphous mass of insubstantial
electricity—it is the bower of human communication and guidance.
Its care is the neurologist’s and neurosurgeon’s venue as,
by virtue of our knowledge, training and experience; we have been
entrusted as guardians of the highest level of intelligence known to
man. Headaches,
seizures, multiple sclerosis, cerebral aneurysms, brain and spinal
tumors and other complex neurological maladies require the unique
application of our art and science for each individual.
Although it has become nearly unfashionable and almost priggish to
talk about virtues, the virtues of self-discipline, compassion,
responsibility, courage, perseverance, honesty, loyalty and faith are
integral to our lives. These
immutable basics are the heart and soul of the medical profession and
we must not allow technology, delivery systems, governments or
businesses with compromised ethics to diminish their importance.
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