Part 10 (1/2)
”One thing, though,” the Duke said thoughtfully. ”You mentioned the amputation of a pickpocket's hands. It seems to me that this technique is just as drastic, just as crippling to the person to whom it is done.”
”Of course it is! No one has ever denied that. G.o.d help us if it's the final answer to the problem! A man who can't drive a car, or use a razor, or punch an enemy in the teeth when it's necessary is certainly handicapped. He's more crippled than he was before. The only compensation for society is that now he's less dangerous.
”There are certain compensations for the individual, too. He stands less chance of going to prison, or to a death cell. But he's still hemmed in; he's not a free man. Of course, in most instances, he's not aware of what has been done to him; his mind compensates and rationalizes and gives him a reason for what he's undergoing. Joey Partridge thinks his condition is due to the fractures he suffered the last time he beat up a man; Manny the Moog thinks that he's afraid to drive a car because of the last wreck he was in. And, partly, maybe they're both right. But they have still been deprived of a part of their free will, their right of choice.
”Oh, no; this isn't the final answer by a long shot! It's a stopgap--a _necessary_ stopgap. But, by using it, we can learn more about how the human mind works, and maybe one of these days we'll evolve a science of the mind that can take those twists _out_ instead of compensating for them.
[Ill.u.s.tration]
”On the other hand, we can save lives by using the technique we have now. We don't dare _not_ use it.
”When they chopped off those hands, centuries ago, the stumps were cauterized by putting them in boiling oil. It looked like another injury piled on top of the first, but the chirurgeons, not knowing _why_ it worked, still knew that a lot more ex-pickpockets lived through their ordeal if the boiling oil was used afterward.
”And that's what we're doing with this technique right here and now.
We're using it because it saves lives, lives that may potentially or actually be a great deal more valuable than the warped personality that might have taken such a life.
”But the one thing that I am working for right now and will continue to work for is a _real_ cure, if that's possible. A real, genuine, usable kind of psychotherapy; one which is at least on a par with the science of cake-baking when it comes to the percentages of successes and failures.”
His Grace thought that over for a minute. Then he leaned back and looked at me through narrowed eyes. There was a half smile on his lips ”Royall, old man, let's admit one thing, just between ourselves,” His voice became very slow and very deliberate. ”Both you and I know that this process, whatever it is, is _not_ psychotherapy.”
”Why do you say that?” I wasn't trying to deny anything; I just wanted to know the reasoning behind his conclusions.
”Because I know what psychotherapy can and can't do. And I know that psychotherapy can _not_ do the sort of thing we've been discussing.
”It's as if you'd taken me out on a rifle range, to a target two thousand yards from the shooter and let me watch that marksman put fifty shots out of fifty into a six-inch bull's-eye. I might not know what the shooter is using, but I would know beyond any shadow of doubt that it was _not_ an ordinary revolver. More, I would know that it could not be any possible improvement upon the revolver. It simply would have to be an instrument of an entirely different order.
”If, in 1945, any intelligent military man had been told that the j.a.panese city of Hiros.h.i.+ma had been totally destroyed by a bomber dropping a single bomb, he would be certain that the bomb was a new and different kind from any ever known before. He would know that, mind you, without necessarily knowing a great deal about chemistry.
”I don't need to know a devil of a lot about psychotherapy to know that the process you've been describing is as far beyond the limits of psychotherapy as the Hiros.h.i.+ma bomb was beyond the limits of chemistry. Ditto for hypnosis and/or Pavlov's 'conditioned reflex', by the way.
”Now, just to clear the air, what _is_ it?”
”It has no official name yet,” I told him. ”To keep within the law, we have been calling it psychotherapy. If we called it something else, and admitted that it _isn't_ psychotherapy, the courts couldn't turn the zanies over to us. But you're right--it is as impossible to produce the effect by psychotherapy as it is to produce an atomic explosion by a chemical reaction.
”I've got a hunch that, just as chemistry and nucleonics are both really branches of physics, so psychotherapy and Brownlee's process are branches of some higher, more inclusive science--but that doesn't have a name, either.”
”That's as may be,” the Duke said, ”but I'm happy to know that you're not deluding yourself that it's any kind of psychotherapy.”
”You know,” I said, ”I kind of like your word _geas_. Because that's exactly what it seems to be--a _geas_. A hex, an enchantment, if you wish.
”Did you know that Brownlee was an anthropologist before he turned to psychology? He has some very interesting stories to tell about hexes and so on.”
”I'll have to hear them one day.” His Grace took a pack of cigarettes from his pocket. ”Cigarette?”
”No, thanks. I gave up smoking a few years back.”
He puffed his alight. ”This _geas_,” he said, ”reminds me of the fact that, before the medical profession came up with antibiotics that would destroy the microorganisms that cause gas gangrene, amputation was the only method of preventing the death of the patient. It was crippling, but necessary.”